In Re Estate of Burger

898 A.2d 547, 587 Pa. 164, 2006 Pa. LEXIS 849
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 25, 2006
Docket16 WAP 2005
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 898 A.2d 547 (In Re Estate of Burger) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme 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 Estate of Burger, 898 A.2d 547, 587 Pa. 164, 2006 Pa. LEXIS 849 (Pa. 2006).

Opinions

OPINION

Justice SAYLOR.

In this appeal, Appellant challenges a determination that she lacks standing to pursue a will contest. The outcome turns on a statutory rule of interpretation applicable to wills, which embodies the public policy disfavoring partial intestacy.

[167]*167In March 2000, Regis F. Burger, M.D. (“Dr. Burger”) prepared the last of a series of several wills, in which he named five beneficiaries to share in the residue of his estate. Dr. Burger was a widower with no children of his own, and the residuary legatees were the heirs of his deceased sister, Anzelma Burger Nash, including her granddaughter, Linda Nash (“Appellee”), each of whom was designated to receive a specified, fractionalized share of the residue. For example, with regard to Appellee, who was to receive the largest share, the will provided as follows:

I give 50% of my residuary estate to LINDA NASH, 120 Bingay Drive, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15237. If LINDA NASH does not survive me, the assets which would have been distributed to her had she survived me shall be distributed proportionally to the other persons entitled to distribution pursuant to this paragraph SEVENTH.

The residuary clause was similar to those that were contained in prior wills, but Dr. Burger had increased Appellee’s share of the residuary estate in each new will, from twenty-five percent in 1998, to thirty-four percent in 1999, to fifty percent in 2000. The March 2000 will also named Appellee and National City Bank of Pennsylvania as executors, as distinguished from earlier wills in which solely the bank was designated. This will, however, like the prior wills, did not mention Dr. Burger’s brother James, or James’ daughter and heir, Janice Burger Leckey (“Appellant”).

Dr. Burger died in November 2002, leaving an estate valued at over $2.5 million, the bulk of which qualified as residue under his March 2000 will. The executors caused the will to be admitted to probate and procured letters testamentary. Appellant filed a notice of appeal and initiated a limited will contest in the orphan’s court via a petition for citation to show cause why the instrument should not be set aside in part.

In her petition, Appellant did not. question Dr. Burger’s capacity to execute his last will and did not challenge the particular legacies or the residuary bequests to his sister’s heirs other than Appellee. Appellant alleged, however, that the increases in the residuary bequest to Appellee, and her [168]*168appointment as executrix, were the product of undue influence. In this regard, Appellant averred that, as of March 1999, Dr. Burger had granted a broad power of attorney in favor of Appellee and, by the end of that year, Dr. Burger’s physical and mental condition had weakened and Appellee had assumed responsibility for his finances, terminated the services of a twenty-four-hour caregiver, and otherwise engendered and exploited a confidential relationship. According to Appellant, the twenty-five percent increase in the residuary bequest to Appellee should therefore be deemed void, and' the result should be a partial intestacy, from which Appellant should benefit as the person nearest by degree of consanguinity to Dr. Burger, and his fifty-percent intestate heir.

Appellee filed preliminary objections in the nature of a demurrer, contending that Appellant lacked standing to pursue her limited will contest, because Dr. Burger’s will provided for a complete distribution of his residuary estate; Appellant was not a beneficiary thereof; and she would not otherwise benefit from a determination that the will was partially invalid. See generally Carother’s Estate, 300 Pa. 185, 188, 150 A. 585, 586 (1930) (“Where the contestant to a will that is void in part receives no benefit from the contest he is not entitled to sustain a caveat nor take an appeal from the action of the court belowf.]”).1 Appellee recognized that, in the absence of a will, Appellant would be an intestate heir; nevertheless, she contended that Dr. Burger’s provision for an alternate disposition of residuary bequests that would fail by reason of the beneficiary’s death evinced an intention that the same disposition should ensue should a [169]*169residuary bequest fail for any other reason. Further, in her supporting brief, Appellee cited a rule of interpretation set forth in Section 2514(11) of the Probate, Estates and Fiduciaries Code, which applies in the absence of a contrary intent discernable from a will. See 20 Pa.C.S. § 2514 (“In the absence of a contrary intent appearing therein, wills shall be construed as to real and personal estate in accordance with the following rules[.]”). Clause (11), which resides among several others that are designed to avoid partial intestacy and function as anti-lapse and void legacy provisions, prescribes as follows:

(11) Lapsed and void devises and legacies; shares in residue. When a devise or bequest as described in clause (10) hereof shall be included in a residuary clause of the will and shall not be available to the issue of the devisee or legatee under the provision of clause (9) hereof,[2] and if the disposition shall not be otherwise expressly provided for by law, it shall pass to the other residuary devisees or legatees, if any there be, in proportion to their respective shares or interests in the residue.

20 Pa.C.S. § 2514(11). According to Appellee, this clause, and the associated decisional law, dictate that any failed devise or bequest, including a share of the residuary estate, would fall to the remaining residuary beneficiaries.

In her response, Appellant relied on clause (ll)’s specific cross-reference to the preceding clause, clause (10), which establishes a presumption applicable to specific devises and bequests, as follows:

(10) Lapsed and void devises and legacies; shares not in residue. A devise or bequest not being pari of the residuary estate which shall fail or be void because the beneficiary fails to survive the testator or because it is contrary to law or otherwise incapable of taking effect or which has been [170]*170revoked by the testator or is undisposed of or is released or disclaimed by the beneficiary, if it shall not pass to the issue of the beneficiary under the provisions of clause (9) hereof, and if the disposition thereof shall not be otherwise expressly provided for by law, shall be included in the residuary devise or bequest, if any, contained in the will.

20 Pa.C.S. § 2514(10) (emphasis added). Since under a literal reading clause (11) of Section 2514 applies only to “a devise or bequest as described in clause (10),” and clause (10) pertains only to specific or particular gifts, Appellant maintained that clause (11) cannot apply to a lapsed or void residuary bequest as such. See Brief In Opposition to Preliminary Objections of Linda Nash, at 5 (“In short, the Rule in clause (11) of the section, by its terms, applies to bequests which were originally not part of the Residuary, but, by the provisions of clause (10), are made part of the Residuary. The plain language of 20 Pa.C.S. § 2514(11) does not apply to a failed bequest which was originally part of the Residuary.”).

The orphan’s court sustained the preliminary objections, agreeing with Appellee’s position that Appellant lacked standing.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Hallowell, S. v. Hallowell, W.
Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2023
County of Fulton v. Sec. of Com., Aplt.
Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 2023
MFW Wine Co., LLC v. PA LCB
Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania, 2022
L.D. v. K.J.D.
Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2021
Lombardo, L. v. Stephens, R.
Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2019
Saint Luke's Hospital v. 736 Delaware Associates
Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2018
H.T. v. K.T.
Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2016
C. Meade v. City of Philadelphia
Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania, 2015
In Re Estate of Harper
975 A.2d 1155 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2009)
Scalfaro v. Rudloff
934 A.2d 1254 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 2007)
In Re Estate of Burger
898 A.2d 547 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 2006)
McMeekin v. Gimbel Brothers, Inc.
223 F. Supp. 896 (W.D. Pennsylvania, 1963)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
898 A.2d 547, 587 Pa. 164, 2006 Pa. LEXIS 849, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-burger-pa-2006.