Brandin v. Brandin

918 S.W.2d 835, 1996 Mo. App. LEXIS 97, 1996 WL 21741
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 23, 1996
Docket68211
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 918 S.W.2d 835 (Brandin v. Brandin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brandin v. Brandin, 918 S.W.2d 835, 1996 Mo. App. LEXIS 97, 1996 WL 21741 (Mo. Ct. App. 1996).

Opinion

GARY M. GAERTNER, Judge.

Appellants, Patricia A. Brandin, Douglas M. Brandin, and Robert N. Brandin (“children”), appeal from the judgment entered by the Circuit Court of the County of St. Louis dismissing their petition for tortious interference with an inheritance expectancy against respondent, Mary Elliott Keyes Brandin. We affirm.

Children are the natural children of Donald N. Brandin (“decedent”) and Yvonne Brandin, his first wife who predeceased him. In January, 1981, decedent became engaged to Mary Elliott Keyes (“wife”). The parties executed an antenuptial agreement on December 31, 1981. This agreement allowed each party to retain control of his or her separate property and gave wife certain interests in decedent’s estate should he predecease her. The agreement also gave wife a cause of action on the contract should decedent’s will not reflect her right to the property as set forth in the agreement. The parties were married the next day, on January 1,1982.

Decedent and wife amended the antenup-tial agreement on January 16, 1989. This amendment deleted and replaced three provisions of the original agreement and altered another, allegedly increasing the amount of decedent’s estate wife would receive if decedent predeceased her. Also on this date, decedent executed a revocable living trust and a pour-over will. The will provided that all property in decedent’s estate was to become part of the trust, and that, if the trust was no longer “in existence,” the estate was to be distributed in the same manner as it was in the trust instrument which was therein incorporated.

Decedent subsequently amended the trust instrument altering and allegedly increasing the economic benefits flowing to wife upon decedent’s death. These amendments were executed on December 3,1990, June 10,1992, and November 3, 1993. The final trust instrument gave wife a certain sum from decedent’s pension benefits and a one-third share of the trust property, both to be calculated before the assessment of estate taxes. Children received the balance of the pension plans and the remaining two-thirds share of the trust property, subject to the payment of estate taxes.

Decedent died on January 28, 1994. His total gross estate was calculated in excess of $8.7 million at the time of his death. On appeal, children argue wife is entitled only to the amount of decedent’s estate she would have received under the original antenuptial agreement. On June 20, 1994, children filed a petition against wife alleging damages for tortious interference with inheritance expectancies, followed by the filing of an amended petition on July 29,1994.

*837 The amended petition alleged the following:

1. Children were “the only children of [decedent] who died on the 28th day of January 1994....”
2-4. Decedent and wife became engaged, executed a valid antenuptial agreement, and were married.
5. “[P]rior to January 16, 1989, [decedent] became ill to the extent he was susceptible to the undue influence” exercised by wife.
6. “[P]rior to January 16, 1989, [wife] stood in a confidential relationship with [decedent].”
7. “[P]rior to Januaiy 16, 1989, [wife] procured the drafting of documents, namely a revocable living trust, a will and amendment to the [antenuptial] agreement for execution by [decedent] which were executed by him,” and these instruments “altered the disposition of [decedent’s] property upon his death contrary to the provisions of the [antenuptial] agreement ... in favor of [wife]_”
8. Wife “procured the drafting of documents, namely the First Amendment to the trust ... the Third Amendment to the Trust [sic] ... and the Fourth Amendment to the trust_ The described instrument altered the disposition of [decedent’s] property upon his death ... in favor of [wife]....”
9. “[A]s a direct and proximate result of the undue influence [wife] exercised to have [decedent] execute the foregoing described documents, [children] have suffered economic damage.”

The petition further set out portions of the amendments altering the disposition of decedent’s property and requested costs and punitive damages, alleging wife’s conduct was “deliberate and maliciously calculated to deprive [children] of their expectancies.”

On August 15, 1994, wife timely filed a protective claim in the probate division of the Circuit Court of St. Louis County, claiming the rights and property she was entitled to by virtue of the amended antenuptial agreement. On August 22, 1994, wife filed a motion to dismiss, or in the alternative, for summary judgment, contending children’s petition failed to state a claim because they failed to file a will contest and trust contest as required by Missouri law, and because children failed to plead and adequately demonstrate they had suffered any economic damage. The trial court granted wife’s motion to dismiss without stating the grounds wherefore on March 9, 1995. Children’s motion for rehearing was denied on April 7, 1995, and this appeal follows.

In reviewing the trial court’s dismissal of a petition, the appellate court determines if the facts as pleaded and the reasonable inferences drawn therefrom state any ground for relief. Sullivan v. Carlisle, 851 S.W.2d 510, 512 (Mo. banc 1993). It is the court’s “duty to decide whether plaintiff is entitled to relief according to dictates of substantive law.” Theodoro v. City of Herculaneum, 879 S.W.2d 755, 759 (Mo.App.E.D.1994). Where the trial court does not set forth the reason for the petition’s dismissal, as here, we presume the court based its ruling on the grounds stated in the motion to dismiss. Id. We will address each of the issues presented in wife’s motion in turn.

In order to state a cause of action for tortious interference with an inheritance expectancy, children had to allege wife, by fraud, duress, undue influence or other tor-tious means, intentionally prevented children from receiving an inheritance or gift from decedent, which inheritance or gift they would have otherwise received. Hammons v. Eisert, 745 S.W.2d 253, 257 (Mo.App.S.D. 1988). Missouri courts have not yet faced what constitutes an adequate pleading for this cause of action. Indeed, only one Missouri court has allowed such an action to stand. See Id. at 258. 1

Here, children failed to plead they had a valid expectancy of which they had been deprived. The pleading merely alleges children were “the only children of [decedent]” and concludes “[a]s a direct and proximate result of the undue influence [wife] exercised ... [children] have suffered eco *838 nomic damage.” Although one could reasonably draw the inference children were the decedent’s intestate heirs, the petition is void of any allegation decedent would have died intestate, or that he intended any certain property to pass to his heirs thereby.

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Bluebook (online)
918 S.W.2d 835, 1996 Mo. App. LEXIS 97, 1996 WL 21741, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brandin-v-brandin-moctapp-1996.