Est. of: M.L., Appeal of: S. Pacheco

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedFebruary 5, 2026
Docket2948 EDA 2024
StatusUnpublished
AuthorStabile

This text of Est. of: M.L., Appeal of: S. Pacheco (Est. of: M.L., Appeal of: S. Pacheco) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Est. of: M.L., Appeal of: S. Pacheco, (Pa. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

J-S27013-25

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT O.P. 65.37

ESTATE OF MARCO LOPEZ, : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF DECEASED : PENNSYLVANIA : : APPEAL OF: SISSI PACHECO : : : : : No. 2948 EDA 2024

Appeal from the Decree Entered October 3, 2024 In the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County Orphans' Court at No: 343AP of 2022

BEFORE: STABILE, J., KUNSELMAN, J., and STEVENS, P.J.E.*

MEMORANDUM BY STABILE, J.: FILED FEBRUARY 5, 2026

This appeal concerns a dispute over the validity of two competing wills

and the distribution of the estate of Marco Lopez (the decedent). Sissi Pacheco

(Appellant), the decedent’s niece, relied upon a will that was dated September

22, 2018 (the 2018 Will) to obtain letters of administration for the estate.

Subsequently, Erik Estuardo Angel López (Appellee), the decedent’s nephew,

appealed to the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County (orphans’

court) to revoke those letters of administration, while also asserting that

another will, dated December 23, 2017 (the 2017 Will), should be probated.

The orphans’ court found merit in Appellee’s claims and entered a decree

removing Appellant as administratrix and finding the 2018 Will to be null and

void. Appellant now argues that the orphans’ court lacked jurisdiction; the

____________________________________________

* Former Justice specially assigned to the Superior Court. J-S27013-25

2018 Will was valid; and the statute of limitations barred Appellee’s action.

Finding merit in the latter claim, we must vacate the decree of the orphans’

court.

The relevant facts in this case are gleaned from the certified record. The

decedent was born in Guatemala on September 22, 1942, and he was a dual

citizen of both that country and the United States, where he had resided since

1972. As of 1988, the decedent was a resident of Philadelphia, but he often

traveled to Guatemala to visit family members.

In 2015, the decedent was diagnosed with cancer, and Appellant lived

in New Jersey at that time. After the decedent’s cancer diagnosis, and until

his death, Appellant assisted him in receiving treatment for his illness and in

travelling with him to Guatemala. The decedent passed away on September

17, 2018.

Appellant obtained letters of administration for the decedent’s estate on

March 28, 2019. The letters were issued by the Philadelphia register of wills.

Appellant also attempted to probate the 2018 Will, which was dated

September 22, 2018.

The 2018 Will provided that Appellant was the decedent’s sole heir.

Although Appellant was appointed as the representative of the decedent’s

estate, she was unable to probate the 2018 Will in part because it was dated

five days after the date of the decedent’s death. See N.T. Hearing, 2/1/2024,

at 48-49.

-2- J-S27013-25

The 2018 Will was drafted by an attorney, James Valentin, who was

unable to fully account for the dating error. Both Valentin and Appellant

claimed that the 2018 Will was executed on September 12, 2018, five days

before the decedent’s death. Valentin suggested that the incorrect date of

September 22 had inadvertently been used for the 2018 Will because it was

the decedent’s birthday. Valentin had erroneously written that date because

he had been reviewing the decedent’s driver’s license when entering

information into the document as a witness to its execution. See N.T. Hearing,

1/31/2024, at 99-100.

In addition to the incorrect date, the decedent’s signature on the 2018

Will appeared inconsistent with how his name was usually signed. The

decedent’s name was written several times in the document as, “Marco

Antonio Lopez,” but it was undisputed that he rarely, if ever, used his full

name for signatures unless required to do so.

Valentin attempted to clarify that the 2018 Will was an amendment to a

prior version he had drafted for the decedent and had executed on July 13,

2018. The amendment was purportedly necessary to provide for the

distribution of a property in Guatemala – one it turned out that the decedent

had never owned. See id., at 90-91, 115.

Valentin’s account of the work he did for the decedent could not be

substantiated because Valentin claimed to have destroyed the original version

of the 2018 Will. See id., at 114. Appellant maintained that she had not

known that Valentin helped the decedent execute that version of the 2018 Will

-3- J-S27013-25

because she “wasn’t interested” in such things. N.T. Hearing, 2/1/2024, at

35-36. Yet, in Appellant’s own account, she had arranged for Valentin to assist

the decedent in creating that document. See id.

Finally, the witnesses to 2018 Will did little to corroborate its

authenticity. One witness described the decedent as looking like a “movie

star” at the time he signed it, which would seem somewhat at odds with the

decedent passing away from terminal cancer just five days after the putative

date of the 2018 Will’s execution. See id., at 75. The notary who witnessed

and notarized the 2018 Will was subpoenaed to produce her records from the

relevant dates, and she did not do so. See id., at 54-55. The notary also

admitted to violating notarial protocols by failing to verify the signatures and

dates on the 2018 Will. See id., at 56.

The record is unclear as to when and how Appellee learned of Appellant’s

involvement with the decedent’s estate. Appellee testified that he first learned

of the 2018 Will’s existence “[a]round the end of 2019,” while attempting to

probate the 2017 Will as an executor in Guatemala. See N.T. Hearing,

10/26/2023, at 93. He also learned at that time that Appellant had been

granted letters of administration in Philadelphia. See id., at 92-93. However,

Appellee decided not to seek the revocation of those letters until after he had

completed probate proceedings in Guatemala. See id., at 93.

The decedent had executed the 2017 Will in Guatemala with the help of

his personal attorney. The 2017 Will contained no specific bequests, and it

named Appellee as the decedent’s sole heir; it also specified that Appellant

-4- J-S27013-25

was disinherited, and that any subsequent will naming Appellant as an heir

should be invalidated.

The decedent completed an affidavit the day after executing the 2017

Will in which he again emphasized that he intended for Appellee to be his only

heir. It is notable that the decedent also expressed concern in the affidavit

that Appellant might attempt to take advantage of his illness by coercing him

to make her an heir in a subsequent will. Further, the decedent stated in the

affidavit that he wished for Appellee to receive a property he owned in

Philadelphia, located at 5435 North American Street.

Appellee became the executor of the 2017 Will on March 14, 2019, in

Guatemala. See N.T. Hearing 1/31/2024, at 11. Later, in 2020, during the

probate proceedings in Guatemala relating to the 2017 Will, Appellee

contacted an attorney in Pennsylvania. At some point, Appellee discovered

that Appellant had sold the decedent’s Philadelphia property and appropriated

all of the estate’s other assets for her own personal use. See id., at 11, 13,

15.

Appellee gave conflicting accounts as to when he learned that Appellant

had obtained letters of administration and began benefiting personally from

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Est. of: M.L., Appeal of: S. Pacheco, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/est-of-ml-appeal-of-s-pacheco-pasuperct-2026.