Lizbeth A. Larkin, in her capacity as of the Estate of Catherine I. Ryan v. Michaela Arthurs Michaela Arthurs v. Lizbeth Larkin

210 A.3d 1184
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJune 17, 2019
Docket17-56, 183
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 210 A.3d 1184 (Lizbeth A. Larkin, in her capacity as of the Estate of Catherine I. Ryan v. Michaela Arthurs Michaela Arthurs v. Lizbeth Larkin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lizbeth A. Larkin, in her capacity as of the Estate of Catherine I. Ryan v. Michaela Arthurs Michaela Arthurs v. Lizbeth Larkin, 210 A.3d 1184 (R.I. 2019).

Opinion

This contentious and regrettable family dispute revolves around the distribution of the assets of the parties' deceased mother, Catherine Ignatia Ryan. 1 Two of Mrs. Ryan's children, Michaela Arthurs and Mark Ryan, appeal from the November 9, 2016 final judgments in two Washington County Superior Court actions that were treated in a consolidated manner in that court and are likewise being reviewed by us in a consolidated manner. Before us are the Superior Court's rulings with respect to the substance of two orders of the Probate Court of the Town of South Kingstown. 2 Those rulings of the Superior Court provided that: (1) as to two specific bank accounts at BankNewport, those accounts were not estate assets and should be distributed pursuant to paragraph three of Catherine's will- i.e. , one should be distributed to Lisa and the other to Lizbeth rather than being divided equally among all four of Catherine's children; and (2) there was no basis to remove Lizbeth as executrix of Catherine's estate. Michaela and Mark timely appealed both judgments of the Superior Court to this Court.

For the reasons set forth in this opinion, we affirm both judgments of the Superior Court.

I

Facts and Travel

It is undisputed that Catherine died on January 14, 2013. It is also undisputed that, at some point in 2012 after having sold her house, Catherine deposited the proceeds of the sale into an account at Washington Trust (the proceeds account). It is undisputed that Catherine then drew upon the proceeds account by having two checks issued in her name in the amount of $ 50,000 each. The parties further agree that, in October of 2012, those checks were deposited into two bank accounts at BankNewport, into each of which was deposited $ 50,000. The first account indicates that its owners are "Catherine I. Ryan or Lizbeth Larkin." The second account indicates that its owners are "Catherine I. Ryan or Lisa A. Ryan." Neither account was specifically identified as being a joint account with right of survivorship (nor did either account contain any indication to the contrary).

In early February of 2013, Lizbeth filed in the Probate Court a petition to probate Catherine's last will and testament. (Catherine's will had named Lizbeth as executrix.) When Lizbeth filed the universal inventory with the Probate Court, she did not make reference therein to the two BankNewport accounts. 3 Michaela and Mark then proceeded to file an objection to the inventory, contending that the two BankNewport accounts should have been included.

On July 25, 2013, the probate judge ordered Lizbeth to amend the inventory by including therein the two BankNewport accounts. Lizbeth did not appeal that order to the Superior Court, and she amended the inventory. Several months later, on February 5, 2014, the probate judge issued another order, which provided that the two accounts were part of what he termed as the "general inventory" of the estate. He then determined that the proceeds from those accounts should be distributed under paragraph six of Catherine's will, pursuant to which they would be distributed "in equal shares" among the four siblings. Lizbeth timely appealed the latter order to the Superior Court.

On March 19, 2014, Michaela and Mark filed what was titled a "renewed motion" in the Probate Court seeking to remove Lizbeth as executrix. On June 17, 2014, the probate judge issued an order denying that motion. Michaela and Mark then timely appealed that order to the Superior Court.

The two appeals from the Probate Court were consolidated, and a trial was held in the Superior Court on November 30, 2015. At the trial, Lizbeth testified that, in October of 2012, Catherine had been informed by her doctors "that she only had a matter of months to live." Lizbeth further testified that, on October 16, 2012, a few days after receiving what Catherine referred to as her "death sentence," Catherine requested Lizbeth to drive her to an office of Washington Trust. It was Lizbeth's testimony that, at Washington Trust, Catherine asked that two $ 50,000 bank checks be made out to her from her account at that bank with the balance to remain in a Washington Trust account in her name. Lizbeth testified that, upon leaving Washington Trust, Catherine stated that the funds left in the Washington Trust account after the withdrawal of the two $ 50,000 checks "would be her probate." Lizbeth said that her mother then asked to be taken to an office of BankNewport and to have Lisa meet them there.

Lizbeth further testified that Lisa did meet them at BankNewport and that Catherine told a bank representative that she wanted to open one account for Lisa and another account for Lizbeth. Into each of those two accounts Catherine deposited one of the $ 50,000 Washington Trust checks. It was Lizbeth's further testimony that Catherine told her that "the probate was set up * * * and whatever was left [was] to be divided by four * * *."

Lisa also testified at trial. She stated that, at the time of the opening of the BankNewport accounts, Catherine told her that she wanted one of the accounts to belong to Lizbeth and one to Lisa.

There were several joint exhibits admitted into evidence at trial, including: Catherine's will; the deposition testimony of Lisa Sellar, a "retail banking administrator" in the employ of BankNewport; the deposition testimony of Paul Ragosta, the attorney who had advised Catherine concerning her will and drafted the will at issue; and a letter from Lizbeth to Michaela relative to Catherine's estate. Pertinent portions of those exhibits will be discussed hereinafter.

Several months later, on August 31, 2016, the trial justice issued a bench decision. He first addressed and then rejected the arguments of Michaela and Mark to the effect that the appeal should be rejected on "law of the case," res judicata , or "jurisdictional" grounds. He proceeded to hold that, after considering the principles set forth in this Court's opinion in the case of Robinson v. Delfino , 710 A.2d 154 (R.I. 1998), 4 the absence of a designation on the two BankNewport accounts relative to the survivorship issue was, in his words, "the product of a mistake by the bank * * *." 5 He further determined that that mistake allowed for the examination of extrinsic evidence as to Catherine's intent because "the Court can't go simply on the face of these two accounts * * *." He then found that "the two accounts, although on their face [they] do not contain a designation of a right of survivorship * * * were accounts that were created with the right of survivorship." The trial justice proceeded to hold that the two BankNewport accounts "should be distributed pursuant to the terms of paragraph 3 of the will * * *." Accordingly, he concluded that each of the two BankNewport accounts should be distributed to Lisa and Lizbeth respectively as surviving owners and should not be divided among all four siblings equally pursuant to paragraph six of the will.

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210 A.3d 1184, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lizbeth-a-larkin-in-her-capacity-as-of-the-estate-of-catherine-i-ryan-v-ri-2019.