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| Wyoming Supreme Court Cases |
RON RETZ, an individual; ERNEST WILLIAMS, individually and as trustee for nieces and nephews of the decedent, William C. Rogers; ANNE BURWELL WILLIAMS, individually and as co-trustee for the nieces and nephews of the decedent, William C. Rogers; FRED CROUTER, individually and as trustee of the Ada Crouter Trust; AND BEVERLY CROUTER, an individual V. WILLIAM SIEBRANDT, an individual; SALVADOR ZARATE, an individual; CHARLES E. GRAVES, in his capacity as Successor Trustee of the Living Trust of WILLIAM C. ROGERS, deceased, and THE UNIVERSITY OF WYOMING FOUNDATION, a Wyoming nonprofit corporation
2008 WY 44
181 P.3d 84
Case Number: S-07-0023
Decided: 04/11/2008
APRIL
TERM, A.D. 2008
RON
RETZ, an individual; ERNEST WILLIAMS, individually and as trustee for nieces and
nephews of the decedent, William C. Rogers; ANNE BURWELL WILLIAMS, individually
and as co-trustee for the nieces and nephews of the decedent, William C. Rogers;
FRED CROUTER, individually and as trustee of the
Appellants
(Plaintiffs),
v.
WILLIAM
SIEBRANDT, an individual; SALVADOR ZARATE, an individual; CHARLES E. GRAVES, in
his capacity as Successor Trustee of the Living Trust of WILLIAM C. ROGERS,
deceased,
Appellees
(Defendants),
and
THE UNIVERSITY OF
WYOMING FOUNDATION, a Wyoming nonprofit corporation,
Appellee
(Nominal
Defendant).
Appeal
from the
The
Honorable Jeffrey A. Donnell, Judge
Representing
Appellants:
C.M.
Aron, Aron and Henning, LLP, Laramie, Wyoming; and Mattaniah Eytan, Law Offices
of Mattaniah Eytan, Corte Madera, California. Argument by Mr.
Eytan.
Representing
Appellees:
Jason M.
Tangeman, Jeff Anthony, and Philip A. Nicholas of Anthony, Nicholas &
Tangeman, LLC, Laramie, Wyoming, for Appellees William Siebrandt and Salvador
Zarate. Paul J. Hickey, Roger C.
Fransen, and Brandi L. Monger* of Hickey & Evans, LLP,
Before
VOIGT, C.J., and GOLDEN, HILL, and BURKE, JJ, and Ryckman,
DJ.
*Order
Granting Motion Allowing Brandi L. Monger to Withdraw as Counsel entered
September 18, 2007.
VOIGT, Chief Justice.
[¶1] Appellants, Ron
Retz, Ernest Williams, Anne Burwell Williams, Fred Crouter, and Beverly Crouter,
request relief from the district court’s grant of two separate motions for
summary judgment, the last of which effectively disposed of Appellants’ claims
against Appellees William Siebrandt, Salvador Zarate, Charles E. Graves
(Trustee), and The University of Wyoming Foundation. Appellants also contest the district
court’s denial of a motion to amend the complaint. We affirm.
ISSUES
[¶2] 1. Did the district court abuse its
discretion in denying Appellants’ request for leave to amend the
complaint?
2. Did the district
court properly grant summary judgment on the claim for breach of contract to
make a will and on the claim challenging the validity of the 2002
trust?
Appellants’
Notice of Appeal also lists several other issues. Appellants chose not to argue those
issues in their briefs and we consider them waived.
FACTS
[¶3] Colonel William
C. Rogers (the Colonel) died in
[¶4] The Colonel spent
some years in
[¶5] The Colonel was
meticulous in his estate planning.
He created a series of instruments, including at least ten separate
amended living trusts, over the course of the years. The trusts have minor variations, but
all contain a number of individual and charitable bequests and leave the
residual estate to the
[¶6] During his life,
the Colonel was trustee of his own revocable trust. Upon his death, that responsibility
passed to his attorney, Appellee Charles Graves. Mr. Graves sent notice of the Amended
Living Trust of William C. Rogers, dated February 16, 2002, to all beneficiaries
in June of 2003. Appellants, all of
whom are either beneficiaries of the trust or claim some right to assets
contained therein, filed the Complaint in this action on April 29, 2005. Appellants alleged, inter alia, that the 2002 trust was
executed under undue influence, that the trust was forged, that the trust was
created in violation of a contract to make a will, and that the Trustee had
violated his duty to the trust by refusing to bring suit in California to
recover monies Appellants allege were misappropriated before the Colonel’s
death. Appellees moved for summary
judgment, which the district court partially granted on September 12, 2006.
