Martha Ferguson, Anthony Schmitt, Rebecca Schmitt, Mary Meadows, Christopher Schmitt, Rosemary Schmitt, Jerry Shillington, Christina Aleman, Steven Shillington v. Berton O'Bryan

CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 15, 2013
Docket49A02-1211-CT-917
StatusPublished

This text of Martha Ferguson, Anthony Schmitt, Rebecca Schmitt, Mary Meadows, Christopher Schmitt, Rosemary Schmitt, Jerry Shillington, Christina Aleman, Steven Shillington v. Berton O'Bryan (Martha Ferguson, Anthony Schmitt, Rebecca Schmitt, Mary Meadows, Christopher Schmitt, Rosemary Schmitt, Jerry Shillington, Christina Aleman, Steven Shillington v. Berton O'Bryan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Martha Ferguson, Anthony Schmitt, Rebecca Schmitt, Mary Meadows, Christopher Schmitt, Rosemary Schmitt, Jerry Shillington, Christina Aleman, Steven Shillington v. Berton O'Bryan, (Ind. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

Oct 15 2013, 9:22 am

FOR PUBLICATION

ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANTS: ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE:

JON R. PACTOR ABIGAIL L. SEIF Indianapolis, Indiana Epstein Cohen Seif & Flora Indianapolis, Indiana

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA

MARTHA FERGUSON, ANTHONY W. ) SCHMITT, REBECCA SCHMITT, MARY ) MEADOWS, CHRISTOPHER SCHMITT, ) ROSEMARY SCHMITT, JERRY W. ) SHILLINGTON, CHRISTINA ALEMAN, ) STEVEN SHILLINGTON, MICHAEL JOSEPH ) SCHMITT, and KEN JOLLY, ) ) Appellants-Plaintiffs, ) ) vs. ) No. 49A02-1211-CT-917 ) BERTON O’BRYAN, ) ) Appellee-Defendant. )

APPEAL FROM THE MARION SUPERIOR COURT The Honorable Cynthia J. Ayers, Judge Cause No. 49D04-1004-CT-14906

October 15, 2013

OPINION - FOR PUBLICATION

CRONE, Judge Case Summary

In Walker v. Lawson, our supreme court held that “an action will lie by a beneficiary

under a will against the attorney who drafted that will on the basis that the beneficiary is a

known third party.” 526 N.E.2d 968, 968 (Ind. 1988). Following Mary Linder’s death, a

group of her relatives (“the Relatives”)1 brought a legal malpractice action against the drafter

of her will, attorney Berton O’Bryan. The Relatives were not specifically named in the will,

but were listed on a form that O’Bryan had given Linder for the purpose of making bequests

to her intended beneficiaries. The list was referenced in the will, but was not signed, dated,

or witnessed. The Relatives assert that as a result of O’Bryan’s professional negligence in

drafting the will, the bequests that Linder intended to make to them failed. O’Bryan claims

that he never saw the list before Linder’s death. He successfully moved for summary

judgment on the basis that he owed the Relatives no legal duty with respect to drafting the

will because they were not known third-party beneficiaries.

On appeal, the Relatives argue that the trial court erred in granting O’Bryan’s

summary judgment motion. We conclude that regardless of whether O’Bryan saw the list, he

knew that Linder intended to benefit anyone named on the list; therefore, the Relatives are

known third-party beneficiaries for purposes of Walker and are thus entitled to bring a legal

malpractice action against O’Bryan. Consequently, we reverse and remand for further

proceedings.

1 The Relatives are Martha Ferguson, Anthony W. Schmitt, Rebecca Schmitt, Mary Meadows, Christopher Schmitt, Rosemary Schmitt, Jerry W. Shillington, Christina Aleman, Steven Shillington, Michael Joseph Schmitt, and Ken Jolly.

2 Facts and Procedural History2

In 2005, the seventy-eight-year-old Linder wished to change her will. Linder

contacted Marian College, her alma mater, for a referral to an attorney. The school referred

her to O’Bryan, who is also a Marian graduate. Linder hired O’Bryan to draft a new will, a

power of attorney, a health care representative form, a living will, and other documents.

