in Re Guise Estate

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 23, 2019
Docket344217
StatusUnpublished

This text of in Re Guise Estate (in Re Guise Estate) 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 Guise Estate, (Mich. Ct. App. 2019).

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 ESTATE OF RANDALL W. GUISE.

DAVID PAVKA, Personal Representative of UNPUBLISHED ESTATE OF RANDALL W. GUISE, July 23, 2019

Appellee,

v No. 344217 Hillsdale Probate Court SUSAN NULL, LC No. 15-035435-DE

Appellant.

Before: SAWYER, P.J., and BORRELLO and SHAPIRO, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

In this probate estate administration matter, Susan Null appeals from the probate court’s order denying her claim on behalf of herself and other members of decedent Randall Guise’s family asserting the right under decedent’s will to the cash value of two automobiles sold by the personal representative of decedent’s estate, David Pavka, to satisfy decedent’s outstanding debts. This matter returns to this Court following additional proceedings in accordance with this Court’s decision in In re Guise Estate, unpublished per curiam opinion of the Court of Appeals, issued November 21, 2017 (Docket No. 334771). In its previous decision, this Court held that Article III of decedent’s will unambiguously devised decedent’s personal belongings to certain family members and that the terms of the will charged Null and another family member, Andrew Guise, with sorting through decedent’s personal property and identifying what personal property ought to be distributed. See Guise, unpub op at 3-4. Recognizing that the mechanics for effecting this identification and distribution arrangement remained imprecise, the panel further held that the will also unambiguously required that remaining personal property not so identified

-1- and distributed, if any, be sold at auction and the proceeds used to supplement other devises to decedent’s church, the humane society, and other various nonfamily recipients. Id.1

The record demonstrates that, on remand, Null performed this required task. However, in this current appeal, Null now claims that there were two additional automobiles that Pavka sold during administration to achieve the liquidity necessary to satisfy other debts of the estate. Null contends that these two automobiles constituted personal property intended for distribution to family members under Article III. Although the will did not specifically identify any particular items of decedent’s personal property, Null argues that the sorting and identification process required by the will and completed by her and Andrew established specific devises that should have had priority for distribution on a proportionate basis as to other specific devises if there were insufficient funds available in the estate. Although the timing of the sale of the automobiles in relation to Null’s sorting and identification of decedent’s personal belongings is not clear in the record, Null would have this Court infer that she did identify, or would have identified, the two automobiles sold by Pavka as personal property that should remain in the family, thus rendering them specific devises. Pavka contends that the devise in Article III is a general devise and that the trial court did not err in rejecting Null’s claim for the vehicles’ cash value. We affirm.

Much of the relevant procedural and factual history of this case is set forth in our previous decision:

This appeal arises from a probate proceeding following the death of Randall W. Guise on October 28, 2015. At the time of his death, Randall was survived by 12 nieces and nephews. Pavka was appointed personal representative to proceed with the informal probate of the estate in November 2015.

Randall executed his last will and testament on July 21, 2015. The will contains the following provision at issue in this case:

“ARTICLE III

“I, Randall W. Guise, upon my death, direct that all of my personal belongings shall be distributed as follows:

“Andrew Guise and Susan Null shall sort through all of the household goods, antiques, tools, and all other items of personal property and identify those items which shall stay within the Guise and Knapp family. Those items identified shall be distributed to members of those families, with the exception of Rhonda Duchette and Bob Guise. Neither of these individuals shall take from my estate and are being purposely omitted.

1 This Court denied Null’s motion for reconsideration of our prior decision. See In re Guise Estate, unpublished order of the Court of Appeals, entered December 27, 2017 (Docket No. 334771).

-2- “The remainder of personal property shall be placed for sale at auction and any proceeds therefrom shall be distributed pursuant to Article VII below.”

Article VII provides a list of persons and charities to which the proceeds should be given.

In February 2016, Null met with five other nieces and nephews and distributed Randall’s personal belongings. Null retained a John Deere tractor for herself and later sold it for $2,000. Pavka subsequently moved the probate court for an order requiring Null to return the $2,000 and any other items removed from Randall’s home. According to the motion, Article III only allowed the identification and distribution of heirlooms, not all personal property. Pavka argued that the John Deere tractor and other valuable items were not heirlooms and should not have been distributed to Null. Null responded that Article III mandated the identification and distribution of all of Randall’s personal property and that she had not acted beyond the scope of her authority. Later, Thomas Guise—Randall’s nephew—objected to the distribution, stating that he had not been informed of the February 2016 meeting and that the distribution was unfair.

The probate court adopted Pavka’s interpretation of the will, holding that Article III only provided for the identification and distribution of heirlooms due to Article III’s language of “shall stay within . . . the family.” The probate court ordered Null to return the $2,000 received from the sale of the tractor. It also ordered that a family-only auction should be held as to certain items—a golf cart, a Ford tractor, and a Great Dane semi-trailer—with the proceeds being distributed under Article VII. [Guise, unpub op at 1-2.]

On appeal, Null argued that the probate court erred when it determined that Article III of decedent’s will pertained only to heirlooms and not all personal property, including any vehicles, trailers, or tractors. Id. at 2. We agreed:

Pursuant to the plain language contained within Randall’s will, we conclude that Article III directed Null and Andrew to identify which of Randall’s personal belongings would be distributed to the family members versus which would be sold at auction. Null’s and Andrew’s authority to identify these items was limited only to personal property. The words “which shall stay within” defines a subset of the personal property of items that were not to be sold at auction by operation of the will based on Null’s and Andrew’s discretion. [Id. at 3.]

Accordingly, we concluded:

The probate court erred in its determination that Article III only allowed for the identification and distribution of heirlooms to Randall’s family rather than all personal property. However, although Article III gave Null and Andrew the authority to identify which personal belongings should be distributed to Randall’s family and which personal belongings should be auctioned for the benefit of the

-3- persons and charities named in Article, [sic] VII, Article III did not give Null and Andrew the authority to distribute the personal belongings. Accordingly, Null’s distribution of Randall’s personal belongings was beyond the scope of her authority.

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in Re Guise Estate, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-guise-estate-michctapp-2019.