Scalfaro v. Rudloff

934 A.2d 1254, 594 Pa. 210, 2007 Pa. LEXIS 2438
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 21, 2007
Docket127 MAP 2006
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 934 A.2d 1254 (Scalfaro v. Rudloff) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Scalfaro v. Rudloff, 934 A.2d 1254, 594 Pa. 210, 2007 Pa. LEXIS 2438 (Pa. 2007).

Opinions

OPINION

Chief Justice CAPPY.1

In this appeal, we consider whether a trust instrument gave a joint settlor, who was also a joint trustee, the authority to revoke an inter vivos trust when he became the sole trustee upon the death of his spouse. For the following reasons, we conclude that the trust instrument is clear and unambiguous in stating that the power of revocation was to be exercised by the settlors jointly and not by either one of them as sole trustee. Accordingly, the order of the Superior Court is reversed.

Robert C. Rudloff (“Mr.[ ]Rudloff’) and Helen M. Rudloff (“Mrs. Rudloff’) (collectively, the “Rudloffs”) owned property (“Property”) located in Bucks County, Pennsylvania as tenants by the entireties. On August 11, 1993, the Rudloffs executed a form-book Declaration of Trust, establishing an inter vivos trust (the “Trust”). The corpus of the Trust was the Property and the Rudloffs were the designated trustees. Under the terms of a quit claim deed, the Property was transferred to the Trust and into the Trust Estate.

Paragraph 1 of the Declaration of Trust named the Rudloffs’ three children, Appellant Judith Scalfaro and Appellees Richard and James Rudloff, as equal one-third beneficiaries. In paragraphs 2 and 3, the responsibilities and interests of the beneficiaries were set forth. Paragraphs 4 and 5 specified the powers and rights the Rudloffs reserved, stating:

[213]*2134. We reserve unto ourselves the power and right at any time during our lifetime (1) to place a mortgage or other lien upon the [Property and (2) to collect any rental or other income that may accrue from the trust property.....
5. We reserve unto ourselves the power and right at any time during our lifetime to amend or revoke in whole or in part the trust hereby created without the necessity of obtaining the consent of any beneficiary and without giving notice to any beneficiary. The sale or other disposition by us of the whole or any part of the [PJroperty held hereunder shall constitute as to such whole or part a revocation of the trust.

(Trial Stipulations at Exhibit 2). Paragraph 6 addressed the revocation of the beneficiary designation and termination of the Trust in the event that the beneficiaries predeceased the Rudloffs. Paragraph 7 addressed what role the survivor of the Rudloffs would assume, stating that “[i]n the event of the physical or mental incapacity or death of one of us, the survivor shall continue as sole Trustee.” (Trial Stipulations at Exhibit 2).

Mrs. Rudloff died in October of 1996. On June 14, 2000, Mr. Rudloff executed and filed a deed conveying the Property to Appellees. Mr. Rudloff died on December 24, 2001. Appellees claimed ownership of the Property under the June 14, 2000 deed.

On June 19, 2003, Appellant filed a Complaint against Appellees in an Action to Quiet Title, alleging that given the terms of the Declaration of Trust, Mr. Rudloff, as sole trustee, was not authorized to convey the Property. Appellant requested that the June 14, 2000 deed be voided and cancelled, and that the Property be administered under the Declaration of Trust. Appellee Richard Rudloff (“Appellee Rudloff”) filed an Answer, New Matter and Counterclaim, alleging that the Trust was revocable by both or either one of the Rudloffs and that Mr. Rudloffs conveyance of the Property on June 14, 2000 served to revoke the Trust and extinguish Appellant’s rights in the Property. Appellee Rudloff requested that Ap[214]*214pedant’s action be dismissed and that the court quiet title in the Property in Appellees.

A bench trial was held on March 1, 2004. The trial court decided in Appellant’s favor, and entered an order dated March 2, 2004, voiding the June 14, 2000 deed, cancedng the June 14, 2000 deed as matter of record, and directing that the Property be administered in accordance with terms and conditions of the Trust. Appellee Rudloff filed post-trial motions, which were denied. He then lodged a timely appeal in the Superior Court, raising whether the trial erred in not recognizing that under the Declaration of Trust, Mr. Rudloff as sole trustee, had the power to revoke the Trust and did so, by conveying the Property.

In its Pa.R.A.P.1925(b) opinion, the trial court concluded that Appellee Rudloffs contention had no merit. The trial court recognized that a settlor may revoke or amend a revocable trust, provided that the power to revoke is reserved in the trust instrument’s terms, and that the settlor’s intent as to revocation is to be gathered from the language of the trust. (Trial Court opinion at 6), citing In re Trust of Kaufmann, 460 Pa. 24, 331 A.2d 209, 211 (1975). Applying these principles to the Declaration of Trust, the trial court noted that paragraph 5 used plural words to describe the power of revocation that the Rudloffs reserved and included no words to indicate that either one of the Rudloffs were authorized to revoke the Trust alone, and that paragraph 7 did not state that the surviving and sole trustee was empowered to change the Trust. (Trial Court opinion at 5-6.) Thus, the trial court concluded that the Declaration of Trust clearly vested the power to revoke the Trust in the Rudloffs jointly, that the action taken by Mr. Rudloff as sole trustee on June 14, 2000 was unauthorized, and that the conveyance of the Property by deed to Appellees was void. (Trial court opinion at 7.)

On appeal, in a published opinion, a divided panel of the Superior Court reached a different conclusion, and reversed the trial court’s order. Scalfaro v. Rudloff, 884 A.2d 904 (Pa.Super.2005). Relying heavily on a decision rendered by the Supreme Court of Utah in Matter of Estate of West, 948 [215]*215P.2d 351 (Utah 1997), the Superior Court majority focused on the second sentence in paragraph 5, which stated that “the sale or other disposition by us of the whole or any part of the [Pjroperty held hereunder shall constitute as to such whole or part a revocation of the trust” and the direction in paragraph 7 that upon the death of one of the Rudloffs, the survivor would continue as sole trustee. The majority repeated the observation made by the Utah Court in Estate of West that the sale of trust property can be accomplished only by a trustee who holds legal title, and reasoned that since Mr. Rudloff retained the powers of a trustee when Mrs. Rudloff died, the Declaration of Trust must be interpreted to mean that Mr. Rudloff was authorized to convey the Property on his own. Scalfaro, 884 A.2d at 907-09. Accordingly, the majority concluded that Mr. Rudloff had the right to convey the Property, and that the conveyance Mr. Rudloff made on June 14, 2000, to Appellees extinguished the Trust and Appellant’s rights in the Property. Id. at 910.

Judge Kelly dissented. Id. at 910-14 (Kelly, J. dissenting). Judge Kelly examined the language in the Declaration of Trust addressing the settlors’ power to revoke and the context in which this power was set out, and concluded that the instrument gave the power to revoke to the Rudloffs jointly as settlors, and not to Mr. Rudloff as sole trustee. Id. at 910-15. Accordingly, Judge Kelly would have determined that the trust became irrevocable upon Mrs. Rudloffs death, and would have affirmed the trial court. Id. at 915.

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Scalfaro v. Rudloff
934 A.2d 1254 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 2007)

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Bluebook (online)
934 A.2d 1254, 594 Pa. 210, 2007 Pa. LEXIS 2438, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scalfaro-v-rudloff-pa-2007.