Steele v. Kenna

CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedFebruary 18, 2026
Docket25-530
StatusPublished
AuthorJudge Valerie Zachary

This text of Steele v. Kenna (Steele v. Kenna) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Steele v. Kenna, (N.C. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF NORTH CAROLINA

No. COA25-530

Filed 18 February 2026

Wake County, No. 23E004747-910

MARY PAULA ZAYTOUN STEELE, Petitioner,

v.

KEVIN I. KENNA, JEFFREY A. KENNA, PATRICK E. KENNA, PETER L. KENNA, THOMAS X. KENNA, MARTHA ZAYTOUN, CLARE K. ZAYTOUN, TAYLOR M. ZAYTOUN, REEVES M. ZAYTOUN, MARY L. ZAYTOUN BERNE, HENRY S. ZAYTOUN, III, JEREMIAH R. ZAYTOUN, CHRISTIAN S. ZAYTOUN, HAYNES ZAYTOUN, BLAISE WATERS, BECKET WATERS, ALEXANDRA PENNY, ELENA PENNY, MARK FOSTER, JR., MARTHA LEE BRISSETTE, AUGUSTUS HOWARD, CHARLES N. HOWARD, KATIE ALLARE, GREGORY ALLARE, JOHN MICKELSON, ASHLEY STEELE, DANNY STEELE, BRIGID STEELE, and HENRY S. ZAYTOUN, JR., as guardian for MARGARET A. ZAYTOUN, and RACHEL L. ZAYTOUN, Respondents.

Appeal by petitioner from order entered 22 November 2024 by Judge Matthew

T. Houston in Wake County Superior Court. Heard in the Court of Appeals 19

November 2025.

The Armstrong Law Firm, P.A., by L. Lamar Armstrong, III, and Daughtry, Woodard, Lawrence & Starling, LLP, by Luther D. Starling, Jr., and Alexander M. Guin, for petitioner-appellant/counter-respondent.

Shumaker Loop & Kendrick, LLP, by Lynn F. Chandler and Lucas D. Garber, for respondents-appellees/counter-petitioners Katie Allare, Gregory Allare, John Mickelson, Ashley Steele, Danny Steele, and Brigid Steele.

No brief filed on behalf of respondents-appellees Kevin I. Kenna, Jeffrey A. Kenna, Patrick E. Kenna, Peter L. Kenna, Thomas X. Kenna, Martha Zaytoun, Clare K. Zaytoun, Taylor M. Zaytoun, Reeves M. Zaytoun, Mary L. Zaytoun Berne, Henry S. Zaytoun, III, Jeremiah R. Zaytoun, Christian S. Zaytoun, Haynes Zaytoun, Blaise Waters, Becket Waters, Alexandra Penny, Elena Penny, Mark Foster, Jr., Martha Lee Brissette, Augustus Howard, Charles N. Howard, STEELE V. KENNA

Opinion of the Court

and Henry S. Zaytoun, Jr., as guardian for Margaret A. Zaytoun and Rachel L. Zaytoun.

ZACHARY, Judge.

Petitioner Mary Paula Zaytoun Steele, the widow of Patrick Steele, acting in

her capacity as trustee of the Patrick Steele Revocable Trust, appeals from an order

granting the motion to compel filed by Counter-Petitioners Katie Allare, Gregory

Allare, John Mickelson, Ashley Steele, Danny Steele, and Brigid Steele, who are the

biological nieces and nephews and sister, respectively, of Patrick Steele (collectively,

“Counter-Petitioners”). After careful review, we affirm the order compelling the

production of documents by the law firm of Wyrick Robbins Yates & Ponton LLP

(“Wyrick Robbins”).

I. Background

This case arises from a dispute over who shall be included in the class described

as “my nieces and nephews” and thereby entitled to a share of a $5 million

distribution from the Patrick Steele Revocable Trust.

