In Re: Weinberg, S., Appeal of: Antin, L.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 27, 2024
Docket88 WDA 2023
StatusUnpublished

This text of In Re: Weinberg, S., Appeal of: Antin, L. (In Re: Weinberg, S., Appeal of: Antin, L.) 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: Weinberg, S., Appeal of: Antin, L., (Pa. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

J-A09020-24

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT O.P. 65.37

IN RE: SHIRLEY WEINBERG : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF REVOCABLE TRUST DATED JANUARY : PENNSYLVANIA 27, 2011 : : : APPEAL OF: LISA A. ANTIN, : BENJAMIN ANTIN, JASON ANTIN, : INDIVIDUALLY AND AS TRUSTEES : No. 88 WDA 2023

Appeal from the Order Entered January 10, 2023 In the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County Orphans' Court at No(s): 02-19-5237

IN RE: SHIRLEY WEINBERG : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF REVOCABLE TRUST DATED JANUARY : PENNSYLVANIA 27, 2011 : : : APPEAL OF: LISA A. ANTIN, : BENJAMIN ANTIN, JASON ANTIN, : INDIVIDUALLY AND AS TRUSTEES : No. 89 WDA 2023

Appeal from the Order Entered January 13, 2023 In the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County Orphans' Court at No(s): 02-19-5237

BEFORE: DUBOW, J., KUNSELMAN, J., and NICHOLS, J.

MEMORANDUM BY KUNSELMAN, J.: FILED: MARCH 27, 2024

This is a dispute between siblings and cousins over who among them

will inherit Shirley Weinberg’s wealth. Shirley’s Son, Jeffrey Weinberg, and

his adult sons, Jeremy, Jonathan, Justin, and Joshua (collectively “the

Weinbergs”), filed the instant action to void certain amendments to Shirley’s

revocable trust. Shirley’s Daughter, Lisa Antin, and her adult sons, Jason and

Benjamin Antin, who are both attorneys (collectively, “the Antins”), filed these J-A09020-24

appeals from two orders. They did this despite a warning from a judge of this

Court in a prior frivolous appeal and the orphans’ court opinion on the non-

appealability of the orders in question. Because both appeals are frivolous,

we quash and impose sanctions.

Although the Weinbergs began this litigation in August of 2019, the case

is still in the pleadings stage. At this stage of the litigation, we take our facts

from the allegations in the Weinbergs’ Petition, filed February 22, 2022.1

Shirley and her husband, Alvin, lived in Pittsburgh’s Squirrel Hill

neighborhood for over 40 years. Alvin ran a television-repair business and

owned several pieces of real estate. When he died in 2001, Shirley was “in a

position of great difficulty [that caused] her to experience depression and to

rely heavily upon family for assistance.” Amended Petition for Rule to Show

Cause Why Trust Amendments Should Not Be Declared . . . and Why a Trustee

Ad Litem Should Not Be Appointed at 2. Shirley suffered cognitive, emotional,

and psychiatric issues; could be easily influenced; and did not “fully appreciate

or manage her financial affairs . . . .” Id.

Daughter “latched onto [Shirley] and followed her nearly everywhere

she went, becoming the most . . . dominating influence in [Shirley’s] life.” Id.

at 2. Daughter made no useful contributions to the family’s real-estate

business.

____________________________________________

1 Although the Weinberg Grandsons initially filed that petition alone, Shirley’s

Son later joined the petition. Thus, we refer to that operable petition as “the Weinberg Petition.”

-2- J-A09020-24

By contrast, Son helped Shirley sort through the properties, most of

which Alvin had left in disrepair. Son built the real estate into a successful

business, Beacon Holdings. He repaired and remodeled properties, managed

the books and tenants, and served as President of Beacon Holdings. In 2008,

Shirley said “she desired to leave 51% of Beacon Holdings to [Son] given his

enormous contribution to the business, and the fact that the family wealth

would not be at the level it was without his effort.” Id. That announcement

enraged Daughter, who physically assaulted Son. See id. at 3-4. Daughter’s

outburst caused tension between Son and Shirley. Son then resigned from

Beacon Holdings.

Thereafter, the Antins convinced Shirley to fire her legal counsel and

hire Cohen & Grigsby, P.C. (now Dentons Cohen & Grigsby, hereinafter

“Cohen”). Cohen soon made Ben Antin an associate attorney in its Business

Practice Group. Ben and Cohen “provided [Shirley] with legal services,

including estate-planning services, in or about 2011, and continuing onward

through 2018.” Id. at 4. When Ben left Cohen to become general counsel at

one of Cohen’s corporate clients, Cohen immediately hired Ben’s brother,

Jason Antin.

Ben’s new position and influence “created an insurmountable conflict of

interest, such that [Cohen’s] attorneys handling [Shirley’s] estate plan . . .

should have referred [Shirley] to alternative counsel . . . .” Id. at 5. However,

Cohen “continued providing [Shirley] with estate-planning services at regular

intervals, including producing documents that purport to take the benefit of

-3- J-A09020-24

[her] estate . . . worth approximately $15,000,000, away from the

[Weinbergs], and instead give the entire estate to” the Antins. Id.

Shirley and the Weinberg Grandsons had very good relationships “based

upon mutual love, caring, respect, trust, and service to one another.” Id. at

6. They visited and vacationed with Shirley regularly.

Even so, on March 24, 2016, Shirley “signed a document prepared by

. . . Cohen, which completely cut [the Weinbergs] out of [the] trust estate,”

leaving an estimated $15,000,000 trust estate solely to the [Antins] . . . (the

‘Third Amendment’) . . . .” Id. at 8. This Third Amendment was “in

contravention of a decades-long estate plan that treated both families

equally,” while Shirley’s relationship with the Weinberg Grandsons remained

positive. Id. at 8-9. In 2017, she asked Jonathan Weinberg to work for her

at Beacon Holdings. Shirley also paid for him and his wife to remodel and

move into a home near her residence in Squirrel Hill.

On December 12, 2018, Jonathan drove Shirley to see her lawyer at

Cohen to sign documents that would leave that home to him. “Instead, the

document that was placed before her to sign was a purported Fourth Amended

Trust Agreement, which . . . again cut out the Weinbergs from any benefit in

[Shirley’s] trust estate (the ‘Fourth Amendment’).” Id. at 12.

Shortly thereafter, Shirley’s health declined, and she entered the

hospital. On February 16, 2019, Jonathan and his wife stayed with her there.

On her death bed, Shirley still believed her estate would benefit the Weinberg

Grandsons, stating: “wait until you see how I have this all set up for you” and

-4- J-A09020-24

“you will always be taken care of.” Id. The following evening, February 17,

2019, Shirley passed away.

The next day, Ben Antin, as an executor to Shirley’s Estate, changed the

locks at Beacon Holdings but did not give Jonathan Weinberg a key. Within

two weeks, the Antin Grandsons submitted Shirley’s will to probate and began

to administer her estate. The will transferred all of Shirley’s wealth into the

at-issue trust. A month later, the Antins evicted Jonathan and his wife from

the Squirrel Hill home where they were living.

On August 19, 2019, Son petitioned the orphans’ court to compel the

Antins to produce and to record the trust documents. The Antins filed

preliminary objections. Then, on September 24, 2019, the Antins started

transferring millions of dollars’ worth of real estate to Daughter. They also

began extracting more than $1,000,000 to the Antin Family Trust. See id. at

14.

Eventually, in May 2021, the orphans’ court overruled the preliminary

objections to the petition to compel production.

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