Matter of Petretti

2024 NY Slip Op 50716(U)
CourtSurrogate's Court, Queens County
DecidedJune 12, 2024
StatusUnpublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2024 NY Slip Op 50716(U) (Matter of Petretti) 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 Petretti, 2024 NY Slip Op 50716(U) (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2024).

Opinion

Matter of Petretti (2024 NY Slip Op 50716(U)) [*1]
Matter of Petretti
2024 NY Slip Op 50716(U)
Decided on June 12, 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This opinion is uncorrected and will not be published in the printed Official Reports.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 June 12, 2024
Surrogate's Court, Queens County


Matter of Lucy Petretti, Deceased.




File No. 2020-3302

Mario Biaggi, Jr., for petitioner, Richard Biaggi

Elman Freiberg PLLC for objectant, Robert Petretti Jr.

Greenfield Stein & Senior LLP for objectant, Barbara O'Flynn
Peter J. Kelly, S.

Offered for probate in this proceeding is an attorney-drafted instrument dated January 19, 2018, purported by Richard M. Biaggi (petitioner) to be the last will and testament of the decedent.

Objections have been filed to the validity of the instrument by decedent's niece, Barbara O'Flynn, and nephew, Robert Petretti, Jr. (objectants). The objections allege that the offered instrument is invalid on the grounds that it was not duly executed; the decedent lacked testamentary capacity; the instrument was procured by fraud (actual and constructive); duress; and undue influence.

The petitioner now moves for summary judgment, dismissing the objections, admitting the will to probate, and appointing petitioner as the executor of the estate. Both objectants have opposed the motion. Upon review of the papers and exhibits filed in support of the motion, as well as the papers and exhibits filed in opposition, the reply thereto, and after oral argument on the record, the court finds as follows:

The decedent, Lucy Petretti, died on July 15, 2020, at the age of 90 leaving the objectants as her distributees. The challenged instrument, an attorney-drafted and supervised will, provides for several small pre-residuary bequests while distributing the balance of the estate to the petitioner and his brother, Mario Biaggi, Jr. Both of the residuary beneficiaries are attorneys and neither are related to the decedent. The decedent's estate, which includes income producing real property, is conservatively valued at approximately $5,000,000.00.

As revealed by the exhibits, the decedent had executed a prior instrument on May 10, 2004 (2004 Will) that was apparently a mirror image of her brother Raymond's will. That instrument includes several modest pre-residuary bequests before distributing the balance of the estate to her brother, Raymond. The Biaggis are the contingent residuary beneficiaries in that Will.[FN1] Raymond predeceased the decedent in 2007 and his will was admitted to probate without [*2]contest.

The petitioner contends that dismissal of the objections is warranted inasmuch as the offered instrument represents the decedent's long-standing desire to bestow her largess on the Biaggis with whom she enjoyed a close, familial-like relationship for over 50 years.

In opposition, the objectants initially argue that the motion is not supported by admissible evidence. Additionally, objectants denounce the will as the product of the Biaggis' undue influence and overreach practiced upon an elderly decedent whose mental acuity had long been in a state of decline.

As a threshold matter, the court first turns to the branch of objectants' opposition that contends that the motion is only supported by evidence that violates CPLR 4519 or constitutes hearsay.

Briefly, CPLR 4519, known colloquially as the "Dead Man's Statute," provides that a person interested in the event shall not be examined as a witness in his own behalf against the executor, administrator, or survivor of the decedent concerning a personal transaction or communication with the decedent.

Evidence excludable pursuant to CPLR 4519 may only be used to defeat a motion for summary judgment, not in support thereof [FN2] (see Phillips v. Kantor & Co., 31 N Y2d 307 [1972]; Matter of Alden, 52 AD2d 1051 [4th Dept 1976]). The rationale being that "[it] is always possible that the incompetency will be waived at the trial, or the door opened, by design, or by inadvertence" (id.).

For instance, when a fiduciary questions an adversary as to all or part of a personal transaction with the decedent, they open the door, at least with respect to that transaction, such that otherwise incompetent testimony is admissible to fully explain the personal transaction in issue (see, e.g., Matter of Radus, 140 AD2d 348 [2d Dept 1988]). The purpose of this rule is to place the parties in relatively equivalent positions vis-a-vis the same transaction, thereby preventing the unfair use of the statute as a sword rather than a shield as intended (see id., citing Matter of Wood, 52 NY2d 139, 145).

In this regard, objectants contend that the movant is unable to rely on the affidavits or deposition testimony of the Biaggis, or of any other legatees named in the offered instrument in support of their summary judgment motion. Indeed objectants go so far as to claim that petitioner may not even rely on the objectants' testimony in furtherance of the motion.

Since evidence violative of CPLR 4519 can be used to defeat summary judgment, the objectants paradoxically submit deposition testimony of some of the individuals whose lips they wish to seal, most notably, the Biaggis. As such, they appear to be asking the Court to extract from the testimony only that which is favorable to objectants' position, whilst disregarding it for any other purposes.

Based on the record submitted, the Court does not have to engage in the impractical and labor intensive exercise of parsing out and considering only those portions of the disputed testimony that inures to the benefit of the objectants. Nor does the Court have to opine on whether such an approach seemingly runs afoul of the equalizing objectives of the Dead Man's Statute. That, fortuitously, is due to the fact that the Court did not need to consider the disputed evidence in determining the within motion (see Matter of Baron, 2020 NY Misc Lexis 3413 [Sur Ct, Queens County 2020]).

That being said, in order to prevail, petitioner as the movant must establish prima facie entitlement to judgment as a matter of law in the first instance (see generally Zuckerman v NY, 49 NY2d 557, 562 [1980]; see also e.g. Matter of Mooney, 74 AD3d 1073 [2d Dept 2010]; Matter of DiChiaro, 39 AD3d 751 [2d Dept 2007]).

More specifically, the petitioner has the burden of demonstrating that the instrument offered for probate was duly executed in accordance with EPTL § 3-2.1 and that the decedent possessed testamentary capacity at the time the instrument was executed (see e.g. Mooney, 74 AD3d at 1075; DiChiaro, 39 AD3d at 751).

Generally, once the requisite proof has been proffered by the movant, the objectants must assemble and lay bare affirmative proof that their claims are real and capable of being established at trial (see Stainless, Inc. v Employers Fire Ins. Co., 69 AD2d 27 [1st Dept 1979] aff'd 49 NY2d 924 [1980]). The objectants are to be afforded every favorable inference that may be drawn from the evidentiary facts alleged (see e.g. Matter of Wimpfheimer

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Matter of Petretti
2024 NY Slip Op 50716(U) (Queens Surrogate's Court, 2024)

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Bluebook (online)
2024 NY Slip Op 50716(U), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-petretti-nysurctqueens-2024.