Court Opinion

ID: 2693684
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2014-08-01 22:05:01.126014+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:06:17.748882
License: Public Domain

[Cite as In re Stevens, 2012-Ohio-4754.]

                IN THE COURT OF APPEALS FOR CHAMPAIGN COUNTY, OHIO

IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE                         :
OF MAXINE STEVENS

                                                    :          C.A. CASE NO.        2012 CA 1

                                                    :          T.C. NO.    10ES212

                                                    :           (Civil appeal from Common
                                                                Pleas Court, Probate Division)
                                                    :

                                                    :

                                           ..........

                                           OPINION

                         Rendered on the   12th     day of     October    , 2012.

                                           ..........

SHERRILLE D. AKIN, Atty. Reg. No. 0059841 and GEORGE B. LIMBERT, Atty. Reg. No.
0082241, 250 E. Broad Street, 9th Floor, Columbus, Ohio 43215
       Attorneys for Jenna L. Stevens

DANIEL C. HARKINS, Atty. Reg. No. 0029750 and MARK D. DeCASTRO, Atty. Reg. No.
0079505, 333 N. Limestone Street, Suite 203, P. O. Box 1125, Springfield, Ohio 45501
       Attorneys for the Estate of Maxine Deloris Stevens

EDWARD G. BAILEY, Atty. Reg. No. 0004749, 4 W. Main Street, Suite 428, Springfield, Ohio
45502
      Special Counsel for the Estate of Maxine Deloris Stevens
                                          ..........

FROELICH, J.

        {¶ 1}            Jenna L. Stevens appeals from a judgment of the Champaign County Court

of Common Pleas, Probate Division, which found that she had challenged the validity of a portion of
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her grandmother’s Will, which, by the terms of the Will itself, caused her interest under the Will to

“lapse and * * * become null and void.”

        {¶ 2}        For the following reasons, the judgment of the trial court will be reversed.

                                           Facts and Procedural History

        {¶ 3}       Maxine Stevens died in November 2010, and her Will was admitted to probate one

month later. According to the Will, all debts, expenses, and taxes were to be paid by the estate.

Dale Circle, Maxine’s “friend and manager,” was named executor, and he was given the option to

purchase Maxine’s “real estate * * * then being used for agricultural purposes” under enumerated

conditions. Maxine’s granddaughter, Jenna Stevens, whose father ( Maxine’s son) had predeceased

Maxine, was to receive all of Maxine’s “tangible personal property,” and the remainder of the estate

was placed in an unnamed trust previously created by Maxine.1

        {¶ 4}       With respect to the bequest to Circle, the Will provided:

        ITEM TWO: I direct my Executor to provide my friend, DALE CIRCLE, with the

        option to purchase the real estate which I may own at the time of my death that is

        then being used for agricultural purposes. The option to be extended by my Executor

        will provide DALE CIRCLE with the opportunity of purchasing the farmland for

        $3,000.00 per acre. My Executor shall give notice to DALE CIRCLE of this option

        within thirty (30) days of my Executor's appointment by the Probate Court. DALE

        CIRCLE must then exercise the option within the forty-five (45) day period

        following the date on which notice is provided by my Executor. In the event DALE

        CIRCLE should fail to provide written notice of his intention to exercise the option

        provided by this ITEM TWO, within the forty-five (45) day period, this ITEM

        TWO and the option described shall lapse. Should DALE CIRCLE proceed in

           1
            For clarity, we will refer to the decedent as “Maxine” and to her granddaughter, the appellant, as “Stevens.”
                                                                                                      3

        exercising the option, he may pay the purchase price either by tendering, in whole or

        in part, cash at closing or a note for the balance of the purchase price, provided the

        note requires (i) equal payments of principal and interest for up to twenty (20) years,

        (ii) bears the Applicable Federal Rate of interest and (iii) secured with a mortgage on

        the land being sold. The note shall be negotiable and should be assigned to those

        individuals who will receive distributions under this Will.

                 Should any individual challenge the validity of this ITEM TWO by filing

        objections or complaints with the Probate Court, then that individual’s interest under

        this Will shall lapse and shall become null and void.

