PENDERGRASS v. PENDERGRASS, II

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedFebruary 10, 2021
Docket2:18-cv-00478
StatusUnknown

This text of PENDERGRASS v. PENDERGRASS, II (PENDERGRASS v. PENDERGRASS, II) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
PENDERGRASS v. PENDERGRASS, II, (E.D. Pa. 2021).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA

JOAN PENDERGRASS

Plaintiff, CIVIL ACTION NO. 18-478 v. THEODORE PENDERGRASS, II, et al., Defendant.

MEMORANDUM OPINION Rufe, J. February 10, 2021 Plaintiff Joan Pendergrass brings this action for wrongful use of civil proceedings and concerted tortious action based on the proceedings on the estate of her late husband, famed Philadelphia soul singer Theodore D. Pendergrass, known as Teddy Pendergrass.1 Before the Court are certain Defendants’ motions for summary judgment and Plaintiff’s motion for partial summary judgment as to liability. I. BACKGROUND AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY2 On January 13, 2010, Teddy passed away. He was survived by his wife, Joan, and his three adult children, Theodore Pendergrass, II, Tishia Burnett, and LaDonna Hollerway. Joan and Teddy were married on March 23, 2008; she is not the mother of Teddy’s children. Theodore is a half-sibling to Burnett and Hollerway.3 An accident in 1982 had left Teddy a quadriplegic with limited use of his arms. Teddy lived at his Penn Valley, Pennsylvania home with Joan and

1 Because numerous individuals discussed in this Memorandum share the last name Pendergrass, the Court will refer to them by first name for the sake of clarity. 2 This section is based upon the facts to which the parties agreed, see Joint Statement Stipulated Facts [Doc. No. 86-2], unless otherwise noted. 3 See Theodore Dep. Dec. 9, 2019 [Doc. No. 92-4] at 6. his mother, Ida Pendergrass, where a nursing home care company provided full time assistance to Teddy.4 Teddy’s estate proceedings took place from 2010 to 2017 in Montgomery County Orphans’ Court before the Honorable Stanley Ott. There were four relevant documents:

1) 1987 Will – The 1987 Will was drafted by Teddy’s attorney and executed by Teddy on October 5, 1987. It left his estate to his then-wife, Karin, and his three children. 2) March 2009 Will – The March 2009 Will was drafted by Teddy’s attorney and was the “joint will” of Teddy and Joan. It was executed on March 25, 2009. It made Joan the primary beneficiary of Teddy’s estate if he were to predecease her. The will left only a painting to Theodore5 and it left twenty-five percent of “all ongoing income derived from the use of the name and/or brand of ‘Teddy Pendergrass’” to “‘TP Alliance,’ a nonprofit corporation.” 3) Codicil – The Codicil was drafted by Teddy’s attorney and dated October 17, 2009. It struck the provisions of the March 2009 Will benefitting Theodore and the TP Alliance. 4) Theodore’s Will – Theodore’s Will was dated May 25, 2009. It was purportedly

drafted by Teddy and left the entire estate to Theodore. Theodore claimed the following about this will:6 On the Tuesday before Memorial Day in 2009, Teddy supposedly told Theodore that he wanted Theodore to take care of the family if anything were to happen to him. He asked Theodore to help execute a will. He told Theodore to

4 Orphans’ Ct. Op. dated Oct. 14, 2014 [Doc. No. 31-1] at 3. 5 The painting was of Teddy. 6 Adapted from Orphans’ Ct. Op. dated Oct. 14, 2014 [Doc. No. 31-1] at 25–27. 2 take a flash drive from his desk containing a will, and said that he wanted his mother Ida and Theodore’s mother-in-law, Juanita Saunders, to serve as witnesses. On the Saturday before Memorial Day, Theodore told Teddy that he had

arranged for Kimberly Joyce Leifheit Cleveland, a notary they both had worked with before, to notarize the will the next day. That night, Theodore opened the will on his computer at his house. He inserted the next day’s date and printed it out.7 The next day, there was an early family dinner at Teddy’s house in Penn Valley. After dinner, Joan wasn’t feeling well and retired to her bedroom. Theodore drove Teddy, Saunders, and Ida to Delaware in Teddy’s specially modified van to meet the notary. Theodore pulled over on the side of the road next to a gas station where the notary was waiting. The will was passed around the van, and Teddy, Ida, and Saunders signed and initialed it. Cleveland then

notarized it. Theodore then drove everyone back to Teddy’s home in Pennsylvania, where Theodore returned the flash drive to Teddy and placed the executed will in his car for safekeeping.

