Patricia C. Berezo v. Lalo Berezo

CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 8, 2021
DocketED109192
StatusPublished

This text of Patricia C. Berezo v. Lalo Berezo (Patricia C. Berezo v. Lalo Berezo) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Patricia C. Berezo v. Lalo Berezo, (Mo. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

In the Missouri Court of Appeals Eastern District DIVISION FOUR

PATRICIA C. BEREZO, ) No. ED109192 ) Appellant, ) Appeal from the Circuit Court of ) St. Louis County vs. ) ) Honorable Ellen S. Levy LALO BEREZO, ET AL., ) ) Respondent. ) Filed: June 4, 2021

Introduction

Patricia Berezo (“Appellant”) appeals the trial court’s grant of summary judgment,

motion to dismiss to Lalo Berezo (“Respondent”), and denying Appellant access to funds held in

trust for her late husband, Michael Berezo (“Decedent”).

Appellant raises four points on appeal. In Point I, Appellant argues the trial court erred

granting Respondent summary judgment, concluding Decedent’s references to his “wife” in the

trust instrument did not entitle Appellant to the funds in the trust. In Point II, Appellant argues

the trial court erred dismissing one of her claims, concluding a proposed amendment to the trust

– which would have made Appellant a beneficiary – never took effect. In Point III, Appellant

argues the trial court erred granting Respondent summary judgment, concluding Appellant is not

entitled to access the trust funds as an omitted spouse. In Point IV, Appellant argues the trial court erred by awarding attorneys’ fees to Respondent and denying Appellant’s motion for

attorneys’ fees.

We affirm.

Factual and Procedural Background

Decedent established the “Michael W. Berezo Revocable Trust” (“the Trust”) in 1996,

while he was married to his first wife, Alene. Decedent and Alene were married until Alene’s

death in June 2012. Decedent and Alene have an adult daughter, Alison. Alison is disabled and

unable to care for herself. Alison is a beneficiary of the Trust. Her care is also funded by a

separate, special needs trust and government assistance.

In August 2012, Decedent amended the Trust (“the Second Amendment”). The Second

Amendment stated, “Alene V. Haskell died on June 15, 2012,” established Decedent as the sole

trustee, and named Decedent’s brother Lalo – Respondent – as successor trustee.1 The amended

Trust nevertheless retained numerous references to Decedent’s “wife.”

Appellant and Decedent married on March 8, 2014. After marrying, Decedent,

Appellant, and their attorneys worked to update the Trust to include Appellant. Decedent died

unexpectedly on November 30, 2014 without amending the Trust.

From December 2014 to March 2015, attorney Michael Silver of the Husch Blackwell

law firm represented Appellant personally and Respondent as successor trustee of the Trust.

Appellant alleges Silver advised her she would be entitled to an elective share of Decedent’s

assets worth approximately $2.3 million, even if she was not included in the Trust. Appellant

also alleges Silver advised Appellant to take a $500,000 loan from the Trust to finance the

purchase of a new house. On March 4, 2015, Silver terminated Husch Blackwell’s

representation of Appellant but continued to represent Respondent in his capacity as trustee.

1 The August 2012 amendment was the Second Amendment to the Trust. The First Amendment was made in 2010.

2 Appellant retained new counsel and filed a declaratory judgment action on September 8,

2015, asking the court to find she was entitled to one half the value of Decedent’s estate,

including the assets in the Trust under section 474.010.2 Respondent argued section 474.010

entitled Appellant to one half the value of Decedent’s probate estate, but not the assets in the

Trust. In response, Appellant filed her first amended petition in January 2016, adding Silver and

Husch Blackwell as defendants. In December 2016, Appellant filed her second amended

petition, claiming (1) Appellant is a beneficiary of the Trust as Decedent’s wife; (2) the never-

executed Third Amendment to and Restatement of the Trust expressed Decedent’s intent and

was valid; (3) the Third Amendment to the Trust was valid and effective; (4) there was an oral

agreement between Appellant and Decedent for Appellant to be added to the Trust; (5) if the

Third Amendment to the Trust was not effective, Appellant was an omitted spouse entitled to a

share of the augmented estate; (6) for an accounting of the Trust assets; (7) for discovery of

assets and to establish a constructive trust; (8) promissory estoppel prevents Respondent from

arguing Appellant was not entitled to recover $2.3 million dollars from the Trust; (9) negligent

misrepresentation against Husch Blackwell and Michael Silver; and (10) breach of trust, breach

of fiduciary duty, and for disgorgement of fees against Husch Blackwell, Silver, and Respondent.

In June 2017, the trial court dismissed Appellant’s claims about the validity of the Third

Amendment to the Trust, her claimed oral agreement with Decedent, and her requests for an

accounting and constructive trust. In November 2017, the court granted summary judgment to

Respondent on Appellant’s claim she was the “wife” in the Trust, for promissory estoppel, and

for breach of trust against Respondent. The court also granted partial summary judgment to

Respondent on Appellant’s omitted spouse claim.

2 All statutory references are to RSMo (2015), unless otherwise indicated.

3 In January 2019, the trial court held a hearing on the parties’ requests for attorneys’ fees.

On March 4, 2020, the trial court denied Appellant’s request for fees and granted Respondent

$582,418.43 in fees. The trial court found Appellant’s “objective in this litigation has been to

pierce [Decedent’s] Trust to obtain a share of the assets held in the Trust in an amount far greater

[than] she was entitled to through the exercise of her statutory inheritance rights under applicable

probate law.” The court further found Appellant’s claim Respondent, Silver, and Husch

Blackwell conspired “to deprive [Appellant] of an inheritance right” was baseless. The trial

court concluded Appellant was “an omitted spouse, nothing more and nothing less . . . . entitled

to an intestate share of her deceased husband’s probate estate,” but not assets held outside the

probate estate, including assets in the Trust.

The trial court found Appellant’s conduct during the litigation was vexatious and justified

awarding fees to Respondent. Specifically, the court found Appellant pursued “multiple and

conflicting theories of recovery,” “propounded voluminous discovery . . . despite the court’s

findings regarding the lack of merit in [Appellant’s] claims,” and “sought reconsideration of

many of the court’s motion rulings and judgments, all of which has significantly increased the

cost of defending the action.” The court further found Appellant “changed arguments presented

in the original proceedings, mischaracterized the Court’s statements in those rulings and

judgments, and attempted to change or introduce new or different facts on reconsideration . . . .

without any concern for the expenses being incurred by [the Trust] or the interest of its innocent

beneficiary, [Alison].”

This appeal follows.3 Additional factual and procedural history will be provided below

as necessary to address Movant’s claims.

3 The only issues on appeal are Appellant’s claims (1) she is a beneficiary of the Trust as decedent’s wife and Respondent is liable for breach of trust; (2) the never-executed Third Amendment to the Trust is valid and effective;

4 Standard of Review

1. Summary Judgment (Points I and III)

The standard of review on summary judgment is essentially de novo.

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Bluebook (online)
Patricia C. Berezo v. Lalo Berezo, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/patricia-c-berezo-v-lalo-berezo-moctapp-2021.