        {¶ 5 }   A prohibition against challenging a will or a term therein under the threat of

disinheritance, such as the one contained in Item Two of Maxine’s Will, is known as an in terrorem

provision.

{¶ 6}    On the day that the trial court admitted the Will to probate and appointed Circle as executor,

Circle filed an “Exercise of Option to Purchase Farmland,” indicating his intention to exercise the

option, his acceptance of the terms set forth in Maxine’s Will, and his intended method of payment.

        {¶ 7}     In May 2011, Circle filed the estate’s Inventory and Appraisal, which included

Maxine’s interest in three parcels of farmland, and the court approved the Inventory. In June 2011,

Circle filed an Application to Extend Administration of the estate, in which he asserted that additional

time would be required “to confirm the State’s acceptance of the Estate Tax Return and to affect the

distribution of the Estate’s assets,” due, in part, to concerns expressed by Stevens. The court does

not appear to have ruled on this application.

        {¶ 8}     On July 29, 2011, Circle filed a notice of his intention to proceed with the

administration of the estate, including his purchase of the farmland. This notice stated that the three

pieces of farmland listed in the Inventory consisted of a total of 242.5 acres, with a total value of
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$1,048,679, or $4,324.45 per acre. Because the terms of the Will permitted Circle to purchase the

farmland for $3,000 per acre, he intended to treat the $321,179 difference “between the farmland’s

appraised value and the $3,000.00 per acre value which was specified by” Maxine as a bequest to

him. Circle requested that the court approve this transaction, if its approval was required. On

August 4, 2011, the court issued a judgment indicating that its approval of this action was not

required and that Circle should proceed accordingly.

         {¶ 9}         One week after the trial court’s judgment instructing Circle to proceed with the

sale, Stevens filed a Memorandum in Opposition to Executor’s Notice of Intention to Proceed with

Administration of Estate.            In this Memorandum, Stevens argued that 1) Circle’s interest in the

farmland had lapsed because Circle had not closed on the property within 45 days or, alternately,

within a reasonable time, 2) Circle’s “Exercise of Option to Purchase Farmland” did not satisfy the

statute of frauds, and 3) Circle had not complied with R.C. 2109.44 in that he did not obtain court

approval for the transaction.2 Stevens also asserted that she did not violate the in terrorem clause of

her grandmother’s Will by insisting that the Executor (Circle) strictly comply with the terms of the

Will.

         {¶ 10}        Based on additional motions from the parties and Circle’s desire to fully respond to

Stevens’s arguments, the trial court scheduled a status conference and vacated its prior judgment

approving the transfer of the agricultural property.

         {¶ 11}        Upon further consideration, the trial court concluded that the Will required only

that Circle give written notice of his intention to exercise the option within 45 days; the Will did not

require that the sale be completed within that time. In the absence of a stated time period, the court

concluded that Circle was required to complete the sale within “a reasonable time.” Considering the

              2
                R.C. 2109.44 provides that fiduciaries “shall not buy from or sell to themselves” nor have any dealing with an estate in
   their individual capacities, except with approval of the probate court and subject to other enumerated requirements.
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nature of large real estate transactions, the time usually required to complete the administration of an

estate, and Circle’s willingness to complete the transaction as of July 2011 (seven months after the

Will was admitted to probate), the court concluded that Circle had acted within a reasonable time and

had complied with the provisions of Item Two of Maxine’s Will. It therefore authorized Circle to

complete the transfer of the real estate. Stevens appealed from the trial court’s judgment.

        {¶ 12}    On appeal, Stevens again argued that 1) the trial court erred in allowing Circle to

purchase the property without approval of the court, as required by R.C. 2109.44, 2) that the court

erred in concluding that Item Two did not require completion of the sale within 45 days and, in the

alternative, in concluding that the sale was completed within a reasonable time, 3) that Circle’s

attempt to exercise the option set forth in Item Two did not comply with the statute of frauds, and 4)

that Circle did not timely exercise the option to purchase. We rejected all of these arguments. In re

Estate of Maxine Stevens, 2d Dist. Champaign No. 2011 CA 26, 2012-Ohio-1860.