After the Motion for Summary
Judgment was filed but before the order partially granting summary judgment was
entered, Appellants moved to amend their Complaint. The district court denied that motion in
part and granted summary judgment for Appellees on the remaining issues on
November 28, 2006. This appeal
followed.
DISCUSSION
A. The Motion to
Amend
[¶7]
The law in
Leave to
amend pleadings “shall be freely given when justice so requires.” We have identified the proper test as to
what the trial court should consider when an amendment is proffered to be the
following:
If the
underlying facts or circumstances relied upon by a plaintiff may be a proper
subject of relief, he ought to be afforded an opportunity to test his claim on
the merits. In the absence of any
apparent or declared reason – such as undue delay, bad faith or dilatory motive
on the part of the movant, repeated failure to cure deficiencies by amendments
previously allowed, undue prejudice to the opposing party by virtue of allowance
of the amendment, futility of amendment, etc. – the leave sought should, as the
rules require, be ‘freely given.’
Armstrong
v. Hrabal, 2004
WY 39, ¶ 11, 87 P.3d 1226, 1230-31 (Wyo. 2004) (internal citations and quotation
marks omitted).
[¶8] We cannot find
that the district court abused its discretion in denying Appellants leave to
amend the Complaint. Several of the
above-stated factors, any one of which gives a district court reason to deny
amendment of a complaint, were present in this case. Appellants filed their Motion to Amend
Complaint on August 22, 2006, more than a year after filing the Complaint, and
only days from the court-ordered discovery cut off. At that time, Appellees’ Motion for
Summary Judgment was still pending. Several of the changes to the Complaint
modified claims that were the subject of that summary judgment motion. Appellants also attempted to add new
claims that would not be in danger from the pending summary judgment
motion. The requested changes would
have required significant additional discovery, including retaking depositions,
and would have entitled Appellees to further dispositive motions.1 Many of the proposed changes would also
have been futile because the district court had already disposed of the
underlying issues on summary judgment by the time the motion was decided. The claims that had not yet been decided
suffered from the same failures of proof that ultimately led the district court
to dismiss summarily the remainder of Appellants’ claims as discussed below, and
amendment to add them would have been futile. See infra ¶¶ 9-13.
[¶9] Appellants Anne
Burwell Williams and Ernest Williams, the Colonel’s estranged niece and nephew,
argue that the district court should have allowed them to amend the Complaint to
add their claim to have Appellee Charles Graves removed as Trustee. The district court found that this claim
was a reiteration of Appellants’ earlier request for injunctive relief,
requesting that the court require the Trustee to sue Appellees Siebrandt and
Zarate in
[¶10] Appellants also take issue with the
district court’s refusal to allow them to amend their Complaint to add claims
for the torts of elder abuse and undue influence. Appellants have not made any cogent
argument supported by law as to why a
[¶11] Appellants Fred and Beverly Crouter
attempted to bring several claims on behalf of their mother, Ada Crouter, the
Colonel’s long-time friend and companion during his years in
[¶12] The last claim about which
Appellants make specific argument on appeal is the Crouters’ claim that the
Colonel used a fraudulent document wrongfully to withdraw securities from an
account he held jointly with Ada Crouter in 1991. The district court properly denied the
request to amend to add this claim because the Crouters could not have prevailed
as a matter of law. The statute of
limitations on conversion is four years.
the
words ‘until the discovery of the fraud’ appearing in
§ 1-18 mean from the
time the fraud was known or could have been discovered in the exercise of
reasonable diligence. They do not
necessarily mean until the party complaining had actual notice of the fraud
alleged to have been committed.
Mason v.
Laramie Rivers Co., 490
P.2d 1062, 1064 (
[¶13] Ada Crouter was a joint holder of
the account from which the Colonel withdrew the securities in 1991. A simple inquiry at the brokerage would
have shown her that the account had been emptied. An account holder is charged with
knowledge of the state of her account.
O’Donnell v.
B. Summary
Judgment
[¶14]
When we review the granting of a summary judgment, we employ the same
standards and use the same materials as were employed and used by the trial
court. We examine the record from
the vantage point most favorable to the party who opposed the motion, and we
give that party the benefit of all favorable inferences that may fairly be drawn
from the record. Summary judgment
is appropriate only when no genuine issue as to any material fact exists and the
prevailing party is entitled to have a judgment as a matter of law. A genuine issue of material fact exists
when a disputed fact, if it were proven, would have the effect of establishing
or refuting an essential element of the cause of action or defense which the
parties have asserted. We review a
grant of summary judgment deciding a question of law de novo and afford no
deference to the trial court’s ruling.
