Matter of Dinnal (Hanlon)

2024 NY Slip Op 50057(U)
CourtSurrogate's Court, Queens County
DecidedJanuary 18, 2024
StatusUnpublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2024 NY Slip Op 50057(U) (Matter of Dinnal (Hanlon)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Surrogate's Court, Queens County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matter of Dinnal (Hanlon), 2024 NY Slip Op 50057(U) (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2024).

Opinion

Matter of Dinnal (Hanlon) (2024 NY Slip Op 50057(U)) [*1]
Matter of Dinnal (Hanlon)
2024 NY Slip Op 50057(U)
Decided on January 18, 2024
Surrogate's Court, Queens County
Kelly, J.
Published by New York State Law Reporting Bureau pursuant to Judiciary Law § 431.
This opinion is uncorrected and will not be published in the printed Official Reports.


Decided on January 18, 2024
Surrogate's Court, Queens County


In the Matter of the Application of Merlene Dinnal, as a Legatee of a Specific Bequest in the Last Will and Testament of Grace Hanlon, Deceased, For Turnover of Property Pursuant to SCPA § 2102 (4).




File No. 2022-2/A

For Petitioner: Patrick A. McGlashan, Esq., McGlashan Law Firm, P.C., 733 Third Avenue, 16th Floor, New York, New York 10017 (212)203-8738

For Respondents Judith Planty and the Roman Catholic Church of Saints Simon and Jude: John G. Farinacci, Esq., Ruskin Moscou Faltischek, P.C., 1425 RXR Plaza, East Tower, 15th Floor, Uniondale, New York 11556 (516) 663-6600

For Respondent David G. Sewell: Richard J. Cea, Esq., Wingate, Kearney & Cullen, LLP, 111 John Street, Ste. 1040, New York, New York 10038 (718)852-5900

For the Charitable Beneficiary Respondents: New York State Office of the Attorney General by Deborah Yurchuk McCarthy, Esq., Charities Bureau, 28 Liberty Street, New York, New York 10005 (212) 416-8397
Peter J. Kelly, S.

In this contested proceeding pursuant to SCPA § 2102(4), Merlene Dinnal ("Dinnal") seeks the turnover of real property located at West 4th Street, Brooklyn that she alleges was specifically devised to her pursuant to the decedent's last will and testament dated April 30, 2011.

By way of pertinent background, on September 11, 1997, the decedent executed a trust agreement entitled the Hanlon Family Trust (the "Trust"). The Trust designated the decedent as trustee during her lifetime and Judith Planty ("Planty") as the successor trustee upon the decedent's incapacity or death. The Trust, by its terms, directed that upon the death of the decedent and William Hanlon, the corpus and undistributed income would be given and distributed as follows: Robert Mennell (20%); Eugene Erb (20%); Saints Simon and Jude Roman Catholic Church (10%); Irene Walmsley (10%); Richard Orenge (10%); Maryknoll Fathers and Brothers (5%); Deafness Research Foundation (5%); Covenant House (5%); Fathers of St. Edmund (5%); Eye Bank for Sight Restoration, Inc. (5%); and Mercy Boys' Home (5%).

Thereafter, on March 17, 1998, the decedent and William F. Hanlon executed a deed [*2]transferring their interests in the real property at issue to Grace E. Hanlon. Another deed was also executed for the same property transferring title from Grace E. Hanlon to Grace E. Hanlon as Trustee. The first deed was recorded on April 20, 1998, and the second was recorded the following day on April 21, 1998. Both deeds were made returnable to the law firm of Connors & Sullivan, Esqs.

On April 30, 2011, the decedent executed a purported will, which, in relevant part, provides that the decedent "revoke[s] all wills, codicils, and trusts heretofore made by me." Paragraph THIRD reads as follows:

I give all of my right, title and interest in my real property located at 1838 W. 4th Street, Brooklyn, New York, together with all buildings and improvements thereon and all contents thereof to MERLENE DINNAL, residing at 481 E. 51st Street, Brooklyn, New York. In the event MERLENE DINNAL shall not survive me, I authorize my Executor, in his absolute discretion, to sell such all of my right, title and interest in all real and personal property described in this THIRD Paragraph and to include the proceeds in my estate for disposition as provided in this document.

At all times during the preparation and execution of this document, David G. Sewell, Esq. ("Sewell"), the drafting attorney and nominated executor, was unaware that the decedent had previously deeded the subject real property into an inter vivos Trust.

Grace Hanlon died on October 19, 2011. Kings County Surrogate Diana A. Johnson signed a decree granting probate on June 2, 2014, and letters testamentary issued to Sewell. A tortured procedural history then commenced.

One year later, on July 14, 2015, Dinnal commenced this turnover petition in the Kings County Surrogate's Court, asserting that while attempting to sell the subject real property she had learned of the Trust agreement and the 1998 deed from a title search. Three months later, Dinnal filed an amended petition, which, in addition to the turnover of the subject real property, sought six alternative requests for declaratory relief. Answers and/or objections were thereafter filed by Sewell, Planty and the Roman Catholic Church of Saints Simon and Jude, and the Office of the Attorney General of the State of New York ("OAG") as the representative of the charitable beneficiaries of the inter vivos Trust.

Dinnal originally moved for summary judgment on this petition, and the OAG cross-moved for summary judgment, seeking a declaration that the title to the subject property was held by the Trust, and thus, should be disposed of according to the terms of the Trust. Planty and the Roman Catholic Church of Saints Simon and Jude supported the OAG's motion.

By decision dated July 14, 2016, Surrogate Johnson found that the "subject property was clearly transferred into the trust and remained therein at the time of the decedent's demise" and "it appears that the decedent reserved a general testamentary power of appointment (EPTL 10-3.2 and EPTL 3-3.3) for herself and/or any other successor trustee allowing her or the successor trustee to dispose of any property in the trust by the decedent's will." Surrogate Johnson denied both Dinnal's motion and the OAG's cross-motion for summary judgment, finding that the "decedent's intent with regards to the proper exercise of her power of appointment is an issue of fact." Petitioner's subsequent motion for leave to reargue was denied by Surrogate Johnson.

By decision and order dated February 27, 2019, the Appellate Division, Second [*3]Department affirmed Surrogate Johnson's Order, finding that the language governing Paragraph NINTH, which requires the decedent to make a specific reference to the Trust in her will to exercise a testamentary power of appointment, and Paragraph SECOND, which does not require a specific reference to the Trust to exercise a general testamentary power of appointment, was ambiguous. Based on such ambiguity, the Appellate Division concluded that extrinsic evidence was necessary to determine the decedent's intent and whether the bequest in her will, which did not contain a specific reference to the Trust, was sufficient under the terms of Trust to effectuate a transfer of the real property to Dinnal (see Matter of Hanlon, 169 AD3d 1039 [2d Dept. 2019]).

Dinnal thereafter moved for an order, inter alia, granting leave to file a second amended petition. By decision and order dated July 5, 2017, Kings County Acting Surrogate John G.

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Matter of Dinnal (Hanlon)
2024 NY Slip Op 50057(U) (Queens Surrogate's Court, 2024)

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2024 NY Slip Op 50057(U), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-dinnal-hanlon-nysurctqueens-2024.