Bielat v. Bielat

2000 Ohio 451, 87 Ohio St. 3d 350
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 5, 2000
Docket1998-2386
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 2000 Ohio 451 (Bielat v. Bielat) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bielat v. Bielat, 2000 Ohio 451, 87 Ohio St. 3d 350 (Ohio 2000).

Opinion

[This opinion has been published in Ohio Official Reports at 87 Ohio St.3d 350.]

BIELAT, EXR., APPELLANT, v. BIELAT, APPELLEE. [Cite as Bielat v. Bielat, 2000-Ohio-451.] Uniform Transfer-on-Death Security Registration Act—R.C. 1709.09(A) and 1709.11(D) as applied to pay-on-death beneficiary designation in an Individual Retirement Account created prior to the Act’s effective date do not violate prohibition against retroactive laws in Ohio Constitution— Requirements for claim of substantive retroactivity of statute. 1. R.C. 1709.09(A) and 1709.11(D) of Ohio’s Transfer-on-Death Security Registration Act, as applied to the pay-on-death beneficiary designation in an Individual Retirement Account created prior to the Act’s effective date, do not violate the prohibition against retroactive laws in Section 28, Article II of the Ohio Constitution. 2. A claim for substantive retroactivity cannot be based solely upon evidence that a statute retrospectively created a new right, but must also include a showing of some impairment, burden, deprivation, or new obligation accompanying that new right. (Van Fossen v. Babcock & Wilcox Co. [1988], 36 Ohio St.3d 100, 107, 522 N.E.2d 489, 496, modified.) (No. 98-2386–Submitted September 15, 1999–Decided January 5, 2000.) APPEAL from the Court of Appeals for Summit County, No. 18930. __________________ {¶ 1} This case concerns the legal effect of two actions taken by a decedent prior to the effective date of Ohio’s Transfer-on-Death Security Registration Act. First, in 1983, Chester S. Bielat opened an Individual Retirement Account (“IRA”) with Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith, Inc. In the “Adoption Agreement” that he signed to open this account, Chester named his sister, Stella, as the beneficiary of the account’s balance upon his death. Shortly thereafter, Chester SUPREME COURT OF OHIO

made a will containing a clause giving all of his property to his wife, Dorothy, upon his death. {¶ 2} In 1993, three years before Chester’s death, the General Assembly codified Ohio’s version of the Uniform Transfer-on-Death Security Registration Act (“Act”), R.C. 1709.01 et seq., 145 Ohio Laws, Part II, 2858. The Act provides, inter alia, that “[a]ny transfer-on-death resulting from a registration in beneficiary form * * * is not testamentary.” (Emphasis added.) R.C. 1709.09(A). Accordingly, the Act removes such transfers on death from the decedent’s testamentary estate, and also from the purview of Ohio’s Statute of Wills, which outlines the formalities that apply to testamentary dispositions. R.C. 2107.03. R.C. 1709.11(D) makes the entire Act applicable to registrations in beneficiary form made “prior to, on, or after the effective date of this section, by decedents dying prior to, on, or after that date.” R.C. 1709.11(D). {¶ 3} Soon after Chester’s death in 1996, Dorothy discovered that Chester had named Stella the beneficiary of his IRA. Dorothy filed a complaint in the Summit County Probate Court, seeking a declaratory judgment that she, not Stella, was entitled to the IRA proceeds. Dorothy’s argument to the probate court consisted of four steps. First, Dorothy argued that Chester’s IRA beneficiary clause constituted testamentary language when it designated Stella as the pay-on-death beneficiary of the account. Second, Dorothy argued that the beneficiary clause was, therefore, null and void, since the Adoption Agreement in which the clause appeared did not comply with the signature and attestation requirements of our Statute of Wills. Third, even though R.C. 1709.09(A), supra, defines beneficiary registrations such as this one as “not testamentary,” Dorothy argued that the Act could not constitutionally apply retroactively to Chester’s IRA beneficiary clause, which was signed a decade prior to the effective date of the Act. Finally, Dorothy averred that without the Act to validate the beneficiary clause in the IRA, the IRA

