Branch v. Cardillo

CourtSuperior Court of Rhode Island
DecidedFebruary 24, 2011
DocketC.A. No. PC-07-620
StatusPublished

This text of Branch v. Cardillo (Branch v. Cardillo) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Branch v. Cardillo, (R.I. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

DECISION
This breach of contract action was tried to the Court without a jury. The following represents the Court's findings of fact and conclusions of law. Trial of this matter spanned several days. Jurisdiction is pursuant to G.L. 1956 § 8-2-13 and § 8-2-14.

I
Facts and Travel
Margaret Cardillo ("Margaret" or "Decedent") was a widow who died intestate on March 10, 2001. Her husband, Thomas C. Cardillo, predeceased her on July 28, 1998. On the date of her death, Decedent owned certain assets which became part of her probate estate. Said assets were to be distributed under the laws of intestacy to her next of kin, namely, her three adult children: Plaintiffs Tammi M. Branch (hereafter "Tammi") and Lori Cardillo-Kelsall (hereafter "Lori"), and Defendant Thomas C. Cardillo, Jr. (hereafter "Thomas"). Upon Margaret's death, Tammi filed a petition for probate in the Probate Court for the Town of Scituate and the Court appointed her as the Administratrix of the Estate.

On the date of her death, Decedent owned real property located at 12 Pinecrest Road, Scituate, Rhode Island (hereafter referred to as the "Scituate property"). At the time of her *Page 2 death, Decedent had been residing there with her son Thomas, who suffers from multiple sclerosis. Thomas had lived with his mother for most of his life. Although no final order of distribution was entered by the Probate Court, in accordance with the laws of intestacy, the Scituate property was to be divided equally among Decedent's three children.

In addition to the Scituate property, Margaret owned or controlled other property at the time of her death, including:

1) Real property located on West Side Road in the Town of Bartlett, New Hampshire (hereafter referred to as the "New Hampshire property"). She held this property in a joint tenancy with Thomas, with right of survivorship.

2) A checking account at Citizens Bank owned jointly with Thomas, with right of survivorship (hereafter "the joint account").

3) Death benefits from a life insurance policy issued by Transamerica Insurance and Investment Group in the amount of $125,000. The Decedent named each of her three children as equal beneficiaries under the policy. Accordingly, with the addition of interest, the insurance company paid $42,927.03 to each of Margaret's children after her death.

4) An annuity, with death benefits, issued by AllAmerica Investments, Inc., in which Decedent named her three children to receive equal payments upon her death.

5) A death benefit to each child in the amount of $1,333.33 from the Employees Retirement System of Rhode Island.

6) Several motor vehicles.

*Page 3

According to the laws of intestacy, the only significant asset that was to pass through probate to the children was the Scituate property. The joint account, the New Hampshire property, the life insurance proceeds and the annuity proceeds all were to pass outside of probate, as follows: the New Hampshire property would pass to Thomas, as the surviving joint tenant; the joint account would pass to Thomas, as the surviving joint owner; and the life insurance and annuity benefits would pass to each child in equal amounts in accordance with Decedent's designation of beneficiaries.

The Plaintiffs allege, however, that the siblings attended several meetings at which they discussed and agreed to the details of an alleged agreement which provided that they pool all of the assets, probate and non-probate alike. According to this alleged agreement, the parties would use the pooled assets to pay all of the estate's debts, including Decedent's funeral costs, as well as bills incurred by her during her lifetime. Thereafter, the remainder allegedly would be divided and distributed to each of them in three equal shares.

The Plaintiffs testified that in order to carry out the intent of the agreement, the parties would deposit each child's share of the life insurance and annuity proceeds into a common account. That account, according to Plaintiffs, was to be used first to pay estate debts; thereafter, the remainder would be divided equally among the three children. According to the alleged agreement, the joint account, which would have passed in its entirety to Thomas, as joint owner, also was to be used to pay debts of the estate. According to Lori, she wrote checks on the account into which the insurance proceeds were deposited and which checks Thomas then signed. Lori further testified that she had to teach Thomas how to write a check. The Plaintiffs both testified that despite the fact that they each were entitled to receive one-third of the Scituate property under the laws of intestacy, they wanted Tom to own the property so he could continue *Page 4 to reside there as he had done his entire life. At the time, however, the Scituate property was encumbered by two mortgages. Thomas testified that the bank had declared the second mortgage in default.

The Plaintiffs contend that according to the alleged agreement, the second mortgage on the Scituate property in the amount of approximately $49,000 would be discharged and paid in full with a portion of the pooled life insurance and/or annuity benefits.1 Thereafter, Thomas would assume the debt secured by the first mortgage and remain on the property.

The Plaintiffs further testified that in return for gaining sole ownership of the Scituate property, Thomas had agreed to convey to each of them a one-third interest in the New Hampshire property. They also testified that the parties had agreed to share the carrying costs associated with the New Hampshire property. Thomas, on the other hand, testified that at no time did he make an agreement with his sisters concerning the distribution of his mother's assets, and that their conveyance to him of their collective two-thirds' interest in the Scituate property was in accordance with his mother's wishes that he have sole ownership and possession of that property after she died.

It is undisputed that a portion of the pooled life insurance proceeds, as well as the joint account, were used to pay estate debts, and that insurance proceeds also were used to pay off the second mortgage on the Scituate property. Thereafter, the balance remaining in the pooled account was to be distributed in equal shares to Tammi, Lori and Thomas. It also is undisputed that the sisters signed a Purchase and Sale Agreement (PSA), and thereafter a Quitclaim Deed, each conveying to Thomas their inherited one-third interest in the Scituate property, thus leaving Thomas as the sole owner of that property. The PSA listed the purchase price as $74,000, with *Page 5 $37,000 to go to each sister, and it represented that that purchase price had been "paid prior to the execution of this Agreement." The Purchase and Sale Agreement made no reference to the New Hampshire property or the alleged agreement as additional non-cash consideration for the sisters' conveyance. It is undisputed that Thomas, who now owns the Scituate property outright, assumed the first mortgage on the Scituate property and currently lives there with his wife, Terri.

The New Hampshire property, which had been used by Decedent and her entire family during her lifetime, passed to Thomas as the sole owner by reason of his being the surviving joint tenant.

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Bluebook (online)
Branch v. Cardillo, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/branch-v-cardillo-risuperct-2011.