Before O’Bryan drafted the will, Linder informed him that she had a list of items that she

wanted to leave to various individuals. O’Bryan informed Linder that he would bring her a

separate form that she could use to make these and other specific bequests and told her that

she would need to fill out the form and sign and date it. In accordance with Linder’s wishes,

the will contained a residuary clause in favor of Marian College. The will also referenced the

list that Linder had discussed with O’Bryan. Specifically, Article II of the will provided as

follows:

I hereby give and bequeath each described item of cash or personalty set out on a certain list which I will from time to time update and keep with this Will. Said list will set out the name of the person and the item or items I bequeath to each such person.

I direct that my Personal Representative honor the list the same as if it had been set out herein. Should any questions arise regarding said list, the decision of my personal representative shall be conclusive. Any modifications I may choose to make to said list shall each be dated and initialed.

Appellants’ App. at 20-21.

2 We held oral argument on July 24, 2013, in Indianapolis. We thank the parties for their presentations.

3 The form O’Bryan provided to Linder for the purpose of making the list referred to in

her will was titled “Specific Bequests of Cash and/or Personalty” and included the following

statement:

This list is the one I, Mary Helen Linder, referred to in my Last Will & Testament dated February 19, 2005. I direct that my Personal Representative honor this list and see to it that each such listed item be given to the named donee. I intend to make changes to this list from time to time by additions or deletions by lining through any deletions and initialing and dating all such changes. I will try to keep this list with or near a copy of the above-mentioned Will.

Id. at 24. The form did not contain designated spots for the bequests to be signed, dated, or

witnessed.

Linder filled in the form indicating that she wished to make a number of cash

bequests, including bequests to the Relatives ranging from $5000 to $50,000 apiece.3 Linder

did not sign and date the list as instructed, nor was the list witnessed. Following the

execution of the will, O’Bryan stayed in regular contact with Linder, but he denies ever

seeing the filled-in form or even knowing whether Linder ever filled out the form at all. At

Linder’s request, O’Bryan drafted a codicil and assisted Linder in its execution on December

5, 2007. Linder passed away just twelve days later.

Within hours of Linder’s death, Ken Jolly, Linder’s nephew and the named personal

representative of her estate, located the will, codicil, and list. Jolly notified O’Bryan, who

filed the will and codicil with the probate court, but not the list. Sometime later, O’Bryan

3 Anthony W. Schmitt and Rebecca Schmitt are not included on the list, but they sought to recover as heirs of their father, Anthony Dominic Schmitt, who was included on the list.

4 informed the probate court of the list’s existence. The probate court appointed special

counsel to investigate the list’s validity and held a hearing on the matter. Before the probate

court issued a ruling, it approved a settlement agreement between Linder’s estate and the

Relatives providing that the list was invalid and that $25,000 would be divided among the

Relatives.4

In April 2010, the Relatives filed a legal malpractice action against O’Bryan. In

August 2011, O’Bryan filed a motion for summary judgment, asserting that he did not owe

the Relatives a duty because “there is absolutely no evidence that [he] had actual knowledge

that they were on the List or were intended beneficiaries of Ms. Linder or her Estate.”

Appellants’ App. at 34. After a hearing, the trial court denied the motion in March 2012.

O’Bryan filed a motion to correct error, and, after a hearing, the trial court granted the motion

and entered summary judgment for O’Bryan in June 2012. The Relatives then filed a motion

to correct error, and the trial court held yet another hearing. In October 2012, the trial court

entered an order denying the Relatives’ motion to correct error and clarifying the basis for its

entry of summary judgment in O’Bryan’s favor. The Relatives now appeal.

Discussion and Decision

On appeal, the Relatives argue that the trial court erred in granting summary judgment

in O’Bryan’s favor. When reviewing a trial court’s ruling on a motion for summary

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Martha Ferguson, Anthony Schmitt, Rebecca Schmitt, Mary Meadows, Christopher Schmitt, Rosemary Schmitt, Jerry Shillington, Christina Aleman, Steven Shillington v. Berton O'Bryan, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/martha-ferguson-anthony-schmitt-rebecca-schmitt-mary-meadows-indctapp-2013.