Davis v. Rizzo

819 S.E.2d 574, 261 N.C. App. 9
CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedAugust 21, 2018
DocketCOA17-1153
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 819 S.E.2d 574 (Davis v. Rizzo) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Davis v. Rizzo, 819 S.E.2d 574, 261 N.C. App. 9 (N.C. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

ELMORE, Judge.

*10 Plaintiffs Rebecca R. Davis ("Rebecca") and Matthew M. Davis ("Matthew") (collectively, "plaintiffs"), daughter-in-law and grandson to ninety-nine-year-old Jeanette B. Davis ("Mrs. Davis"), brought this action, individually as expected beneficiaries of Mrs. Davis's 11 March 2002 revocable trust ("2002 Revocable Trust") and on Mrs. Davis's behalf as settlor of that trust, against defendants Janet D. Rizzo ("Rizzo"), who is Mrs. Davis's daughter, and Anne Page Watson ("Attorney Watson"), who was one of Mrs. Davis's estate planning attorneys. Plaintiffs alleged that Mrs. Davis's mental health has been deteriorating since 2010, and Rizzo has been exerting undue influence on her, thereby invalidating Mrs. Davis's estate planning decisions from 2014 to 2016, including executing a general power-of-attorney appointing Rizzo as her lawful attorney-in-fact; creating a new trust ("2016 Trust"); and transferring two parcels of real property held in her 2002 Revocable Trust to Rizzo, as trustee of the 2016 Trust. Following Mrs. Davis's motion to intervene as a party-defendant in the action, the trial court entered an order denying plaintiffs' motion to continue or stay proceedings, and granting Mrs. Davis's, Rizzo's, and Attorney Watson's (collectively, "defendants") motions to dismiss plaintiffs' claims under our Civil Procedure Rule 12(b)(6).

After the trial court denied plaintiffs' postjudgment motion to amend that order pursuant to Civil Procedure Rules 59 and 60, plaintiffs filed notices of appeal from the trial court's orders (1) allowing Mrs. Davis to intervene as a party-defendant; (2) denying their motion to continue or stay proceedings, and dismissing their claims; and (3) denying their motion to amend the second order. In response, defendants have filed *11 a motion to dismiss plaintiffs' appeals from the first two orders, arguing they violated our Appellate Procedure Rule 3(c) 's thirty-day jurisdictional time limit to take appeal, and that their postjudgment motion to amend did not toll this time because it was not a proper Rule 59 motion. See N.C. R. App. P. 3(c)(1), -(3).

Because we agree the motion to amend did not constitute a proper Rule 59 motion sufficient to toll the appeal clock, we allow defendants' motion to dismiss plaintiffs' untimely appeals from the first two orders for lack of jurisdiction. Additionally, because plaintiffs have failed to demonstrate the trial court *577 abused its discretion in denying their motion to amend, we affirm the third order.

I. Background

Ninety-nine-year-old Mrs. Davis and her late husband, Haywood Davis, Sr. ("Haywood, Sr."), had two children together, defendant Rizzo and Haywood Davis, Jr. ("Haywood, Jr."). Haywood, Jr. and his wife, Rebecca, had one child, Matthew.

On 8 February 2017, plaintiffs Rebecca and Matthew, Mrs. Davis's daughter-in-law and grandson, individually as expected beneficiaries of Mrs. Davis's 2002 Revocable Trust and on Mrs. Davis's behalf as trustor of that trust, sued Rizzo, who is Mrs. Davis's only surviving child, and Attorney Watson, who was one of Mrs. Davis's estate planning attorneys. Plaintiffs asserted claims sounding in constructive fraud and breach of fiduciary duty, actual fraud, and undue influence.

According to plaintiffs' complaint, a few years after her late husband Haywood, Sr.'s death, Mrs. Davis on 11 March 2002 created the 2002 Revocable Trust, later revised on 28 December 2010, naming herself as initial trustee and listing her two children, Rizzo and Haywood, Jr., as equal trust fund beneficiaries. The 2002 Revocable Trust provided that if Mrs. Davis's children should predecease her, Haywood, Jr.'s fifty percent share would be distributed equally between his wife, Rebecca, and their son, Matthew; and Rizzo's fifty percent share would be distributed equally to her children. At that time, Mrs. Davis's estate planning attorney, Rupe S. Gill ("Attorney Gill"), was named as first-successor trustee, and two parcels of real property were held in the 2002 Revocable Trust.

However, plaintiffs' complaint alleged, four months after Haywood, Jr.'s death in 2014, Rizzo brought Mrs. Davis to Attorney Gill's office, where Rizzo exerted undue influence on Mrs. Davis to make certain revisions to her 2002 Revocable Trust, including replacing Attorney Gill with Rizzo as first-successor trustee and naming Attorney Gill as special *12 co-trustee, and to execute a general power-of-attorney appointing Rizzo as her lawful attorney-in-fact. On 16 July 2015, Rizzo brought Mrs. Davis to defendant Attorney Watson's office, where Rizzo again exerted undue influence on Mrs. Davis to revise her 2002 Revocable Trust by removing Attorney Gill as special co-trustee. On 25 July 2016, Rizzo returned Mrs. Davis to Attorney Watson's office, where Rizzo again exerted undue influence on her to create a new trust, the 2016 Trust, naming Rizzo as trustee. That same day, Rizzo exerted undue influence on Mrs. Davis to convey by general warranty deeds, as trustee of her 2002 Revocable Trust, the two properties previously held in the 2002 Revocable Trust to Rizzo, as trustee of the 2016 Trust.

Plaintiffs further alleged in their complaint that after Mrs. Davis revised her 2002 Revocable Trust in 2010, her "mental health deteriorated" and her "medical records show that [i]n recent years she has been suffering from ... impaired mental capacity, altered mental status, confusion, and memory loss"; that "when [Mrs. Davis] signed trust-related documents and deeds during the period from 2014 through 2016, she had diminished mental capacity and was under the undue influence of her daughter, [Rizzo]"; and that Mrs. Davis "is a real party in interest and a necessary party ... but lacks sufficient mental capacity to represent herself in these proceedings." Therefore, plaintiffs requested, inter alia , "a guardian ad litem be appointed to represent [Mrs. Davis's] interests ... as soon as is practicable."

On 22 February 2017, Mrs. Davis filed a verified motion to intervene as a party-defendant in the action and to stay proceedings. Attached to her motion were affidavits from Mrs. Davis and her treating physician of the last seven years, Dr. Allison K. Gard. Mrs. Davis in her affidavit stated: "I have never been adjudicated to be incompetent," and "I am competent." Dr. Gard in her affidavit stated that she performed two "Mini-Mental Status Examination[s]" on Mrs. Davis in February 2017 and September 2016, who "scored 28 out of 30" on both tests. Dr. Gard also stated: "[B]ased upon my personal observation of Mrs. Davis, I do not find any reason why she cannot be in charge of her own affairs[,]" and that she "is one of the highest functioning 98-year-olds that I have had the pleasure to know."

*578 That same day, Mrs.

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819 S.E.2d 574, 261 N.C. App. 9, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-rizzo-ncctapp-2018.