In Re Estate of Glover

669 A.2d 1011, 447 Pa. Super. 509, 1996 Pa. Super. LEXIS 6
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 11, 1996
Docket00943
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 669 A.2d 1011 (In Re Estate of Glover) 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 Estate of Glover, 669 A.2d 1011, 447 Pa. Super. 509, 1996 Pa. Super. LEXIS 6 (Pa. Ct. App. 1996).

Opinion

OLSZEWSKI, Judge:

This is an appeal from an order entered in the Court of Common Pleas of Chester County dismissing appellants’ exceptions and rendering the court’s decree final. We affirm in part and reverse in part.

*512 The instant action involves appellants’ continuing challenge to the probate of Frances C. Glover Cloud’s (Frankie) will. Frankie, who passed away on June 7, 1991, was survived by her husband (Edward Cloud), her brother (appellant Rolfe Glover, III), her brother’s children (appellants Rolfe Glover, TV, Katherine Cheney Glover and Gordon Glover), and her husband’s nieces and nephew (appellees Joyce Pierce Kelly, Tammy Pierce Rudge and Martin Pierce, Jr). At the time of her death, Frankie’s estate was valued at approximately eight million dollars.

On June 7, 1991, the Register of Wills of Chester County admitted Frankie’s Last Will and Testament, dated June 29, 1989, to probate. At the same time, the Register also granted Letters Testamentary to Lynn Hurley. On December 9, 1991, the validity of an Antenuptial Agreement, under which Cloud received two million dollars, was upheld pursuant to the stipulation of all parties. While the Antenuptial Agreement has never been questioned, the Glovers did appeal the probate of Frankie’s will on June 5, 1992. After a hearing, the trial court found that the subscribing witnesses had not actually witnessed Frankie sign the will. As such, the court vacated the Register’s Decree of Probate and remanded the case for a further hearing.

On December 2, 1992, the Glovers filed a Caveat with the Register, alleging that the 1989 will was invalid due to undue influence. The Register granted a nonsuit against the Glovers and once again admitted the will to probate and granted Letters of Testamentary to Hurley. The Glovers appealed to the Orphan’s Court Division of the Chester County Court of Common Pleas. On June 22, 1993, while the Glovers’ appeal was still pending, the court removed Hurley as Executrix and appointed Kevin Hollerin, Esq., and Wilmington Trust Company as Administrators Pro Tern. On November 2,1994, the Honorable Alexander Endy, who had presided over fifteen days of testimony conducted over a five-month span, issued his Opinion and Decree Nisi diámissing the Glovers’ appeal and upholding the validity of the will. Upon the filing of exceptions by the Glovers, the court en banc *513 entered an order dated February 9, 1995 making the Decree Nisi final. This appeal follows. 1

On appeal, the Glovers raise the following issues for our review:

1. Whether the trial court erred in failing to find that the probated will was altered after its execution.
2. Whether the trial court erred in failing to find that the probated will was executed as a result of undue influence.
3. Whether the trial court erred in failing to find that the probated will was executed as a result of fraud.

Our standard of review in will contests is well settled. We are limited to:

determining whether the findings of fact approved by the court en banc rest on legally competent and sufficient evidence, and whether an error of law has been made or an abuse of discretion committed. It is not our task to try the case anew. The rule is particularly applicable “to findings of fact which are predicated upon the credibility of witnesses, whom the judge has had the opportunity to hear and observe, and upon the weight given to their testimony.”

In re Estate of Bankovich, 344 Pa.Super, 520, 522-23, 496 A.2d 1227, 1229 (1985) (citations omitted).

Initially, we note that the unscrupulous actions of Hurley lie at the heart of this will contest. Frankie met Hurley at a horse show in 1960 and the women fast became friends. Hurley began assisting Frankie by sorting mail and preparing checks for Frankie’s signature. Eventually, Hurley obtained signatory authority over some of Frankie’s bank accounts. Consequently, Hurley simply drew on these accounts without Frankie’s approval.

