Mark Vance v. Gus G. Tamborello, Independent Administrator With Will and Codicil Annexed of the Estate of Robert Wesley Vance

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 27, 2010
Docket14-09-00231-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Mark Vance v. Gus G. Tamborello, Independent Administrator With Will and Codicil Annexed of the Estate of Robert Wesley Vance (Mark Vance v. Gus G. Tamborello, Independent Administrator With Will and Codicil Annexed of the Estate of Robert Wesley Vance) 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.

Bluebook
Mark Vance v. Gus G. Tamborello, Independent Administrator With Will and Codicil Annexed of the Estate of Robert Wesley Vance, (Tex. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

Affirmed and Memorandum Opinion filed April 27, 2010.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

___________________

NO. 14-09-00231-CV

Mark Vance, Appellant

V.

Gus G. Tamborello, Independent Administrator with Will and Codicil Annexed of the Estate of Robert Wesley Vance, Deceased, Appellee

On Appeal from the Probate Court No. 2

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 376,481

NO. 14-09-00315-CV

CAMERON MCCULLOCH, Independent Administrator with Will and Codicil Annexed of the Estate of RUBY LEE VANCE, Deceased, Appellee

On Appeal from the Probate Court No. 1

Trial Court Cause No. 369,088

MEMORANDUM OPINION

In these consolidated appeals appellant Mark Vance challenges the probate courts’ orders overruling Mark’s[1] objections to the inventories filed by appellees Gus G. Tamborello and Cameron McCulloch, independent administrators of the estates of Robert Wesley Vance and Ruby Lee Vance, respectively.  In both causes, Mark’s objections are based on the treatment of an individual-retirement account (IRA) in Robert’s name.  For the reasons below, we conclude Mark has not established that the probate courts abused their discretion in overruling Mark’s objections.  Accordingly, we affirm in both causes.

I

            Robert and Ruby were husband and wife.  They had three children—Mark, Michael, and Joe.

During their marriage, both Robert and Ruby had IRA accounts, in their respective names, with Merrill Lynch.[2]  Each designated the other as the primary beneficiary.[3]  Robert did not name a contingent beneficiary.  Robert’s IRA agreement included the following provision:  “If you have not designated a beneficiary, or if no beneficiary survives you, your IRA balance will be paid to your surviving spouse, or, if you are not survived by your spouse, to your estate.”

On December 27, 2006, Ruby died.  By her will, she gave her personal property to Robert and the remainder of her estate in trust to Robert for life.  On termination of the trust by Robert’s death, the remaining property was to be distributed per stirpes to Ruby’s then-living descendants.

On November 9, 2007, Probate Court No. 1 approved the inventory for Ruby’s estate.  The inventory did not include either Robert’s or Ruby’s IRA.

On November 20, 2007, Robert died.  Given Ruby’s prior death, Mark, Michael, and Joe were the beneficiaries of Robert’s will.  Ruby’s IRA was still in her name, and administration of the trust for Robert’s benefit, set forth in Ruby’s will, had not been completed.

Robert’s will was admitted to probate on December 11, 2007.  On June 6, 2008, Probate Court No. 2 granted administrator Tamborello’s motion for an order transferring the funds in Robert’s and Ruby’s IRA accounts in three equal shares into inherited IRA accounts for Mark, Michael, and Joe.  In its order the court stated that the following facts, among others, were undisputed:  (1) the beneficiaries had appeared in the action and were properly before the court; and (2) Mark and Michael objected to transfer of the IRA assets into new accounts at Merrill Lynch, but desired their shares of the IRA accounts to be transferred directly to accounts in their names at other investment firms.  Accordingly, the court ordered Merrill Lynch to

divide the assets held in [Robert’s and Ruby’s] IRA Accounts, to the extent practicable, into one-third portions of equal value.  In the case of Beneficiaries Mark Vance and Mike Vance, Merrill Lynch shall transfer their portion of the IRA Accounts pursuant to their D.T.C. transfer instructions to IRA accounts opened by them at other investment firms.

On January 7, 2009, Probate Court No. 2 approved the inventory for Robert’s estate.  The inventory listed both Ruby’s and Robert’s IRAs.  Mark and Michael objected to inclusion of Robert’s IRA, contending that “one-half of this account is comprised of community property funds that belong to the estate of Decedent’s wife, Ruby Vance.”  Tamborello responded, in part, by observing that Mark and Michael had “fully supported [Tamborello’s] effort to have Merrill Lynch transfer Robert’s IRA directly to [them] and their brother into three inherited IRA’s so that they would receive very favorable tax treatment.”  On February 6, 2009, Probate Court No. 2 heard the objection and overruled it.

In the meantime, administrator Cameron McCulloch filed a first amended inventory for Ruby’s estate.  On January 20, 2009, Probate Court No. 1 approved that inventory.  The inventory again included neither Robert’s nor Ruby’s IRA.  Mark and Michael objected to the inventory on the ground that it failed to list Ruby’s fifty-percent community-property interest in Robert’s IRA.[4]  McCulloch then filed a second amended inventory.  Mark, at this point proceeding pro se, filed handwritten objections to the second amended inventory, arguing the second amended inventory was the same as the first amended inventory and his objections were the same as those he had raised to the first.  McCulloch responded, arguing (1) Mark’s objection was barred by the doctrine of collateral estoppel based on the proceeding in Probate Court No. 2; (2) the IRA was “intact” when Robert died; and (3) Robert’s IRA was listed in his name only and Merrill Lynch, pursuant to plan documents, treated the entirety of the account as belonging to Robert.

On March 5, 2009, Probate Court No. 1 heard and denied the objections and, on March 9, approved the second amended inventory.  The court appears to have based its ruling largely on the doctrine of collateral estoppel.

II

            In both causes, Mark, pro se, appeals the trial court’s orders overruling his objections to, and approving, the inventories.  See Tex. Prob. Code Ann. § 250 (Vernon 2003) (describing property to be included in inventory and stating “inventory shall specify what portion of the property, if any, is separate property and what portion, if any, is community property”).  Under Texas Probate Code section 258,

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Bluebook (online)
Mark Vance v. Gus G. Tamborello, Independent Administrator With Will and Codicil Annexed of the Estate of Robert Wesley Vance, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mark-vance-v-gus-g-tamborello-independent-administ-texapp-2010.