In Re: Donald Bany Revocable Living Trust

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 17, 2024
Docket1276 MDA 2023
StatusUnpublished

This text of In Re: Donald Bany Revocable Living Trust (In Re: Donald Bany Revocable Living Trust) 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: Donald Bany Revocable Living Trust, (Pa. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

J-A15038-24

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT O.P. 65.37

IN RE: DONALD BANY REVOCABLE : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF LIVING TRUST : PENNSYLVANIA : : APPEAL OF: MARY LEE METER : : : : : No. 1276 MDA 2023

Appeal from the Order Entered August 18, 2023 In the Court of Common Pleas of Centre County Orphans' Court at No(s): 2020-0301

BEFORE: DUBOW, J., BECK, J., and STEVENS, P.J.E.*

MEMORANDUM BY BECK, J.: FILED DECEMBER 17, 2024

Mary Lee Meter (“Meter”) appeals from the order entered by the Centre

County Orphans’ Court (“orphans’ court”) finding Christopher Snyder

(“Snyder”) an intended beneficiary of the Donald Bany Revocable Trust (the

“Trust”) and entering a declaratory judgment in favor of Snyder. Upon review,

we conclude that the orphans’ court failed to abide by this Court’s remand

order, see In re Donald Bany Revocable Living Trust, 336 MDA 2021,

2022 WL 1284616 (Pa. Super. Apr. 29, 2022) (non-precedential decision)

(“Bany I”), and that its decision is not supported by the evidence of record.

We therefore reverse.

____________________________________________

* Former Justice specially assigned to the Superior Court. J-A15038-24

The certified record reflects the following. Donald Bany (“Decedent”)

died on January 4, 2017. During his life, Decedent had a wife but no children.

Snyder and Meter are brother and sister, and Decedent’s nephew and niece.

During Meter’s childhood, she developed a close relationship with Decedent

and his wife. In 1974, when Meter was eleven years old and Snyder was six

years old, Decedent executed a last will and testament (“the 1974 Will”) in

which he named his wife the sole beneficiary of his estate and designated

Meter as the only contingent beneficiary. The 1974 Will did not include Snyder

as a beneficiary of any kind.

On December 17, 2013, after the death of his wife, Decedent executed

a second last will and testament (“the 2013 Will”). In the 2013 Will, Decedent

named Meter as the sole beneficiary of his estate and designated Meter’s then

husband Dr. Jeffrey Meter (“Dr. Meter”) as the sole contingent beneficiary.

Once again, the 2013 Will did not include Snyder as a beneficiary of any kind.

Along with the 2013 Will, Decedent executed a general power of attorney in

which he named Meter as his sole agent.

On July 9, 2015, Decedent executed the Trust to aid in the distribution

of his assets upon his death. In the Trust, Decedent named himself and Meter

as co-trustees during his lifetime and subsequently Meter as the sole trustee

upon his death.

Relevant to the instant matter, Article 1 of the Trust provides, in

pertinent part:

-2- J-A15038-24

My descendants shall be limited to Mary Lee Meter, my niece, her children and her husband Jeffrey J. Meter and my nephew Christopher Roger Snyder.

Trust, 7/9/2015, Article 1. Additionally, Article 5.2 of the Trust provides, in

relevant part:

5.2 Residuary Trust Estate. The Trustee shall divide the remaining Trust Estate into separate shares for my descendants, per stirpes. The Trustee shall hold each beneficiary’s share as a separate trust under Article 6. If I have no descendants living at my death, the Trustee shall distribute the remaining Trust Estate to Mary Lee Meter and to Jeffrey J. Meter and Christopher Roger Snyder in the event Mary Lee Meter does not survive me[.]

Trust, 7/9/2015, Article 5.2.

Four days later, on July 13, 2015, Decedent executed a third and final

last will and testament (“the 2015 Will”) in which he left all his personal

property to Meter and the residue of his estate to the Trust. Decedent did not

name Snyder as a beneficiary of the 2015 Will. Decedent named Meter as his

sole personal representative and stated that Dr. Meter and Snyder were to

serve as co-personal representatives in the event Meter was unable fulfill that

role.

A prior panel of this Court set forth the procedural history preceding this

appeal as follows:

On July 6, 2020, Snyder filed a petition to show cause why Meter should not be directed to file an account of her administration of the Trust. On August 31, 2020, Meter filed an answer to the petition, as well as a counterclaim seeking a declaratory judgment that Meter is the sole beneficiary of the trust and that Snyder “has no claim to any remaining trust assets.” Counterclaim for Declaratory Judgment, 8/31/20, at ¶ 2. On October 20, 2020, the [o]rphans’ [c]ourt issued an order

-3- J-A15038-24

directing, inter alia, that Meter file an account of her administration within 45 days. On December 4, 2020, Meter filed an amended counterclaim in which she expanded upon her allegations, and to which she attached copies of earlier wills, executed by [Decedent] in 1974 and 2013, that excluded Snyder as a beneficiary. She also attached to the amended pleading a copy of an email from the scrivener of the Trust, Gerald Nowotny, Esquire [(“Nowotny”)], in which he explained that it was [Decedent’s] intent that Meter “would be the only beneficiary of the trust.” Amended Counterclaim, 12/4/20, at Exhibit A.

Following a status conference, on January 7, 2021, the court issued an order again directing Meter to file an account and ordering the parties to file briefs on the issue of whether Snyder is a beneficiary of the Trust. Both parties submitted briefs, and Meter filed her account on January 21, 2021. In her brief, Meter argued that the terms of the Trust—specifically, Articles 1 and 5.2—were “contradictory,” “paradoxical,” and “nonsensical,” and, therefore, ambiguous. Respondent’s Brief in Opposition, 1/15/2021, at 3-4. Accordingly, Meter argued that the court should turn to extrinsic evidence—specifically, [Decedent]’s prior wills and the testimony of the scrivener—to “cut” the “Gordian knot presented by the operative language in the Trust.” Id. at 6.

On February 26, 2021, without holding a hearing, the court issued an opinion and order in which it concluded that the Trust was not, in fact, ambiguous. In particular, the court “[did] not interpret the final sentence of Article 5.2 to create ambiguities in [Decedent’s] intent; instead[,] the court found the sentence to be the result of boilerplate language written by a lackadaisical scrivener.” Orphans’ Court Opinion, 2/26/2021, at 4. The court went on to state that “even assuming, arguendo, that extrinsic evidence was necessary, the documents provided by Meter would not result in a different conclusion by the court” because any documents admitted as extrinsic evidence to elucidate [Decedent]’s intent “must be related to the trust.” Id., citing In Re Blish Trust, 38 A.2d 9 (Pa. 1944). The court concluded that

here, the two documents related to [the] Trust are [Decedent’s] 2015 [W]ill and the Trust Agreement itself. When viewing these together, both documents are consistent and neither establishes an intent on the part of [Decedent] other than for his residuary estate to pass to the Trust which, upon his death, was to then

-4- J-A15038-24

be separated into individual trusts for his named descendants.

Orphans’ Court Opinion, 2/26/2021, at 4.

Bany I, at *1-*2 (record citations modified, original brackets omitted). The

orphans’ court therefore entered an order in favor of Snyder, declaring him to

be a beneficiary of the Trust and determining that he therefore had standing

to compel an accounting of the Trust.

Meter appealed. On April 29, 2022, this Court vacated the orphans’

court’s order, concluding that the language of the Trust was “manifestly

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In Re: Donald Bany Revocable Living Trust, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-donald-bany-revocable-living-trust-pasuperct-2024.