Jaime Jose Cardona, Sylvia Lopez, Hortencia Trevino, Arturo Cardona, Esthela Cardona, Mario Cardona, and Roberto Cardona v. Francisco Cardona

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 30, 2020
Docket09-19-00118-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Jaime Jose Cardona, Sylvia Lopez, Hortencia Trevino, Arturo Cardona, Esthela Cardona, Mario Cardona, and Roberto Cardona v. Francisco Cardona (Jaime Jose Cardona, Sylvia Lopez, Hortencia Trevino, Arturo Cardona, Esthela Cardona, Mario Cardona, and Roberto Cardona v. Francisco Cardona) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Jaime Jose Cardona, Sylvia Lopez, Hortencia Trevino, Arturo Cardona, Esthela Cardona, Mario Cardona, and Roberto Cardona v. Francisco Cardona, (Tex. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

In The

Court of Appeals

Ninth District of Texas at Beaumont

__________________

NO. 09-19-00118-CV __________________

JAIME JOSE CARDONA, SYLVIA LOPEZ, HORTENCIA TREVINO, ARTURO CARDONA, ESTHELA CARDONA, MARIO CARDONA, AND ROBERTO CARDONA, Appellants

V.

FRANCISCO CARDONA, Appellee

__________________________________________________________________

On Appeal from the 284th District Court Montgomery County, Texas Trial Cause No. 17-04-05186-CV __________________________________________________________________

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appellants Jaime Jose Cardona, Sylvia Lopez, Hortencia Trevino, Arturo

Cardona, Esthela Cardona, Mario Cardona, and Roberto Cardona (hereafter

collectively referred to as “appellants”) challenge the trial court’s order dismissing

their lawsuit in part for want of jurisdiction and granting summary judgment in favor

of appellee Francisco Cardona (“Francisco”). We affirm the trial court’s judgment. 1 Background

Following the death of their father, Jose Santos Cardona (hereinafter referred

to as “Decedent”), appellants filed suit against their brother, Francisco, alleging that

Francisco had breached his fiduciary duty to Decedent while serving as his power of

attorney. According to appellants, after Decedent gave Francisco power of attorney

to help handle Decedent’s finances, Francisco sold the Decedent’s home and placed

the proceeds from the sale in an operating account that was made payable on death

to Francisco. Appellants alleged that Francisco had Decedent execute a new will that

named all the children and disposed of Decedent’s estate through an alleged

“phantom trust[.]” According to appellants, Decedent had been diagnosed with

dementia and did not have testamentary capacity to execute a new will, and Decedent

did not understand the contents or the effect of the will because he could not read

English. Appellants alleged that Francisco breached his fiduciary duty as Decedent’s

power of attorney by engaging in self-dealing and obtaining a personal benefit from

transactions involving Decedent’s funds. Appellants further alleged that Francisco

had Decedent execute a new will by using fraud and deceit and/or by exercising

undue influence over Decedent.

Appellants also alleged that Francisco breached his fiduciary duty to

appellants, who trusted that Francisco would assist Decedent with his finances

2 without engaging in self-dealing. According to appellants, Decedent’s wish was for

his estate to be equally divided among his children, but Francisco interfered with

their inheritance rights by breaching his fiduciary duty to obtain full control over all

the funds in Decedent’s estate prior to his death. Appellants sought damages in

excess of $1,000,000 for the loss of inheritance.

In their amended petition, appellants alleged that Francisco breached his

fiduciary duty to appellants, who were named as beneficiaries of the trust in which

Francisco was named as trustee. Appellants alleged that Francisco breached his

fiduciary duty by obtaining control over all the funds in Decedent’s estate and then

failing to add the assets to the trust as mandated by the trust instrument.

Francisco filed a traditional and no-evidence motion for summary judgment.

Francisco stated that prior to Decedent’s death in January 2017, Decedent executed

a statutory durable power of attorney naming Francisco as his agent-in-fact.

According to Francisco, Decedent provided him with all the powers granted by

statute, as well as the ability to name himself beneficiary in any insurance, annuity,

and/or bank accounts and to serve as co-signor for all bank, brokerage and/or savings

accounts. Francisco stated that Decedent instructed him to deposit the proceeds from

the sale of his real property into a Bank of America account (hereafter referred to as

the “BOA account”). Francisco stated that in March 2016, Decedent executed a

3 personal signature card for his BOA account, establishing a joint tenancy with the

right of survivorship in the account between Francisco and Decedent. According to

Francisco, both he and Decedent signed the signature card in their individual

capacities, and Francisco maintained that he did not execute Decedent’s signature in

his capacity as Decedent’s agent under any durable power of attorney. According to

Francisco, this was not the first time Decedent had named him as the survivor or

beneficiary of Decedent’s BOA account.

Francisco stated that after Decedent deposited the proceeds into the BOA

account, Decedent met with Marta Martin, an estate planning attorney, and Decedent

executed, among other documents, a Last Will and Testament and a Declaration of

Trust, naming Francisco as the independent executor and trustee. According to

Francisco, Martin carefully explained each document to Decedent in Spanish in a

private meeting, and Martin did not discover any issues concerning Decedent’s

testamentary capacity and was confident Decedent was not being coerced or

influenced to execute the documents. Francisco stated that Decedent’s will left his

probate estate to the trust, and the trust provisions provided that the trustee should

add assets into the trust that Decedent had made payable to the trustee. Francisco

maintained that Martin explained to Decedent that if he wanted other non-probate

assets to be part of the trust, Decedent would have to take specific actions and

4 reference the trust or trustee. Francisco stated that after Decedent died on January 1,

2017, he probated Decedent’s will and was appointed the independent executor.

Francisco explained that he took possession of the funds in the BOA account, which

were designated to him by right of survivorship. According to Francisco, he had no

legal requirement to share the funds with appellants, and despite his offer to do so,

appellants sued him for allegedly breaching his fiduciary duty and for using fraud,

deceit, or undue influence to have Decedent execute the estate planning documents.

Francisco argued that he is entitled to summary judgment on appellants’

breach of fiduciary duty claims because appellants claims relate solely to the fact

that Decedent made Francisco a joint tenant with the right of survivorship on the

BOA account. Francisco argues that the survivorship agreement was valid and parol

evidence is inadmissible to vary, add, or contradict the terms, and that the contractual

provisions of the survivorship agreement concern a non-probate asset that is not

considered a testamentary transfer. According to Francisco, he cannot have breached

a fiduciary duty to Decedent or to appellants as beneficiaries of the trust, because he

was contractually permitted to take possession of the funds in the BOA account

under a valid survivorship document that Decedent signed in his individual capacity.

Francisco also argues that the provisions of the trust do not apply to the BOA

funds, because the funds could not have been made payable to him as trustee because

5 the trust was created after the execution of the survivorship agreement. Francisco

pointed to Martin’s deposition testimony, in which Martin testified that she

explained to Decedent that he had to specifically leave an asset to the trustee for it

to fund the trust, and Martin testified that Decedent understood that he needed to

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Jaime Jose Cardona, Sylvia Lopez, Hortencia Trevino, Arturo Cardona, Esthela Cardona, Mario Cardona, and Roberto Cardona v. Francisco Cardona, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jaime-jose-cardona-sylvia-lopez-hortencia-trevino-arturo-cardona-texapp-2020.