. . . We will affirm a grant
of summary judgment if it can be sustained on any legal ground appearing in the
record.
Platt v.
Creighton, 2007
WY 18, ¶ 7, 150 P.3d 1194, 1198-99 (Wyo. 2007) (citations and quotation marks
omitted).
[¶15] The district court granted summary
judgment on all issues in two separate decision letters. Appellants contest the district court’s
decision on two of those issues, which we will address here.2
1.
Contract to Make a
Will
[¶16] Appellants Ernest Williams and Anne
Burwell Williams claim that the Colonel entered into an agreement with their
parents, his sisters, to leave all of his money to his family when he died. In its Order Granting Partial Summary
Judgment, the district court dismissed that claim because it found that
Appellants were not able to produce any competent evidence3 to support the allegations
contained therein. However, the
contract would be unenforceable even if evidence supported its existence. Appellants claim that the Colonel agreed
to leave his money to his sisters and their families in exchange for their help
in hiding his assets from his then-wife during the divorce. “Generally, a contract which is contrary
to public policy will not be recognized by the court, and the parties to such
contract will be left as the court finds them.” Tate v. Mountain States Tel. & Tel.
Co., 647 P.2d 58, 61 (
2.
Undue
Influence
[¶17] The district court
summarily dismissed Appellants’ claims that the 2002 trust instrument was either
forged or executed under the undue influence of Appellees Siebrandt and
Zarate. The district court
determined that Appellants had no standing to attack the 2002 trust. In its November 28, 2006 decision
letter, the district court reasoned that Appellants had no tangible interest in
setting aside the 2002 trust because they would not take any differently under
the previous trust instrument.
Appellants argue that the proper course of action is to reinstate a will
the Colonel executed in 1988, and not the 2000 trust that was the predecessor to
the 2002 trust instrument.
[¶18] Under Wyo. Stat. Ann. § 4-10-407
(LexisNexis 2007), “a trust is void to the extent its creation was induced by
fraud, duress or undue influence.”
The 2002 trust was the means of revoking the previous (2000) trust
instrument. Appellants have
presented no evidence showing that any independent revocation of the 2000 trust
ever took place. If the portions of
the 2002 trust relating to Appellees Siebrant and Zarate were void because of
undue influence, the
[¶19] In order to establish that a will
(or in this case, a testamentary trust) was executed under undue influence, a
party must establish:
(1) the
relations between the one charged with exercising the undue influence and the
decedent affording the former an opportunity to control the testamentary act;
(2) that the decedent’s condition was such as to permit * * * subversion of
h[is] freedom of will; (3) that there was activity on the part of the person
charged with exercising undue influence; and (4) that such person unduly
profited as beneficiary under the will.
In re
Estate of Loomis, 810
P.2d 126, 129 (
[¶20] Appellees, as movants, bear the
initial burden of establishing a prima
facie case for summary judgment.
In re Estate of
[¶21] Appellees also provided an
affidavit of Trustee Charles Graves, who attested that he had known the Colonel
for decades, spoke with him on a regular basis, met with him occasionally over
the years, and had observed, firsthand, the Colonel’s relationship with Appellee
Siebrandt. Mr. Graves verified that
he drafted the 2002 trust at the Colonel’s instruction, that he spoke directly
to the Colonel regarding the terms to be added to and removed from the 2000
trust, and that he believed that the document was an expression of the Colonel’s
wishes, and not those of any other party exerting influence over him. Mr. Graves also explained that he was
personally aware that the Colonel transferred a significant amount of money in
the form of gifts to Appellee Siebrandt throughout the Colonel’s lifetime.
[¶22] Appellees also provided deposition
testimony from several health care professionals who had known the Colonel over
the years. Louanna Blackton, an
administrator at the Colonel’s assisted living facility from 1997 to 1999,
remembered the Colonel and testified that he was a very independent person and
that he was always alert and aware.
Diane Morton, another administrator, testified that the Colonel was
resistant to the level of help he was offered at the facility, that he was
extremely intelligent and opinionated, and that he always spoke his
mind.