2 January Term, 2000

account balance would be transferred not to Stella, but rather to Chester’s probate estate, where it would pass to Dorothy under the terms of Chester’s will. {¶ 4} After considering Dorothy’s declaratory judgment action and Stella’s motion to dismiss, the probate court concluded that the Act validated the nontestamentary transfer-on-death clause in Chester’s IRA even though the beneficiary designation in the IRA was created before the effective date of the Act. Therefore, the probate court ordered the balance of the IRA to pass to Stella under the terms of the beneficiary clause that Mr. Bielat had signed in 1983. {¶ 5} Dorothy appealed this judgment to the Ninth District Court of Appeals. She argued that the application of the Act to the pay-on-death beneficiary registration that Chester executed prior to the Act’s effective date constituted a retroactive application of the law in violation of Section 28, Article II of the Ohio Constitution. The court of appeals affirmed the probate court’s decision in favor of Stella. The court held that although the Act was being applied in this case to a transfer-on-death beneficiary clause executed before the Act’s effective date, the Act did not impair a vested right belonging to Dorothy, and thus did not violate the Ohio Constitution’s prohibition against retroactive laws. {¶ 6} The cause is now before this court upon the allowance of a discretionary appeal. __________________ Joseph C. McLeland and Terence E. Scanlon, for appellant. Witschey & Witschey Co., L.P.A., Frank J. Witschey and Jeffrey T. Witschey, for appellee. __________________ Cook, J. {¶ 7} The issue before the court is whether R.C. 1709.09(A) and 1709.11(D) of Ohio’s Transfer-on-Death Security Registration Act constitute retroactive laws in violation of Section 28, Article II of the Ohio Constitution when

3 SUPREME COURT OF OHIO

applied to the designation of a death beneficiary in an IRA executed prior to the effective date of the Act. Because we conclude that the applicable sections of R.C. Chapter 1709 constitute remedial, curative statutes that do not affect substantive rights, we affirm the judgment of the court of appeals and uphold the validity of the beneficiary clause in the IRA Adoption Agreement executed between Mr. Bielat and Merrill Lynch. The Test for Unconstitutional Retroactivity {¶ 8} Section 28, Article II of the Ohio Constitution prohibits the General Assembly from passing retroactive laws and protects vested rights from new legislative encroachments. Vogel v. Wells (1991), 57 Ohio St.3d 91, 99, 566 N.E.2d 154, 162. The retroactivity clause nullifies those new laws that “reach back and create new burdens, new duties, new obligations, or new liabilities not existing at the time [the statute becomes effective].” Miller v. Hixson (1901), 64 Ohio St. 39, 51, 59 N.E. 749, 752. {¶ 9} This court has articulated the procedure that a court should follow to determine when a law is unconstitutionally retroactive. State v. Cook (1998), 83 Ohio St.3d 404, 410, 700 N.E.2d 570, 576, citing Van Fossen v. Babcock & Wilcox Co. (1988), 36 Ohio St.3d 100, 522 N.E.2d 489, paragraph one of the syllabus. We emphasize the phrase “unconstitutionally retroactive” to confirm that retroactivity itself is not always forbidden by Ohio law. Though the language of Section 28, Article II of the Ohio Constitution provides that the General Assembly “shall have no power to pass retroactive laws,” Ohio courts have long recognized that there is a crucial distinction between statutes that merely apply retroactively (or “retrospectively”) and those that do so in a manner that offends our Constitution. See, e.g., Rairden v. Holden (1864), 15 Ohio St. 207, 210-211; State v. Cook, 83 Ohio St.3d at 410, 700 N.E.2d at 576-577.

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Bluebook (online)
2000 Ohio 451, 87 Ohio St. 3d 350, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bielat-v-bielat-ohio-2000.