*514 In the early 1980’s, Frankie employed Richard Ross as her financial advisor. After suffering a stroke in 1984, Frankie entrusted Ross and Hurley with all of her financial affairs. This was a mistake of exceptional proportion. The trial court found that, between 1987 and 1991, Ross and Hurley unscrupulously misappropriated $1,600,000 from Frankie. “The monies acquired by Ross and Hurley from Frankie were used to fund their various businesses, pay personal credit card accounts, mortgages, utility bills, tax liabilities, two Lincoln Towncars, college tuition and provide spending money.” Opinion, 11/2/94 at 6. Hurley also peculated funds to pay her divorce settlement and to buy and maintain a horse for her daughter.

In their first claim of error, the Glovers contend that Hurley altered Frankie’s will after it had been executed. We disagree. The record supports the following factual findings by the trial court: On June 21, 1989, Ross and Hurley employed the law firm of Eckell, Sparks, Monte, Auerbach and Moses (Eckell, Sparks) to draft a will for .Frankie. The will, as drafted by Eckell, Sparks, provided, in pertinent part, that each of the Pierces would receive $5,000, Richard Ross would receive $50,000, the University of Pennsylvania’s New Bolton Center 2 would receive $1,000,000 and the residue of Frankie’s estate, including her farm, would go to the Glovers. On June 29, 1989, Ross retrieved the will from Eckell, Sparks, picked up Hurley and drove to Frankie’s home.

Frankie and Cloud, who had planned to immediately depart on a trip to Alaska in their motor home after the will signing, waited for Ross and Hurley in the company of Frankie’s old friend, Jayne Kirkpatrick. The motor home’s engine was running as Hurley and Ross arrived. Once inside the motor home, Hurley penned interlineations on the document. Frankie hurriedly reviewed the will, initialled the interlineations and signed her name at the end. Ross then took the document back to Eckell, Sparks, where it was placed in the firm’s vault for safe keeping. In May of 1990, Hurley em *515 ployed Eckell, Sparks to draft Frankie’s Antenuptial Agreement. At that time, the law firm provided Hurley with the original and a copy of Frankie’s will. Hurley never returned the will and the trial court found that “[t]he document offered for probate on June 7, 1991, had apparently been in her possession from May 1990 to June 1991.” Opinion, 11/2/94 at 11.

The 1989 will was probated with the following interlineations intact: the Pierces, not the Glovers, were to receive the farm and Hurley was to receive $50,000. Instantly, the Glovers allege that these interlineations were not the ones that were initialled by Frankie in her motor home on June 29, 1989. Rather, the Glovers contend that Hurley made these alterations and forged Frankie’s initials onto the will after its execution.

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

Related

Trust Under Deed of Walter G, Appeal of:Garrison,M
2023 Pa. Super. 151 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2023)
Shepley, K. v. Richardson, G.
Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2021
In Re: Klionsky, B., Appeal of: Klionsky, M.
Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2020
Est. of Nancy Lynn Landis, Appeal of: Landis, J.
Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2020
In Re: Passarelli Family Trust
Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2017
Com. v. Lavalliere, J.
Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2016
Estate of Sacchetti v. Appeal of Sacchetti
128 A.3d 273 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2015)
R.G. v. I.G.
Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2015
Pierre, A. v. MP Cloverly Partners, LP
Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2015
Estate of Rothberg, S. Appeal of: Rothberg, M.
Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2015
Leach, E. v. Davis, P.
Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2015
In re Estate of LaVeglia
31 Pa. D. & C.5th 190 (Lancaster County Court of Common Pleas, 2013)
In re Estate of Fritts
906 A.2d 601 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2006)
Owens v. Mazzei
847 A.2d 700 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2004)
In Re Estate of Luongo
823 A.2d 942 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2003)
Estate of Glover v. Comm'r
2002 T.C. Memo. 186 (U.S. Tax Court, 2002)
In Re Estate of Angle
777 A.2d 114 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2001)
Chalkey v. Roush
757 A.2d 972 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2000)
In re Estate of Stout
746 A.2d 645 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2000)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
669 A.2d 1011, 447 Pa. Super. 509, 1996 Pa. Super. LEXIS 6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-glover-pasuperct-1996.