[¶23] Appellees submitted the affidavit
of Kathie Cuomo, an employee of The University of Wyoming Foundation who met
with the Colonel in May of 2002 regarding his gifts to the University. Ms. Cuomo found the Colonel in good
health, and in full control of his faculties. She met with the Colonel alone and never
met Appellee Siebrandt. Philip
Dubois, also of the University, confirmed that he met with the Colonel in 1998
and again in 2000. Mr. Dubois
testified that Siebrandt was not present at either visit, and that the Colonel
seemed much happier at his home in
[¶24] Alejandro Cruz testified that he
was the Colonel’s primary caregiver until the Colonel’s death in 2003. Mr. Cruz described the last years of the
Colonel’s life, a daily routine that included regular trips to the library
(where the Colonel was left alone to study) and frequent visits to the beach,
despite the Colonel’s confinement to a wheelchair and other medical issues. Mr. Cruz discussed the various choices
the Colonel made with respect to his daily activities, testimony that reflects
that the Colonel had a very independent lifestyle for a man in his
nineties.
[¶25] The notary who notarized the 2002
trust also testified in deposition that she remembered the Colonel. She testified that the Colonel seemed
alert, that she remembered him being talkative, and that she had no recollection
of anyone being with the Colonel that day. The notary recognized the Colonel from a
picture on his driver’s license at the deposition and confirmed that the person
whose picture appeared on that license was, in fact, the person who came to her
office to have the trust notarized.
[¶26] We find that the district court was
correct in finding that Appellees had met their burden under the summary
judgment standard. The burden then
shifted to Appellants to “present specific and substantiated evidence showing
the existence of a material fact” as to undue influence with respect to the
trust document. McLean, 2004 WY 126, ¶ 15, 99 P.3d at
1004. Appellants failed to produce
sufficient admissible evidence to raise such an issue.
[¶27] Appellants produced the sworn
testimony of Paul J. Barulich, an attorney who met with the Colonel at the
assisted care facility in 1998 and reviewed the Colonel’s estate documents. Mr. Barulich testified that Appellee
Siebrandt was visibly upset that the Colonel was meeting with a lawyer without
Siebrandt’s knowledge and that the Colonel refused to see Mr. Barulich after
their initial meeting. When Mr.
Barulich was able to gain admittance to see him, the Colonel remained in bed,
refused to look at him, and repeatedly told him to “go away.” Mr. Barulich also testified that
Siebrandt was in the room during that visit. However, Appellees produced a letter
from the Colonel addressed to Mr. Barulich that requested the return of his
papers and ordered Mr. Barulich not to complete any work on the Colonel’s
behalf. Appellees have also
produced the testimony of Trustee Charles Graves that he investigated Mr.
Barulich’s concerns, that the State of
[¶28] In addition to Mr. Barulich’s
testimony, Appellants have produced photocopies of reams of correspondence from
the Colonel to various people, most of which is illegible. Appellants provided typed versions of
these hand-written letters, but failed to give any reason such transcriptions
would be admissible in court. This
Court does not know who transcribed the letters, and from the limited number of
phrases legible to us, it is obvious the transcriptions contain multiple errors
and do not accurately reflect the contents of the letters themselves. We have reviewed the portions of the
letters that can be deciphered and they show, at best, that the Colonel and
William Siebrandt had a problematic relationship over the course of many
years. Nothing in these letters in
any way proves or disproves the allegations of undue influence with respect to
the 2002 trust instrument.
[¶29] Appellants also point to a number
of gifts from the Colonel to William Siebrandt in the last years of the
Colonel’s life. The record shows,
however, that the Colonel was in the habit of making large gifts to Siebrandt
over the course of his life. An
examination of the Colonel’s net worth at the time shows that, while the gifts
were substantial (sometimes approaching a million dollars at a time), the
Colonel’s net worth at that time ranged between $50 and $100 million. Gifts of 1% of the Colonel’s total
estate to his primary caretaker and closest friend are not unusual or out of
character enough to serve as convincing evidence that his will was
overthrown.
[¶30] “In ruling on a motion for summary
judgment, the judge must view the evidence presented through the prism of the
substantive evidentiary burden.” Bitker v. First Nat’l Bank in Evanston,
2004 WY 114, ¶ 11, 98 P.3d 853, 855-56 (Wyo. 2004) (internal citation and
quotation marks omitted). “Clear
proof of undue influence is required to render a will voidable.” Loomis, 810 P.2d at 128 (quoting Macaraeg v. Wilson, 749 P.2d 272,
277 (
It is
not sufficient to show that a party benefited by a will had the motive and the
opportunity to exert such influence but there must be evidence that he did exert
it and did so control the actions of the testator that the instrument is not
really the will of the testator.
