Pulliam v. Petersen

CourtDistrict Court, D. Maryland
DecidedJuly 22, 2024
Docket8:22-cv-01381
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
Pulliam v. Petersen, (D. Md. 2024).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT DISTRICT OF MARYLAND

LINDSAY P. PULLIAM, Plaintiff, Vv. FRANK E. PETERSEN, III and Civil Action No. TDC-22-1381 THE LORETTA I. EASTON REVOCABLE TRUST, Defendants.

MEMORANDUM OPINION Plaintiff Lindsay P. Pulliam has filed this civil action against Defendants Frank E. Petersen, III (“Frank Petersen”) and The Loretta I. Easton Revocable Trust (“the Trust”), in which she alleges claims of conversion, breach of fiduciary duty, and deceit arising from Frank Petersen’s administration of the Trust, for which she seeks injunctive relief. Pending before the Court is Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment, which is fully briefed. Upon review of the submitted materials, the Court finds that no hearing is necessary. D. Md. Local R. 105.6. For the reasons

set forth below, the Motion will be GRANTED. BACKGROUND At issue in this case are the will and trust of Dr. Loretta I. Easton, a resident of Montgomery County, Maryland, who died on August 18, 2018 at the age of 81. Easton was a longtime friend of the Petersen family, which included four siblings: Pulliam, Frank Petersen, Gayle Petersen, and Dana Petersen Moore. Easton was the best friend of the Petersen siblings’ mother, knew the Petersen siblings since they were children, and remained close to them until her death. The

Petersen siblings referred to Easton as “Aunt Loretta.” Petersen Moore Aff. §] 9, Opp’n Ex. la, ECF No. 78-1. After Easton’s death, her will was filed with the Office of the Register of Wills of Montgomery County, Maryland (“Register of Wills”). The document that created the Trust, the Declaration of the Loretta I. Easton Revocable Trust (“the Trust Declaration”) dated June 19, 2018, was not included in that filing but was produced in the discovery phase of this case. Upon direction by the Court, Defendants have submitted the Trust Declaration as part of the record in this case. I. The Will and Information Report In her last will and testament (“the Will”), signed and dated by Easton on June 19, 2018, Easton named Frank Petersen and attorney Rosalind R. Ray as the co-personal representatives for purposes of her will. Among other responsibilities, Easton directed Petersen and Ray to pay out of her estate her funeral and burial expenses, her debts, and all estate, inheritance, and succession taxes. Easton also affirmed that designated beneficiaries of her life insurance policies and annuities should receive the proceeds of those instruments. Easton directly referenced the Trust by stating that she bequeathed her unimproved real property, bank accounts, jewelry, art, books, personal clothing, and remaining assets in her estate to the trustee of the Loretta I. Easton Revocable Trust, to be distributed in accordance with the terms of the Trust. Any remaining vehicles, however, were granted directly to Frank Petersen. The Will also specifically stated that any “relatives, kin, and potential heirs not listed” in the Will had been “purposely, consciously and deliberately omitted” and excluded from the Will. Will at 3, Compl. Ex. 1, ECF No. 1. The Will provided that the co-personal representatives would receive 10 percent of Easton’s estate as compensation for their services.

An Information Report filed with the Register of Wills, signed and dated in March 2020 by Frank Petersen, Ray, and attorney Cheryl Chapman Henderson, included a list of Easton’s interests in annuities, employee pension or benefit plans, and other similar accounts. The list included seven accounts with cash value, held at various institutions, and included the cash value of each account and the specific successor, owner, or beneficiary of each account. Information Report at 5-6, ECF No. 73-1. The following individuals or entities were the successor, owner, or beneficiary of all or part of one or more of these accounts: Frank Petersen; the Trust and its trustees, Frank Petersen and Ray; Eleanor Anderson; People’s Congregational United Church of Christ; Howard University; and Howard University School of Medicine. Il. The Trust In the Trust Declaration, Easton identified Frank Petersen and Ray as the successor co- trustees upon her death or incapacity. The document defines a trustee as “the Administrator or Manager of the trust.” Trust Decl. at 2, ECF No. 82-1. The Trust Declaration listed the following nine individuals as beneficiaries who, upon the death of Easton, would receive specified cash amounts that ranged from $2,000 to $10,000: Judy Biagas, Verna Clarke, Monique Gorham, Jerome Bullock, Charles Nearon, Rita Palmer, Lovella Thomas, Darlene Wright Wesley, and June Yeager Perkins. Additional beneficiaries included the Howard University College of Medicine, the Howard University Undergraduate School, Theater of the Arts Department, and the Howard University Medical Alumni Association (collectively, “the Howard University Entities”), which would each receive a specified percentage of the remaining assets held in the Trust. The Trust Declaration further designated that “all additional assets of the trust including airline miles shall be distributed

to grantor’s Friend, Frank E. Petersen, III absolutely.” Trust Decl. at 4. It also stated that Easton □

“thas chosen to make no provisions in this trust agreement for anyone not named herein.” Jd. at 5. III. Easton Oral Statements Pulliam has submitted affidavits from her sisters, Gayle Petersen and Dana Petersen Moore, attesting to oral statements by Easton before her death expressing her intent that the four Petersen siblings receive equal shares of her estate. According to Gayle Petersen, during multiple visits before and after she became ill, Easton informed Gayle Petersen that she intended to leave her condominium and her other assets to the four Petersen siblings. Gayle Petersen asserts that “on more than one occasion,” Easton told her that Frank Petersen “would oversee the division and distribution of all of her other property and that [the four Petersen siblings] would all take equally.” G. Petersen Aff. §] 8, Opp’n Ex. 1, ECF No. 78-1. On August 4, 2018, when Gayle Petersen visited Easton while she was in the hospital shortly before her death, Easton again said that “she intended for all four of the Petersen children to share equally in her state,” then reviewed with Gayle Petersen, using a calculator, various investment accounts each valued at between $75,000 and $90,000. Id. ¥ 12. Gayle Petersen further states that, at an October 14, 2018 meeting at Easton’s home following Easton’s death, Ray told her that “[t]he girls were not named but she wanted all of you to take equally,” and that Easton had listed Frank Petersen’s name “as a placeholder” in order to distribute assets equally to the four children. /d. § 15. When Gayle Petersen expressed concerns to Ray about whether Frank Petersen would follow Easton’s wishes, Ray advised her that she would “have to appeal to his conscience.” Jd. § 16. In her affidavit, Dana Petersen Moore similarly states that Ray advised her, after Easton’s death, that Easton’s intent was for her estate “to be shared equally by all four of the Petersen

children.” Petersen Moore Aff. §] 19. According to Petersen Moore, Ray advised Easton that she would need to amend her will in order to reflect these intentions, but Easton responded that she trusted Frank Petersen to follow her wishes and “take care of his sisters as Aunt Loretta wished.” Id. 421. Both Gayle Petersen and Dana Petersen Moore assert that Ray had informed them that she had notes of Easton’s intentions for the Petersen children to share in the estate. At the October 2018 meeting at Easton’s home, Frank Petersen told his sisters to “take whatever you want” from among her personal effects. /d. | 15. However, in discussions with Gayle Petersen, Frank Petersen was “adamant” that all of the money belonged only to him. G. Petersen Aff. § 18.

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Pulliam v. Petersen, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pulliam-v-petersen-mdd-2024.