In Re Estate of Hatten
This text of 880 So. 2d 1271 (In Re Estate of Hatten) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
In re ESTATE OF Louise HATTEN.
Antoinette Tartaglia, Jeanette Kidd, and Anthony Hatten, Appellants,
v.
Louis Hatten, individually, Appellee.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Third District.
*1272 Jose Saavedra, Miami,for appellants.
Walton Lantaff Schroeder & Carson, Lawrence D. Smith, Miami, and Erich B. Neumann, Coral Gables, for appellee.
Before COPE, GODERICH, and GREEN, JJ.
COPE, J.
This is an appeal of a summary judgment in favor of the defendant in an action for interference with a testamentary expectancy. We conclude that disputed issues of material fact remain, and reverse for further proceedings.
I.
As this is an appeal from a summary judgment, the facts put forth by the plaintiffs are accepted as true for present purposes.
The decedent, Louise Hatten, died August 17, 2001. The decedent had seven brothers and sisters.
In 1996 or 1997 one of the sisters, plaintiff-appellant Antoinette Tartaglia, visited the decedent. The decedent showed plaintiff Tartaglia her will. When Ms. Tartaglia read it, she saw that the decedent had disinherited three family members. The decedent told plaintiff Tartaglia that she disinherited her brothers Louis and George, and her nephew Joseph.[1]
The will left the decedent's property to the three plaintiffs (her sister Antoinette Tartaglia, her sister Jeanette Kidd, and her brother Anthony Hatten), plus a another sister, Helen Parker, who is not a party to this litigation.
In May 2001, plaintiff-appellant Jeanette Kidd vacationed with the decedent. The decedent told plaintiff Kidd the contents of *1273 her will. The description was the same as the contents of the will plaintiff Tartaglia had read in 1996 or 1997. Plaintiff Kidd did not, however, actually see the will.
According to plaintiff-appellant Anthony Hatten, the decedent also described the will to him. Again, the decedent's description of the bequests was the same as those contained in the will plaintiff Tartaglia saw in 1996 or 1997.
On August 17, 2001three months after the conversation between decedent and plaintiff Kidd regarding the contents of the willthe decedent died. The day after the decedent's death, plaintiff Tartaglia and defendant Louis Hatten went to the decedent's home along with a neighbor, Helen Baer.
According to plaintiff Tartaglia, while she and others picked out the clothes in which the decedent would be laid to rest,
[Defendant] Louis [Hatten] was going through all [of decedent] Louises drawers and putting all kinds of papers and documents in a paper bag. He was also putting personal items on the dining room table along with a couple of card board as well as metal boxes, which, he departed the condominium with these items....
[Defendant] Louis [Hatten] never showed me any of the things in the bags or boxes. Not only was there no discussion of their contents, I was never shown what was taken out of the apartment. We never heard anything further about the Will or the contents of what Louis removed from the apartment that day. I firmly believe that Louis found the Will, read it, and discovered that he had been disinherited, and then destroyed the Will.
R. 77.
Thereafter defendant Louis Hatten filed a petition for administration and was named the personal representative of the estate. The estate was opened as an intestate estate. Under Probate Rule 5.200, the verified petition must contain:
(h) in an intestate estate, a statement that after the exercise of reasonable diligence the petitioner is unaware of any unrevoked wills or codicils, or if the petitioner is aware of any unrevoked wills or codicils, a statement why the wills or codicils are not being probated, or otherwise a statement of the facts concerning any such will or codicil....
Fla. Prob. R. 5.200(h) (emphasis added).
The plaintiffs filed an adversary action against the defendant, seeking damages for the tort of interference with a testamentary expectancy. This cause of action was recognized in Florida in DeWitt v. Duce, 408 So.2d 216 (Fla.1981). The cause of action is available where the defendant has maliciously destroyed a will, and the plaintiff is unable to reestablish the destroyed will in a probate proceeding. Id. at 219.
The plaintiffs allege that the decedent had repeatedly told each of them that she had made a will which disinherited Louis, George, and Joseph. The decedent had reconfirmed the existence of the will in May 2001 shortly before her demise in August of 2001. The plaintiffs allege that the will was in the personal papers which the defendant took away from the decedents home the day after her death. They assert that the defendant read the will and destroyed it upon finding that it left him only one dollar. The plaintiffs state that as a result of this malicious destruction, the $700,000 estate will be divided seven ways under the law of intestate succession. Under the will, the three plaintiffs plus nonparty Helen Parker would have each received one fourth.
*1274 The defendant moved for summary judgment. He argued that all of the plaintiffs evidence is barred under (a) hearsay rule and (b) the Dead Mans Statute.
The trial court granted summary judgment for the defendant. The plaintiffs have appealed.
II.
In this case the decedent was known to have made a will. When a decedent who has made a will dies, and the will cannot be found among the decedents personal papers (or other logical locations such as safety deposit box or family lawyer), a presumption arises that the decedent herself destroyed the will, intending to revoke it. See Walton v. Estate of Walton, 601 So.2d 1266, 1266-67 (Fla. 3d DCA 1992).
This presumption is rebuttable, id., and there is a factual issue in this case which precludes summary judgment for the defendant. That is so because in this case the defendant carried away the decedent's personal papers without letting anyone else examine them. He later reported that no will was found. Since the decedents will left the defendant one dollar, but under intestate succession the defendant will take approximately $100,000, there was a motive for the defendant to destroy the will. The defendant denies that he did any such thing, but for summary judgment purposes there is a factual dispute for the trier of fact. See Upson v. Carville, 369 So.2d 113 (Fla. 1st DCA 1979).
III.
Proceeding to the defendant's evidentiary arguments, we first consider the defendant's contentions regarding the hearsay rule.
The defendant maintains that the hearsay rule bars evidence of the contents of the decedent's will. That is not so.
There is a specific hearsay exemption for statements which relate "to the execution, revocation, identification, or terms of the declarants will." 90.803(3)(b), Fla. Stat. (2003). According to Professor Ehrhardt:
Section 90.803(3)(b)1 recognizes that a statement of memory or belief is admissible when it relates to the execution, revocation, identification, or terms of the declarant's will. Generally, courts recognizing an exception of the hearsay rule have provided that a decedent's statements relating to the execution or the revocation of a will are admissible regardless of whether they are made prior or subsequent to the execution or revocation.
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880 So. 2d 1271, 2004 WL 1933545, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-hatten-fladistctapp-2004.