The Trust was first created in 2007 and was modified several times prior to the

death of Patrick Steele (“Grantor”) in 2022. In the 2007 iteration of the Trust, Grantor

named as potential extended-family beneficiaries “Brigid Ann Steele; my nieces and

nephews; and my wife’s nieces and nephews.” In 2013, Grantor amended the trust

agreement, changing the potential extended-family beneficiaries to “such of Brigid

-2- STEELE V. KENNA

Ann Steele, my nieces and my nephews as survive me.” In successive amendments in

2015, 2018, and 2021, Grantor retained his sister and his nieces and nephews as

potential extended-family beneficiaries. In the 2018 amendment, Grantor limited the

amount that would be distributed to his sister and his nieces and nephews to no more

than $5,000,000.

Attorney Matt Bullard of Wyrick Robbins drafted the 2007 Trust with the

assistance of John O’Connor, an Iowa attorney with whom Grantor had previously

worked. Bullard drafted the 2013 Amendment and O’Connor drafted the 2018

Amendment, although Counter-Petitioners assert that Bullard “played a significant

role in drafting” it as well. Bullard drafted the 2021 Amendment.1

On 1 September 2023, Mary Paula Zaytoun Steele, acting in her capacity as

trustee of the Trust, filed a petition for declaratory judgment seeking clarification of

the “rights and obligations created under the Trust and construction of the phrase

‘nieces and nephews’ as used in the Trust.” Specifically, she seeks a declaratory

judgment that Grantor’s five biological nieces and nephews and twenty-four marital

nieces and nephews comprise the class of “my nieces and nephews” and are therefore

entitled to distributions as extended-family beneficiaries of the Trust.

On 27 February 2024, Grantor’s marital nieces and nephews filed an answer

and motion for summary judgment consonant with the petition, asserting that the

1 It is unclear from the record which attorney drafted the 2015 Amendment, although it was

executed in Wake County, North Carolina.

-3- STEELE V. KENNA

class of “my nieces and nephews” includes both Grantor’s biological and marital

nieces and nephews. On 26 November 2024, Counter-Petitioners filed an amended

answer, affirmative defenses, and amended counter-petition2 in which they alleged,

inter alia, that during a meeting with his Iowa attorney, Grantor had “clearly

expressed his intent to leave the Nieces and Nephews Portion to his side of the family

only.” Counter-Petitioners seek a declaratory judgment that they are the only

beneficiaries of the extended-family portion of the Trust, to the exclusion of the

marital nieces and nephews.

During discovery, Counter-Petitioners served Wyrick Robbins with a subpoena

directing the firm to produce “[a]ll documents related to estate planning for

[Grantor].” Wyrick Robbins objected to the subpoena on the basis of attorney-client

privilege and refused to produce the requested discovery absent Mary Paula Zaytoun

Steele’s written consent or a court order compelling its production. On 6 September

2024, Counter-Petitioners filed a motion to compel, seeking an order “compelling

Wyrick Robbins to produce and permit inspection and copying of all documents

related to the estate planning for” Grantor. In support of their motion, Counter-

Petitioners invoked the “testamentary exception to the attorney-client privilege.”

On 22 November 2024, the trial court entered an order addressing, inter alia,

2 The original answer and counter-petition do not appear in the record. The parties stipulated

that “[a]s the amended pleadings are now the operative pleadings, they are included in the Record and the originals are excluded from the Record.”

-4- STEELE V. KENNA

Counter-Petitioners’ motion to compel. The court granted Counter-Petitioners’

motion and instructed Wyrick Robbins to produce the subpoenaed documents within

14 days of service of the order.

Mary Paula Zaytoun Steele timely filed notice of appeal from the court’s order,

“specifically the portion of the [o]rder granting [the] [m]otion to [c]ompel.”

II. Appellate Jurisdiction

“Generally, there is no right of immediate appeal from interlocutory orders and

judgments.” Goldston v. Am. Motors Corp., 326 N.C. 723, 725, 392 S.E.2d 735, 736

(1990). “An interlocutory order is one made during the pendency of an action, which

does not dispose of the case, but leaves it for further action by the trial court in order

to settle and determine the entire controversy.” Veazey v. City of Durham, 231 N.C.

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