7 Theodore claimed that in or around 2010, his computer crashed and could not be repaired and so he threw it away. Theodore Dep. Mar. 21, 2013 [Doc. No. 90-8] at 57–58. Theodore also claimed that in 2010 or 2011, the printer that printed the will began to malfunction and so he threw it in the trash as well. Id. at 60–61. 3 A. Orphans’ Court Proceedings On January 20, 2010, Joan applied for, and was granted, letters testamentary pursuant to the March 2009 Will and the Codicil. Shortly thereafter, Theodore attempted to probate Theodore’s Will but was denied.8 1. Theodore’s challenge of the March 2009 Will and the Codicil On February 19, 2010, Theodore, represented by attorneys Robert Bacine and Jack

Rounick, brought a challenge against the March 2009 Will and the Codicil, arguing that they were not properly executed.9 This challenge was brought, in part, because the date on Theodore’s Will placed it between the execution of the March 2009 Will and the Codicil, and so it could not be presented if the Codicil was valid. Because Bacine and Rounick were not litigators, attorney James Mannion was hired by Theodore to present the case.10 In an order dated August 4, 2010, the Orphans’ Court held that the Codicil was invalid as improperly executed and struck it.11 The March 2009 Will was left as the document governing the disposition of the estate. The parties filed cross-appeals—Joan appealed the portion of the decision striking the Codicil and Theodore appealed the portion

admitting the March 2009 Will. On August 8, 2011, the Superior Court quashed the appeals. 2. Prima facie hearing On January 31, 2012, Theodore filed a petition requesting a prima facie validity hearing for Theodore’s Will. Mannion represented Theodore at the evidentiary hearing, and Joan,

8 Theodore Dep. Mar. 21, 2013 [Doc. No. 90-8] at 67–69. 9 Orphans’ Ct. Docket, 2010-X0189 [Doc. No. 90-1]. 10 James Mannion is not a party to this action. 11 See Luber Dep. Dec. 16, 2019 [Doc. No. 92-6] at 11. 4 Theodore, Ida, Saunders, and Cleveland testified.12 On September 13, 2012, Judge Ott determined that Theodore had made a prima facie showing as to the validity of Theodore’s Will. It was accepted for probate and Theodore was appointed executor of the estate. 3. Joan’s challenge of Theodore’s Will On October 1, 2012, Joan contested Theodore’s Will. She asserted that “1) It was not

signed by [Teddy]; 2) It was a forgery; 3) It was not prepared at [Teddy]’s request; 4) [Teddy] was not capable of signing his name to the document; and 5) [Teddy] was not in Delaware on the date the document was allegedly signed.”13 Theodore filed an answer, and a hearing was scheduled for November 20, 2013. Mannion withdrew after the prima facie hearing because of non-payment, but Bacine and Rounick continued to represent Theodore during discovery.14 About two weeks before the start of the trial, Bacine and Rounick contacted attorney Timothy Holman to take over the case.15 After reviewing the files and docket, and speaking with Mannion, Bacine, Rounick, and Theodore, Holman took the case on contingency.16 Bacine and Rounick withdrew.17 The trial consisted of eight days of evidentiary hearings between November 20, 2013,

and May 15, 2014. Eleven witnesses testified, including Joan, Theodore, Cleveland, Saunders,

12 See Prima facie Hr’g Tr. [Doc. No. 90-7]. 13 Joint. Statement Stipulated Facts [Doc. No. 86-2] at 6. 14 Rounick Dep. Feb. 11, 2020 [Doc. No. 92-3] at 55. 15 Holman was recommended by Mannion as someone who would be able to try the case on short notice. see id. at 55–56. 16 Holman Dep. Feb. 20, 2020 [Doc. No. 92-7] at 11–20.

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