Menard v. Gaskell

885 A.2d 1254, 92 Conn. App. 551, 2005 Conn. App. LEXIS 512
CourtConnecticut Appellate Court
DecidedDecember 6, 2005
DocketAC 25621
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 885 A.2d 1254 (Menard v. Gaskell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Appellate Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Menard v. Gaskell, 885 A.2d 1254, 92 Conn. App. 551, 2005 Conn. App. LEXIS 512 (Colo. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

Opinion

DiPENTIMA, J.

The dispositive issue in this probate appeal is whether the trial court abused its discretion in refusing to impose a constructive trust on the decedent’s estate. The court concluded that the disposition of the estate of the decedent’s late husband, more than ten years before her death, did not give rise to a constructive trust on the decedent’s estate in favor of the plaintiff, George J. Menard, the son of the decedent’s late husband. We conclude that the court properly exercised its discretion and, therefore, affirm the judgment.1

The following evidence presented to the trial court is relevant to the disposition of the plaintiffs appeal. In 1954, Joseph L. Menard and the decedent, Anna A. Menard, married. From previous marriages, Joseph [553]*553Menard had a son, the plaintiff, and Anna Menard had a daughter, the defendant Barbara Gaskell. For most of the marriage, Joseph Menard and Anna Menard resided together and saw their respective children several times a month, although with varying degree depending on the circumstances of the children’s lives at any given time. Joseph Menard and Anna Menard held the majority of their property, including their home and most of their bank accounts, as joint owners with rights of survivorship. In 1986, they visited an attorney, the defendant Robert F. Peters, who drafted mirror wills for them.2 The wills provided that on the death of the testator, all real and personal property would pass to the spouse, but if the spouse predeceased the testator, the estate would pass equally to the plaintiff and Barbara Gaskell. Peters testified that it was customary for him to inform his clients that wills are meaningless documents until the makers die and that a surviving spouse is free to change his or her will following the death of the first spouse. The mirror wills were in effect at the time of Joseph Menard’s death in December, 1989. Slightly more than $5000 passed under the terms of his will; the remainder of the property in which he had an ownership interest passed to his wife by virtue of her survivorship interest.

When Joseph Menard died, Anna Menard asked the plaintiff and a mutual friend and cousin, Robert Holmberg, to accompany and to help her in choosing a headstone for her late husband. After choosing the headstone, they had lunch, during which she allegedly told the plaintiff that although she had inherited all of her late husband’s estate, on her death he and Barbara [554]*554Gaskell would share it.3 The afternoon of that conversation was the last time the plaintiff saw Anna Menard. She died more than ten years later, in July, 2000.

Several times in the years following Joseph Menard’s death, Anna Menard revised her will, diminishing the plaintiffs portion of her estate. During that time, she also set up a joint bank account with Barbara Gaskell, into which she deposited slightly more than $200,000. In 1999, when she executed her final will, Anna Menard included a provision that expressly omitted the plaintiff from her will. She explained to her attorney that the reason for first diminishing the plaintiffs share and then excluding him entirely from her will was because she had not heard from him since Joseph Menard’s death. That will was in effect at the time of Anna Menard’s death.

The plaintiff learned of Anna Menard’s death when the defendant Lawrence C. Gaskell, Barbara Gaskell’s husband and the executor of Anna Menard’s estate, telephoned him. The plaintiff obtained a copy of Anna Menard’s will and, on discovering that he was left nothing of the estate, hired an attorney. The plaintiff then presented a claim against Anna Menard’s estate for $310,200, approximately one half of its value, on the basis of an alleged constructive trust previously established by Joseph Menard and Anna Menard. That claim was disallowed by the executor in its entirety. The plaintiff filed an application with the Probate Court for a hearing on his rejected claim, and, on September 27, 2001, the Probate Court denied the claim.

The plaintiff appealed from the decision of the Probate Court to the Superior Court, claiming, inter alia, that the trial court should impose a constructive trust [555]*555on Anna Menard’s estate, “as well as upon gifts and transfers of assets held jointly at the time of [Joseph Menard’s] death and made subsequent to his death.” On May, 25, 2004, the trial court held a trial de novo.4 The court concluded that the plaintiff had proven that a confidential relationship existed between Joseph Menard and Anna Menard but that the defendants had met their burden to negate the existence of a constructive trust. The court, therefore, rendered judgment in favor of the defendants, and this appeal followed.

Before reviewing the plaintiffs claim that the court improperly determined that the defendants had met their burden in negating the existence of a constructive trust, we set forth our standard of review. “A court’s determination of whether to impose a constructive trust must stand unless it is clearly erroneous or involves an abuse of discretion. . . . This limited scope of review is consistent with the general proposition that equitable determinations that depend on the balancing of many factors are committed to the sound discretion of the trial court. . . . Wendell Corp. Trustee v. Thurston, 239 Conn. 109, 114, 680 A.2d 1314 (1996).

“[A] constructive trust arises . . . against one who, by . . . abuse of confidence . . . either has obtained or holds the legal right to property which he ought not, in equity and good conscience, hold and enjoy. . . . Id., 113. Courts may use the equitable device of a constructive trust to remedy the unjust enrichment which results from not disposing of property as promised after the promise induced someone with whom the promisor shared a confidential relationship to transfer the property to the promisor. Starzec v. Kida, 183 Conn. 41, 49, 438 A.2d 1157 (1981).” (Internal quotation marks [556]*556omitted.) Riccio v. Riccio, 75 Conn. App. 556, 558-59, 816 A.2d 733 (2003).

The plaintiff claims that after the trial court concluded that a confidential relationship existed between Joseph Menard and Anna Menard, the burden then shifted to the defendants to negate the existence of a constructive trust by clear and convincing evidence. The plaintiff further claims that the trial court abused its discretion in concluding that the defendants met that burden.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
885 A.2d 1254, 92 Conn. App. 551, 2005 Conn. App. LEXIS 512, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/menard-v-gaskell-connappct-2005.