        {¶ 13}    While Stevens’s appeal was pending, she filed in the trial court an Application by

Beneficiary/Legatee for Order of Distribution, seeking distribution of Maxine’s tangible personal

property. In his capacity as executor, Circle opposed the application, asserting that Stevens had

forfeited her interest under the Will by challenging Item Two in prior court proceedings. In response,

Stevens claimed that she only sought “enforcement of Item Two” and that her filing could “in no way

be construed as a challenge to the validity of Item Two” of the Will.

        {¶ 14}    The trial court did not conduct a hearing, but ruled on Stevens’s Motion for an

Order of Distribution based on the argument’s raised in the parties’ filings.           The trial court

concluded:

                 Decedent’s Will is clear. “Should any individual challenge the validity of

        this ITEM TWO by filing objections or complaints with the Probate Court, then that

        individual’s interest under this Will shall lapse and shall become null and void.
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                 First, the Court does not believe a Will Contest is necessary to constitute a

        challenge of the validity of Item II [sic] and therefore that argument is unconvincing.

        Second, the Court believes Ms. Stevens[’] challenge to and interpretation of the time

        limits of Item Two in both her Memorandum in Opposition and her subsequent

        appeal constitute the very challenge the testator contemplated.

                 Therefore, the Court finds that Jenna Stevens[’] arguments in her

        Memorandum in Opposition to Executor’s Notice of Intention to Proceed and the

        appeal of the Court’s subsequent decision on that issue is clearly a challenge to the

        validity of Item Two of the Will.

                 Although the court is sympathetic to her, in that this could lead to her not receiving

        certain sentimental items of her grandmother, her grandmother’s wishes are clear and the

        Court must act in accordance with those wishes.

                 For all the above reasons, the Court finds that pursuant to the Decedent’s will

        Ms. Stevens has challenged the validity of Item II and her interest in the Will has

        lapsed and therefore, her Motion for an Order of Distribution is denied.

        {¶ 15}     Stevens appeals from the trial court’s judgment, raising one assignment of error,

which she frames as a question:

        “Whether the trial court erred as a matter of fact and law when it ruled that the

        filing of a Memorandum in Opposition to the Executor’s Notice of Intention to

        Proceed, participation in the resulting will construction action, and subsequent

        Appeal filed as Case No. 2011 CA 00026 by Jenna Stevens constitutes a

        challenge to the validity of Item Two of the Decedent’s Will sufficient to invoke

        the provisions of an in terrorem claim in the Decedent’s Will to lapse Jenna

        Stevens’ individual interest under the Will?”

        {¶ 16}     Stevens advances numerous arguments in support of her claim that the trial court
                                                                                                       7

erred in concluding that her actions invoked the in terrorem provision of her grandmother’s Will.

        {¶ 17}    The “in terrorem” doctrine originated centuries ago in England and has served

different purposes over the years; under the modern American doctrine, however, it applies to “no

contest” provisions in wills. Moskowitz v. Federman, 72 Ohio App. 149, 162-163, 51 N.E.2d 48

(9th Dist. 1943). The general purpose of an in terrorem clause is to deny or limit the inheritance of a

named legatee or devisee if that person “shall make any effort or attempt to break, change or set aside

the will or any part thereof.”    Riber v. Peters, 12th Dist. Fayette Nos. 81-CA-27 and 81-CA-28,

1982 WL 3247, *3 (Oct. 27, 1982), citing Kirkbridge v. Hickok, 155 Ohio St. 293, 294-295, 98

N.E.2d 815 (1951). In determining whether the in terrorem doctrine applies in a particular case,

courts must consider “public policy, probable cause, good faith, and a variety of other matters * * * in

connection with the facts” of the case. Moskowitz at 163.

        {¶ 18}    The question presented to the trial court and on appeal is whether Stevens

“challenged the validity” of the Will or of Item Two, or merely sought clarification of certain

provisions therein, when she filed a memorandum in opposition to Circle’s motion to proceed with the

sale and then appealed the court’s decision. This is a question of law, which we review de novo.

Modie v. Andrews, 9th Dist. Summit No. 21029, 2002-Ohio-5765, ¶ 10.

        {¶ 19}    Stevens points out that she did not file a will contest action, as allowed by R.C.

