In Re Bloch

625 A.2d 57, 425 Pa. Super. 300, 1993 Pa. Super. LEXIS 1554
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 11, 1993
Docket3185
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 625 A.2d 57 (In Re Bloch) 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
In Re Bloch, 625 A.2d 57, 425 Pa. Super. 300, 1993 Pa. Super. LEXIS 1554 (Pa. Ct. App. 1993).

Opinion

*302 POPOVICH, Judge:

This case involves an appeal from the order of the Court of Common Pleas of Lehigh County, Orphans’ Court Division, dismissing the appeal of the Appellants 1 from the decree of the Register of Wills admitting to probate the will and codicil of Mamie Myrtle Bloch, deceased. We affirm.

The record discloses that the Appellants filed a petition for declaratory judgment 2 seeking to invalidate the 1983 will of the decedent on grounds of undue influence, breach of the attorney-client relationship by the scrivener of the will (Charles E. Shoemaker, Jr., hereinafter “Charles Jr.”), noncompliance with conditions precedent by the beneficiaries and the scrivener’s violation of the Rules of Professional Responsibility (1.8 3 ) in preparing a will in which his father (Charles E. Shoemaker, Sr., hereinafter “Charles Sr.”) and his paramour (Cheryl Passaro) were the residuary legatees.

A hearing was conducted on January 16, 1991, wherein it was recounted that in April of 1983, the decedent inquired of Charles Sr. if he could recommend an attorney to assist her and her husband in preparing wills. Charles Sr. indicated that his son, Charles Jr., was an attorney.

Thereafter, the Blochs made an appointment with Charles Jr. During the course of the meeting, the Blochs indicated their intention to allow for disposition of each’s estate to the other. Should one predecease the other, however, the remaining estate was to be divided equally between Charles Sr. and Ms. Passaro. Also, Charles Sr. was to be designated as executor should Mr. Bloch not survive his wife.

When counsel asked why such a distributive scheme, when there were existing family members, the Blochs explained that: “They were not on close terms with any of the family *303 members, and that this is what they had planned to do, and this is what they had wanted to do.” N.T. 78. Specifically, when Charles Jr. asked as to the natural objects of their bounty (i.e., brother, sisters, niece and nephew), the Blochs “chose not to leave any thing to any of those people.” N.T. 175. Charles Jr. did not recall the “exact language used [by the Blochs], but it was not complimentary to the family members. What they desired to do was to — , to make a gift to the two people they were closest to.” 4 Id.

In compliance with the wishes of the Blochs, Charles Jr. prepared their wills and forwarded them for review. Included in the documents were identical Articles IV and V, which read:

ARTICLE IV. GIFT OF PERSONAL AND HOUSEHOLD EFFECTS
I give all my automobiles, and all my other articles of personal or household use, together with all insurance relating thereto to my [spouse], if [s/]he survives me by thirty (30) days. If [s/]he does not so survive me, I give all such property to Charles E. Shoemaker, Sr. and Cheryl Passaro, in equal shares, who have agreed to care for my [spouse] and myself for as long as we each shall live, utilizing any or all of such property for this purpose, and who have agreed to care for my dog and cats for as long as said shall live. ARTICLE V. RESIDUARY ESTATE
*304 I give, devise and bequeath the rest, resideue [sic] and remainder to my [spouse] ... if [s/]he survives me by thirty (30) days. If [s/]he does not so survive me, I direct that the rest, residue and remainder of my estate shall be divided into two (2) equal shares and distributed to Charles E. Shoemaker, Sr. and Cheryl Passaro, in equal shares, who have agreed to care for my [spouse] and myself for as long was we each shall live, utilizing any or all of such property for this purpose, and who have agreed to care for my dog and cats for as long as said shall live.

Also, Charles Sr. was named as the contingent executor should Mr. Bloch predecease Mrs. Bloch.

On April 19, 1983, the Blochs’ wills were executed, witnessed and notarized (as self-executing wills) in counsel’s office. The next time counsel heard from Mrs. Bloch was in 1986. Mr. Bloch had died and Mrs. Bloch asked Charles Jr. to probate her husband’s will. This was accomplished. Late in 1986, Mrs. Bloch again contacted Charles Jr. to alter her will and make specific bequests of personal property to a variety of people. Counsel recommended that a codicil be drawn. Mrs. Bloch agreed and an amendment to the 1983 will was drafted and executed on December 31, 1986.

On July 27, 1987, Mrs. Bloch contacted Charles Jr. about changing her 1983 will and 1986 codicil in order to revise the distribution of her estate, a change which deleted Charles Sr. and Ms. Passaro and devised the property to the decedent’s nephew (Jack Conway, who was to receive her two cats and dog) and sister (Mildred Conway, who was to be the recipient of a marble table). 5 The remaining portion of the estate and *305 all insurance were to be divided equally among the sisters and brother of the decedent, i.e., Mildred Conway, Cora Fox, Betty Crayosky (who has since died), and Hiram Becker. See Article 4, Exhibit 0-3.

Under the residuary clause of the proposed 1987 will, the previously named sisters and brother were listed as residuary legatees.

On August 26, 1987, Charles Jr. sent a letter with a copy of the new will to Mrs. Bloch. He directed her to review the instrument and make any corrections she deemed necessary. If there were no changes, Mrs. Bloch was to phone Charles Jr. for an appointment to execute the originals. This never came to pass.

Upon Mrs. Bloch’s death, Charles Sr. and Ms. Passaro learned for the first time while attending her funeral that they were included in the decedent’s will. When the decedent’s 1983 will was submitted for probate by Charles Sr. and Ms. Passaro, the Appellants claimed the will was invalid and sought confirmation of this assertion by way of a Declaratory Judgment. Once a hearing had been held, the Orphans’ Court dismissed the Declaratory Judgment as an incorrect procedure by which to assail the validity of the 1983 will. The proper course was to have the matter reviewed, initially, by the Register of Wills. 6

The Register of Wills admitted the 1983 will and 1986 codicil for probate. On review by the Orphans’ Court, which the parties stipulated could be limited to the testimony proffered at the January 16, 1991, hearing, the appeal of the decree of the Register of Wills’ admission of the decedent’s will and codicil was dismissed. This appeal followed.

The first issue raised by the Appellants concerns the claim that the will of 1983 is invalid on the basis that the *306 decedent was unduly influenced in the preparation of the document.

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Bluebook (online)
625 A.2d 57, 425 Pa. Super. 300, 1993 Pa. Super. LEXIS 1554, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-bloch-pasuperct-1993.