Pezza v. Pezza, 91-0458 (1994)

CourtSuperior Court of Rhode Island
DecidedMarch 29, 1994
DocketC.A. No. PC 91-0458
StatusUnpublished

This text of Pezza v. Pezza, 91-0458 (1994) (Pezza v. Pezza, 91-0458 (1994)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pezza v. Pezza, 91-0458 (1994), (R.I. Ct. App. 1994).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.]

DECISION
This civil action is a complaint for declaratory relief. The plaintiff Olga Pezza wants this Court to declare that she is entitled to a life estate, pursuant to G.L. 1956 (1984Reenactment) § 33-25-2, as amended, in certain real property held by the defendant Michael Pezza as trustee under a trust created by the plaintiff's deceased husband, Anthony Pezza, Jr. The declaration of trust and a contemporaneously executed will are in evidence, as well as deeds conveying real estate from Anthony Pezza, Jr. to himself as trustee under the trust. In addition, the evidence includes an amendment to the trust, by which it was made irrevocable, a resignation by Anthony Pezza, Jr. as trustee, an acceptance as trustee by Michael Pezza, and a statutory disclaimer of all benefits under the trust by Anthony Pezza, Jr.

I.
After consideration of all relevant exhibits and from the testimony which the Court finds competent and credible, the Court finds the following facts:

The principal purpose of the inter vivos declaration of trust and the will executed by Anthony Pezza Jr. on December 29, 1983 was both to provide for his children upon his death or in the event of his disability and to exclude his wife Olga from any claim after his death against the real estate which he simultaneously transferred to himself as trustee. When he transferred bare legal title to the real estate to himself as trustee while the trust was revocable and while he had a power to compel re-conveyance of the realty back to himself out of trust and while he enjoyed an unrestricted right to all the principal and income of the trust, he thereby retained complete and unconditional control of the full ownership of that land during his lifetime.

On June 25, 1986 he resigned as trustee and Michael Pezza succeeded him as trustee under the terms of the trust declaration. Any invalidity of the trust because of a merger of the legal title of the trustee with the equitable interest of the settlor as beneficiary was thereby eliminated. The settler also amended the trust so that he could no longer modify, amend or revoke the trust. The trust thereupon became irrevocable. It could no longer be considered to be testamentary in any respect.

Under provisions of § 34-5-2 of the General Laws on December 5, 1986 the beneficiary Pezza disclaimed any power to compel re-conveyance to him of the real estate subject to the trust. According to § 34-5-8 that disclaimer became irrevocable and the disclaimed interest could never vest in Anthony Pezza, Jr. He had thereby fully and effectively irrevocably divested himself of any interest in or right to the real estate held by Michael Pezza as trustee. His interests passed by law under the trust as if he had died either on June 25, 1986 just before he made the trust irrevocable, or on December 5, 1986 just before he disclaimed any power to compel a re-conveyance of the real estate. The combination of the amendment of the trust on June 25, 1986 and the statutory disclaimer on December 9, 1986, within nine months, was to make a complete and absolute transfer of all interest in the real estate to the remaining beneficiaries under the trust. There is no evidence of any consideration for the amendment to the trust or the disclaimer so the surrender of rights and the transfer thereby accomplished was in effect a gift.

The Court further finds that, considering all the circumstances shown by the evidence, the conduct of Anthony Pezza, Jr. in executing the amendment and the later disclaimer was voluntary and an act of his free will. He thereby intended to, and in fact did make a complete and absolute gift of the assets held in trust to the beneficiaries named or described in the trust, preclusive of any interest of his own or his wife, as he later learned to his chagrin, regret and rage. Cf., W. Shakespeare, The Tragedy of King Lear. Anthony Pezza, Jr. did nothing afterwards during his lifetime to avoid or set aside the consequences of his actions in 1986. He thereby confirmed the finality of those actions.

II.
The question presented by this case is whether or not a spouse can avoid the life estate provided in § 33-25-2 by a transfer of title to real estate to a trustee where the spouse continues to enjoy some of the benefits of ownership of the real property but surrenders all powers of control over the trust or the real property held under the trust. The plain language of §33-25-2 is of no help because it contains no express reference to trusts, testamentary or inter vivos, nor to gifts in any form. It provides:

"Whenever any person shall die leaving a husband or wife surviving, the real estate owned by such decedent in fee simple at his or her death shall descend and pass to the husband or wife for his or her natural life subject, however, to any encumbrances existing at such death, Provided that the liability, if any, of such decedent to discharge such encumbrance or encumbrances shall not be impaired. The provisions of §§ 33-1-1 and 33-1-2 shall be subject to the provisions of this chapter and of § 33-1-6."

It is undisputed that Anthony Pezza, Jr. died leaving a wife surviving. The question is whether or not at his death he "owned" the real estate transferred to the trust in fee simple. If the trust and disclaimer are valid, he did not. If the trust and disclaimer are invalid, he did, and his wife is entitled to enjoy a life estate by virtue of the statute.

The plaintiff contends that the trust and the disclaimer are invalid because they are an intentional effort by the decedent to deprive and defraud her of the spousal life estate created by the statute. Two fundamental public policies are in conflict. One is the public interest in preserving the alienability of real property. An owner of real property should enjoy freedom to alienate his interests in that land. An innocent purchaser should be entitled to rely on a title of record. That policy is served by the abolition of dower and curtesy in § 33-25-1. Another is the provision of some continuation of spousal survivorship interests in real property, which were once protected by dower and curtesy. This policy is served by the life estates created by§ 33-25-2.

This section entirely misses the growth of the inter vivos, or living, trust as a supplement to or substitute for a testamentary document in modern estate planning. It also has scant regard for the relative frequency of second and subsequent marriages and composite families. It assumes that ownership of land will generally pass on death either by intestate succession or under a will. Note the references in § 33-25-2 to §§33-1-1, 33-1-2 and 33-1-6 all concerning intestate descent of real estate, and the reference to the provisions of the decedent's will in § 33-25-3.

The Courts have taken two major approaches in dealing with the problem presented in this case. The first approach focuses on the intent of the spouse who created the trust.

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Bluebook (online)
Pezza v. Pezza, 91-0458 (1994), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pezza-v-pezza-91-0458-1994-risuperct-1994.