David Buboltz and Donna Reece v. Patricia Birusingh, individually and in Her Capacity as Co-Executor of the Estate of Cletis C. Ireland, and Kumari Durick

CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJune 11, 2021
Docket19-1724
StatusPublished

This text of David Buboltz and Donna Reece v. Patricia Birusingh, individually and in Her Capacity as Co-Executor of the Estate of Cletis C. Ireland, and Kumari Durick (David Buboltz and Donna Reece v. Patricia Birusingh, individually and in Her Capacity as Co-Executor of the Estate of Cletis C. Ireland, and Kumari Durick) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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David Buboltz and Donna Reece v. Patricia Birusingh, individually and in Her Capacity as Co-Executor of the Estate of Cletis C. Ireland, and Kumari Durick, (iowa 2021).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF IOWA No. 19–1724

Submitted March 23, 2021—Filed June 11, 2021

DAVID BUBOLTZ and DONNA REECE,

Appellants,

vs.

PATRICIA BIRUSINGH, ESTATE OF CLETIS C. IRELAND, and KUMARI DURICK,

Appellees.

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Pottawattamie County,

Craig Dreismeier, Judge.

The plaintiffs appeal the district court’s grant of summary judgment

on their tortious-interference-with-inheritance claim, and the defendants

cross-appeal for a new trial, asserting admission of improper hearsay

testimony and improper statements by opposing counsel during closing

argument. AFFIRMED.

McDermott, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which all

participating justices joined. Christensen, C.J., took no part in the

consideration or the decision of the case.

Alexander E. Wonio (argued) of Hansen, McClintock & Riley, Des

Moines, and Tyler M. Smith of Smith Law Firm, PLC, Altoona, for

appellants. 2

Charles Wittmack (argued) of Hartung Schroeder Law Firm, Des

Moines, and Jamie L. Cox, Paul S. Wilson, and Lonny L. Kolln II of Willson

& Pechacek, P.L.C., Council Bluffs, (until withdrawal) for appellees. 3

McDERMOTT, Justice.

In this case, we must answer whether a cause of action for tortious

interference with inheritance requires the plaintiff to prove that the

defendant had knowledge of the plaintiff’s expectation to receive an

inheritance from the decedent. The inheritance in dispute comes from a

woman named Cletis Ireland, who died in March 2016 at age 92. She was

an only child, never married, and had no children. Her estate included

her family’s century farm where she had lived most of her adult life.

In 2001, Ireland executed a will that would have given her farm in equal shares to David Buboltz, a cash rent farmer who had been leasing

about eighty acres on the farm since 1991, and Edith Mae Maertens, her

cousin. But in 2015, Ireland executed a new will. The new will removed

both Maertens, who had died in 2008, and Buboltz as the beneficiaries of

her farm and purported to give the farm instead to Kumari Durick, the

daughter of a family friend. Ireland named Durick’s mother, Patricia

Birusingh, as the executor of her estate in the new will.

Birusingh was married to Ireland’s doctor. Ireland, sometime after

she executed the 2001 will, grew close to the Birusingh family. When

Ireland due to her advancing age could no longer drive a car, Birusingh

and Durick began bringing her groceries, driving her to appointments, and

running other errands for her. Birusingh and Durick characterized

themselves as good neighbors, taking care of an elderly friend in need who,

of her own volition, chose to include them in her will.

Buboltz and Reece, on the other hand, characterized Birusingh and

Durick as conspirators in a Machiavellian plot, preying on the

vulnerabilities of an isolated elderly woman to convince her to bequeath her farm to them in exchange for their help. Shortly after Ireland died,

one of Maertens’s daughters (and thus Ireland’s first cousin once removed) 4

named Donna Reece, along with Buboltz, filed a lawsuit to set aside

Ireland’s 2015 will. Their petition alleged several causes of action against

Birusingh and Durick, including undue influence and tortious interference

with inheritance.

Prior to trial, Birusingh and Durick sought summary judgment on

the tortious-interference-with-inheritance claim. They argued that this

cause of action requires proof, among other things, that a defendant knew

of the plaintiff’s expected inheritance from the decedent. Birusingh and

Durick claimed that no evidence existed to show that they had knowledge of any expected inheritance by Buboltz or Reece related to Ireland’s 2001

will or, for that matter, that they had any knowledge of Ireland’s 2001 will

whatsoever. Buboltz and Reece countered that, despite no direct evidence

proving knowledge, circumstantial evidence created disputes of material

fact concerning what Birusingh and Durick knew, and that these factual

disputes required the court to deny summary judgment. The district court

found none of the plaintiff’s circumstantial evidence sufficient to create a

dispute of material fact and thus granted the motion and dismissed the

plaintiffs’ tortious-interference-with-inheritance claim. Buboltz and Reece

voluntarily dismissed other claims but maintained the undue influence

cause of action.

During the trial, Buboltz and Reece requested that the district court

instruct the jury on the dismissed tortious-interference-with-inheritance

claim. The district court refused. The jury returned a verdict in favor of

Buboltz and Reece on the undue influence claim.

Both sides appeal. Buboltz and Reece appeal the dismissal of the

tortious-interference-with-inheritance claim, arguing that the district court erroneously determined that the tort required proof that a defendant

possess knowledge of a plaintiff’s expected inheritance. They further argue 5

that, even if we find the tort includes such a requirement, the district court

erred in concluding that no dispute of material fact existed on the issue.

Birusingh and Durick cross-appeal, arguing a new trial is necessary based

on the admission of improper hearsay testimony and improper statements

by opposing counsel during his closing argument.

I.

We begin with the question of whether knowledge of a plaintiff’s

expectancy of an inheritance from the decedent is an element of tortious

interference with inheritance. We review the district court’s summary judgment ruling for correction of legal error. Lewis v. Howard L. Allen

Invs., Inc., 956 N.W.2d 489, 490 (Iowa 2021).

We first recognized the existence of an “independent cause of action

for the wrongful interference with a bequest” in Frohwein v. Haesemeyer

in 1978. 264 N.W.2d 792, 795 (Iowa 1978). We’ve addressed this tort

again in our opinions in the intervening decades only three times. In the

first, in 1991, we held that the plaintiffs were procedurally barred from

pursuing a tortious-interference-with-inheritance claim when two valid,

uncontested codicils reaffirmed an earlier codicil (which eliminated the

plaintiffs’ bequest) because the claim in that situation constituted a

“collateral attack on testamentary dispositions.” Abel v. Bittner, 470

N.W.2d 348, 351 (Iowa 1991). In the second, a year later, we held that a

plaintiff may pursue a tortious interference claim separate from a will

contest even when the plaintiff alleges that the defendant used wrongful

means to induce the decedent to execute a new will. Huffey v. Lea, 491

N.W.2d 518, 519–20 (Iowa 1992) (en banc). And in the third, decided last

term, we overruled Frohwein and Huffey v. Lea and held that a plaintiff alleging a tortious-interference claim involving a will executed through

wrongful means must join the action with a timely will contest. Youngblut 6

v. Youngblut, 945 N.W.2d 25, 37 (Iowa 2020). None of our prior cases

analyzed or set forth the elements of a tortious-interference-with-

inheritance claim.

Buboltz and Reece contend that courts outside Iowa have not

included knowledge of a plaintiff’s expectancy of an inheritance as an

element of the tort.

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