In Re Franz Weiser Revocable Trust

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 20, 2023
Docket363537
StatusUnpublished

This text of In Re Franz Weiser Revocable Trust (In Re Franz Weiser Revocable Trust) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Franz Weiser Revocable Trust, (Mich. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

If this opinion indicates that it is “FOR PUBLICATION,” it is subject to revision until final publication in the Michigan Appeals Reports.

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

In re FRANZ WEISER REVOCABLE TRUST.

JEREMY GREGG and ERICA GREGG, UNPUBLISHED July 20, 2023 Petitioners-Appellants,

v No. 363537 Huron Probate Court HILDA WEISER and REINER KREISSIG, Co- LC No. 2022-042593-TV Trustees for the FRANZ WEISER REVOCABLE TRUST,

Respondents-Appellees.

Before: GLEICHER, C.J., and JANSEN and HOOD, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

Concerned that their aunt and uncle had unduly influenced their grandparents to disinherit them, Jeremy and Erica Gregg filed a petition to either invalidate their grandfather’s trust or for court supervision. After specifically instructing the parties that it was not yet time to address the merits of the Greggs’ undue influence claim, the court sua sponte dismissed the petition, asserting that the Greggs failed to support it. This surprise order of dismissal contravened the Greggs’ right to due process. We vacate the order dismissing the petition and remand for further proceedings.

I. BACKGROUND

Franz and Maria Weiser were married for approximately 60 years. Maria entered the marriage with a young son, Reiner Kreissig, whom Franz helped raise. The couple had two daughters, Gunda and Hilda. Gunda died in 1990, leaving two children, Jeremy and Erica Gregg.

The Greggs contend that the Weisers’ 1992 estate plan provided for their inheritance of Gunda’s share by representation. The cotrustees state on appeal that “no copies of the 1992 Wills are known to exist.” A durable power of attorney executed by Maria in 1992 is of record, however. In 2015, Franz and Maria Weiser executed new wills, naming Reiner and Hilda as their sole heirs

-1- and specifically stating: “In making this Will, I have duly considered the natural objects of my bounty and specifically and conscientiously exclude, disinherit, and leave nothing to either Jeremiah Gregg or Ericka Gregg or to their children or Grandchildren.”1

In 2018, following Maria’s entry into a nursing home, Franz established the Franz Weiser Revocable Trust. The trust identified Franz and Maria’s living and deceased children and stated that Reiner and Hilda were the only beneficiaries of the trust. The trust also identified “Jeremiah Gregg” and “Ericka Gregg” as Franz’s grandchildren and stated that he “intentionally, with full knowledge, [had] chosen to exclude [them] and [their] descendants under the terms of [his] Trust Agreement.”

Maria died on August 18, 2019, at the age of 97. Franz died on December 12, 2020. Erica did not learn of her grandfather’s passing until July 6, 2021. The Greggs asserted that Reiner and Hilda intentionally concealed their grandparents’ deaths from them.

In an affidavit, Erica asserted that after Gunda’s passing, the Weisers held her personal belongings in safekeeping with the promise they would be returned to Jeremy and Erica. However, Reiner and Hilda refused to release those items after the Weisers’ deaths. Erica described that Hilda convinced her grandparents not to take her and Jeremy in after their mother’s passing and they were sent to live with their father, a relative stranger to them. In their absence, Erica alleged that Hilda sold their mother’s home and took their family’s personal belongings. These conditions “put a continued strain on the relationship” between the Greggs and their grandparents, but they “work[ed] on [the] relationship” and “moved on from the past.”

In April 2022, Jeremy and Erica Gregg filed a petition for court supervision of the trust, to invalidate the trust based on undue influence, to ascertain the trust beneficiaries, and for an inventory and accounting. The Greggs identified themselves as trust beneficiaries. They alleged that the Weisers’ original estate plan provided for Jeremy and Erica to inherit their mother’s share of the estate by representation.

However, in January of 2018, while MARIA WEISER was incapacitated, HILDA WEISER and REINER KREISSIG convinced FRANZ WEISER through undue influence to change his estate planning and form the FRANZ WEISER REVOCABLE LIVING TRUST DATED JANUARY 16, 2018, transferring all of his and MARIA WEISER’s assets into the Trust and making [sic] HILDA WEISER and REINER KREISSIG as successor Co-Trustees.

The Greggs asserted that they, “by way of representation, are the natural objects of FRANZ WEISER’S bounty,” and therefore, “it is presumed that they would be provided for as beneficiaries under this new Trust unless there was undue influence” on Franz from Hilda and Reiner. The Weisers “would never have disinherited their grandchildren . . ., the last remaining legacy of their departed daughter GUNDA” absent undue influence, the Greggs alleged. The Greggs further

1 Jeremy and Erica Gregg’s names were misspelled in both the 2015 wills and 2018 trust, a fact we return to later in this opinion.

-2- noted that Hilda and Reiner had rejected their many requests to produce the trust documents, informing the Greggs that they were not trust beneficiaries but providing no proof.

The probate court conducted a pretrial conference on May 18, 2022. The court indicated that no evidentiary hearing would be conducted that day. “[T]oday’s proceeding will be conducted really as a pretrial conference to see where we are, what’s going to happen with evidentiary hearings, discovery, things like that.” The court indicated that it would order a 90-day period for discovery. The Greggs noted that the first step would be production of the trust. Counsel for the cotrustees, Michelle Biddinger, asserted that as the Greggs were not beneficiaries of the trust, they were not entitled to production of the trust documents. The court indicated, “I think what we need to do is to set a hearing on that . . . immediately.” That would be “the starting point.”

Regarding the issue of undue influence, the Greggs’ counsel, Vincent Farougi, stated:

[W]e’re dealing with . . . an issue of undue influence and whether that creation of that trust . . . was unduly influenced by Hilda and Reiner. Now, we have one piece of evidence, one paper, allegedly from the trust, which has given us clues that there was undue influence and that the testator did not know what he was doing. He names his step-son as his living child; which he’s not his living child. He names his grandson Jeremiah; . . . Jeremiah, it’s not even his name. So, we have two clues that Franz didn’t know what he was signing. But that’s one page out of the trust; that which happened to be attached as an exhibit to their response. So . . . we want to see the whole trust so we can show further evidence that Franz was either not of his right mind and/or there was - -

The court interrupted, acknowledging that the Greggs alleged undue influence but indicating that the court was “inclined to start with” answering whether the Greggs were entitled to discovery of the trust documents. The court continued that it was sua sponte ordering a hearing on the sole issue of whether the Greggs were entitled to production of the trust documents. “[W]e’re not talking about undue influence or anything.” Given that the court limited the issue then before it, no scheduling order entered.

In July 2022, the court heard oral argument regarding the production of the trust documents. Attorney Farougi argued that he required production of the trust documents to ascertain whether Franz was subject to undue influence. He contended that were clues from the one page provided to the Greggs that Franz had not read the document. The document referred to Reiner as Franz’s living child, when he was actually Franz’s stepchild. The document incorrectly referred to Jeremy as Jeremiah and misspelled Erica’s name.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
In Re Franz Weiser Revocable Trust, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-franz-weiser-revocable-trust-michctapp-2023.