Estate
of Draper, 374
P.2d 425, 431-32 (
[¶31] Appellants are at a disadvantage in
this litigation, in part because none of them had seen or had regular contact
with the Colonel for more than 30 years. Appellees, on the other hand, had visited
the Colonel regularly (some daily) in his last years, and they were able to
provide evidence accordingly.
Appellants have not provided enough evidence to raise a material fact
with regard to undue influence.
3.
Forgery
[¶32] Appellants also attack the 2002
trust on the basis that the Colonel’s signature on the document is a
forgery. The Colonel’s signature on
that trust is notarized. Under Wyo.
Stat. Ann. § 32-1-107 (
[¶33] The notary whose signature and seal
appear on the 2002 trust testified, as we noted above, that she remembered the
Colonel and remembered notarizing his document. See supra ¶ 25. The notary also testified about her
customary procedure for notarizing a document, which included reviewing the
document for completeness, inspecting valid state identification, witnessing the
client’s signature, and having the client separately sign a notary journal. She explained that her procedure for
notarizing a jurat (which is what the notary certificate on the 2002 trust
contained) required her to witness the act of signing, and that she would have a
client resign the document if it were brought in to her with a signature already
affixed.
[¶34] As discussed above, Appellee
Charles Graves stated that he prepared the trust at the Colonel’s direction,
that he dealt directly with the Colonel on the matter, and that he believes
the 2002 trust reflects the Colonel’s wishes. See supra ¶ 21. The Colonel returned the trust to Mr.
Graves after it was notarized, and Mr. Graves held it until the Colonel’s death
in 2003.
[¶35] Appellants offered the report of a
forensic document examiner to refute the presumption in favor of the information
(including the identification of the signer) in the notary certificate. The document examiner’s report is not
well-worded, and refers to signatures in the body of the trust and to notarized
signatures. It appears to conclude
that the notarized signature is genuine, while the signatures found elsewhere in
the trust are not genuine. This is
the only evidence Appellants have produced on this matter. This is not enough to raise a genuine
issue of material fact with respect to the authenticity of a notarized signature
given the testimony of the notary, the corroboration provided by the decedent’s
lawyer that the trust was legitimate, and the fact that the 2002 trust appears
to be congruous with the testamentary scheme pursued by the Colonel throughout
his life.
CONCLUSION
[¶36]
The district court did not abuse its discretion when it denied
Appellants’ request to amend their Complaint. The district court properly summarily
disposed of Appellants’ claims when they failed to produce enough evidence to
raise a genuine issue of material fact on any claim. We affirm.
FOOTNOTES
1At the
time of the hearing on the Motion to Amend Complaint, the deadline for filing
dispositive motions had passed.
2Appellant
carries the burden of bringing a complete record to this Court for review. Stroup v. Oedekoven, 995 P.2d 125, 129
(
3The
“evidence” filed in this case consists of thousands of pages of poorly
organized, often illegible, largely irrelevant, painfully duplicative, and
generally unexplained documents. We
have addressed the relevant documents cited by the parties amidst this
cullage. The fact that we review a
district court’s decision de novo in
a case for summary judgment does not excuse the parties from proper citation to
those portions of the record relevant to their respective
arguments.
4Appellants
claim that they could not be expected to attack the 2000 trust, because they
were never served with proper notice of that instrument pursuant to Wyo. Stat.
Ann. § 4-10-813(b)(iii) (
Citationizer© Summary of Documents Citing This Document
Cite
Name
Level
Wyoming Supreme Court Cases Cite Name Level 1982 WY 68, 647 P.2d 58, Tate v. Mountain States Tel. and Tel. Co. Cited 1983 WY 55, 664 P.2d 39, Miller v. Miller Cited 1985 WY 143, 705 P.2d 1242, O'Donnell v. Western Nat. Bank of Casper Cited 1999 WY 180, 995 P.2d 125, Stroup v. Oedekoven Cited 2004 WY 39, 87 P.3d 1226, ARMSTRONG v. HRABAL Cited 2004 WY 114, 98 P.3d 853, BITKER v. FIRST NATIONAL BANK IN EVANSTON Discussed 2004 WY 126, 99 P.3d 999, MELCHER v. BENSON Discussed at Length 2007 WY 18, 150 P.3d 1194, RALPH E. PLATT V. ALICE A. CREIGHTON and MURRAY C. CREIGHTON Discussed 2007 WY 34, 152 P.3d 1057, GLEN R. WAYT V. HEATHER M. URBIGKIT Cited