2107.71 et seq., and this fact is undisputed. However, the in terrorem clause of Maxine’s Will was

not limited to will contests; it forbade “challenge[s]” to the validity of Item Two “by filing objections

or complaints with the Probate Court.” These terms are more broad than a statutory “will contest”

and, because they are not terms of art, they are subject to the court’s interpretation. Thus, the fact

that Stevens did not file a statutory will contest is not dispositive of whether she “challenged” Item

Two.

        {¶ 20}    Stevens categorizes her actions in this case as “a request for construction” of the
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Will, and she emphasizes that Circle “commenced the action which led to the probate court’s Entry

construing Item Two.” Although Stevens construes Circle’s Notice of Intention to Proceed with

Administration of the Estate as a request by Circle for interpretation of Item Two, in which she merely

participated secondarily as a beneficiary, this characterization is inaccurate. Circle stated that the

“purpose of the Notice [was] to provide transparency during the continued administration of the

Estate.” He did not seek interpretation of any of Item Two’s provisions. Circle requested approval

to proceed with the sale if such approval were required, but this request did not require interpretation

of the Will’s provisions.     It was Stevens’s Memorandum in Opposition to Circle’s notice that

questioned, in the first instance, whether he had complied with the specific provisions of Item Two,

such as the correctness of the manner in which he attempted to exercise his option and the time in

which the sale was required to be completed.

         {¶ 21}    Citing various cases, Stevens also contends that “actions to obtain interpretation” or

a “request for construction” do not challenge the legitimacy of a will and therefore do not invoke an

in terrorem clause. We agree with the general premise represented by these cases that an in terrorem

clause does not place an executor’s conduct beyond the oversight of the probate court and that every

request by a beneficiary for involvement of the probate court does not constitute a challenge to a

will.   Therefore, we must determine whether Stevens’ filings in this case could reasonably be

construed as a request for interpretation, clarification, or construction of the Will’s provisions, or if

they challenged the validity of the Will itself in such a way as to invoke the in terrorem clause.

         {¶ 22}     Stevens relies on Kasapis v. High Point Furniture Co., Inc., 9th Dist. Summit

Nos. CA 22758 and 22762, 2006-Ohio-255, in which beneficiaries requested clarification from the

court as to whether closely held stock should be categorized as a tangible property or an intangible

one, because such properties were treated differently under the Will. She also cites Modie, 9th Dist.

Summit No. 21029, 2002-Ohio-5765, in which a beneficiary’s filing of exceptions to an inventory

was distinguished from a challenge to the validity of the Will, and Kirkbride v. Hickok, 155 Ohio St.
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293, 98 N.E.2d 815 (1951), in which beneficiaries sought clarification from the court when a statute

related to charitable bequests potentially invalidated some charitable bequests made under the Will.

These cases demonstrate that there are situations in which a beneficiary can legitimately seek

clarification of a Will’s provisions or request that the court review an executor’s conduct without

violating an in terrorem clause.

        {¶ 23}        The trial court implicitly concluded that Stevens sought to prevent the distribution

of assets provided for in her grandmother’s Will, that the language of Item Two was “clear,” and that

Stevens’s claimed “confusion” over the specific terms (with which she claimed Circle had failed to

comply) was, in fact, an attempt to undermine the Will. In our view, however, Stevens’s request that

the trial court determine whether the timing of and manner in which Circle exercised the option to

purchase complied with the provisions of the Will sought clarification or construction of the Will’s

provisions, and was indistinguishable from the types of clarifications sought in Kasapis and

Kirkbride. The trial court erred in concluding that, by her actions, Stevens sought to challenge “the

validity of” the Will or to prohibit Circle from exercising his right under the Will to purchase

Maxine’s farmland; rather, she sought only to ensure that Circle’s actions complied with Maxine’s

directions.

                                                 Conclusion

        {¶ 24} The trial court erred in concluding that Stevens’s actions violated the in terrorem

clause in the Will.

        {¶ 25}        The assignment of error is sustained.

        {¶ 26}        The judgment of the trial court will be reversed, and the matter remanded for

further proceedings.

                                                ..........

GRADY, P.J. and DONOVAN, J., concur.
                        10

Copies mailed to:

Sherrille D. Akin
George B. Limbert
Daniel C. Harkins
Mark D. DeCastro
Edward G. Bailey
Hon. Brett A. Gilbert