Pulley v. Short

261 S.W.3d 701, 2008 Mo. App. LEXIS 1161, 2008 WL 4002978
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 2, 2008
DocketWD 68257
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 261 S.W.3d 701 (Pulley v. Short) 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
Pulley v. Short, 261 S.W.3d 701, 2008 Mo. App. LEXIS 1161, 2008 WL 4002978 (Mo. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

HAROLD L. LOWENSTEIN, Judge.

This appeal stems from a suit involving a will contest and an antenuptial agreement brought by a surviving spouse. The surviving husband was omitted from his deceased wife’s will. He brought suit asserting that he was a pretermitted spouse, an antenuptial agreement barring him from asserting his rights to the assets of a revocable trust was void and unenforceable, and the assets of the revocable trust should be brought into the probate estate. The trial court entered judgment in favor of the husband on all counts. This appeal followed.

I. Factual Background

Lois Kell (“Lois”) and the respondent, Tony Pulley (“Respondent” or “Tony”) were married on October 12, 1986. Tony was Lois’s second husband. Her first husband, Gordon Kell, had died four months previously, after almost forty years of marriage. Lois and Gordon had two grown children, Deborah Short (hereinafter “Deborah” or “Appellant”) and David Kell. Lois and Gordon had accumulated substantial assets, primarily real estate, during their marriage. In October 1986, Lois was sixty-five years old and had retired from teaching school.

Tony Pulley was forty-two years old when he and Lois married. The October 12, 1986, marriage was his third. He had four children from his first marriage. His second marriage was dissolved in May 1986, five months before he married Lois. At the time of the marriage to Lois, Tony was working as a certified nurse assistant at a Kansas City nursing home where he also resided. He had a number of convictions for driving while intoxicated. His driver’s license had been revoked. He was also subject to an outstanding judgment for unpaid child support.

Prior to her marriage to Tony, Lois, with assistance of counsel, created a revocable trust, (“the Trust”) dated October 3, 1986, pursuant to Section 456.010 RSMo. 1 *704 Lois was the sole trustee of the Trust during her lifetime. Her daughter, Deborah, was named the successor trustee, and Lois’s children, Deborah and David, were the beneficiaries of the Trust. The Trust was funded with properties acquired by Lois and Gordon Kell during their marriage and with Lois’s personal property. The legal descriptions of fifteen parcels of real property were appended as an exhibit to the Trust document.

Lois’s attorney also drafted a prenuptial agreement, dated October 12, 1986 (“the Agreement”). The prenuptial agreement recited that Lois had provided Tony with a copy of the Trust agreement. Under the Agreement, Tony waived any rights he may have, in the event of Lois’s death, to a child’s share of the Trust assets and agreed that the Agreement could be used against him should he make any claim on the Trust assets. In return, Lois waived any rights she had in assets Tony brought into the marriage.

Although the Agreement explained that Tony “has a right to have the results of his execution of this Agreement explained to him by an attorney of his choice,” Tony did not consult an attorney or seek any legal advice. Rather, he signed the Agreement, and his signature was notarized.

For the first five years of marriage, Tony had significant problems with alcohol abuse. He only worked outside the home briefly as a nursing assistant in a nursing home. He then worked with Lois to rehabilitate properties she purchased and prepare them for rental.

Lois paid all the expenses of the household, the farms, and the rental units. Tony did not contribute financially to the marriage until he began to receive disability benefits. Lois demanded he contribute $300 per month to help with household expenses.

Until her death in September 2004, Lois transferred properties in and out of the Trust as they were purchased or sold, keeping the properties separate from her personal estate, and titled these properties in the name of the Trust. Both Deborah and Tony testified that Lois did not disclose her financial dealings to her family. Indeed, Lois’s children, Deborah and David, did not know anything about the Trust beyond the fact that their mother had established a trust and that they were the beneficiaries.

II. Procedural Posture

Lois Kell died in September 2004. Lois’s will was admitted to probate. In her will, executed in January 1981, Lois bequeathed and devised all of her property to her then husband, Gordon. Should Gordon predecease Lois, their children, Deborah and David, would take under the will.

Tony’s consolidated petitions named Lois’s estate, the Trust, and Lois’s children, Deborah and David, the appellants, as defendants. Tony sought a will contest, imposition of a trust, damages, discovery of assets, injunction, and an accounting. The court entered judgment on February 26, 2007, and an amended judgment for purposes of appeal on March 7, 2007.

In its judgment, the court found in favor of Pulley on all counts. The trial court did not make, and the parties did not request, findings of fact. The trial court concluded that Pulley was a pretermitted spouse, pursuant to Section 474.235 2 and awarded him an intestate share of Lois’s estate-speeifically one half of all property in the probate estate. The court also invalidated the Agreement, finding it to be void and *705 unenforceable. The trial court predicated its decision on: (1) lack of financial consideration paid to Pulley; (2) absence of proof of disclosure of assets prior to execution of the Agreement; (B) absence of legal counsel for Pulley; (4) the Agreement was prepared by counsel for Lois and not reviewed by Pulley’s counsel; (5) the special relationship between Lois and Pulley established before she created the Trust and prenuptial Agreement.

The court found, further, that the Trust was an antenuptial contract that had, as its primary purpose, the defeat of Tony’s marital rights, and was, therefore, a fraudulent transfer within the meaning of the Missouri Non-Probate Transfers Law, Sections 461.071 and 461.300. The court ordered that the property of the Trust be made available to satisfy probate claims, expenses, statutory allowances, and other probate expenses. The court also concluded that 156 acres of property, with an appraised value of $150,000 to $230,000, was not properly made part of the Trust and should be included in the probate estate.

The judgment ordered that Pulley receive an undivided one-half of all real and personal property in the Trust relating back to April 2005. This appeal followed.

III. Discussion

Deborah’s two points relied on make three distinct claims. In her first claim, Deborah contends the trial court erred in finding Tony was a pretermitted spouse within the meaning of Section 474.235. She next argues that the trial court erred in invalidating the Agreement. She contends, as a third claim, that the Trust was improperly brought into the probate estate.

This court reviews a court tried case under the standard set forth in Murphy v. Carron, 536 S.W.2d 30, 32 (Mo. banc 1976).

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Bluebook (online)
261 S.W.3d 701, 2008 Mo. App. LEXIS 1161, 2008 WL 4002978, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pulley-v-short-moctapp-2008.