Undue Influence by a Family Member
Undue Influence If Undue Influence was Clear, the
Will of the Elderly Testatrix is Denied Admission to Probate.
The testatrixs will was properly rejected as the
product of undue influence because the proponent and the testatrix had a
confidential relationship and because there were "suspicious
circumstances" surrounding the execution of the will. In Re Probate of the
Last Will and Testament of Catelli Docket # A-2963-01T5
In the Catelli case, Thomas R. Villone was named by
his elderly aunt, Anna Villone Catelli, as the executor in a will and as the
trustee under a living trust which she executed on January 9, 1996. He appeals
from the decision of the Chancery Division which refused to admit that 1996
will to probate, which named his cousin, George Villone, as the Administrator
C.T.A. of Catellis estate, which ordered him to restore assets to the estate,
which awarded counsel fees and which dismissed a related complaint that he had
filed in his effort to enforce certain provisions of the 1996 trust. The
decision of the trial court was made following two days of testimony and the
consideration by the court of deposition testimony given by witnesses,
including Thomas Villone, who could not appear in New Jersey. In that decision,
the court first held that, as a matter of public policy, the will could not be
admitted to probate because at the time of the execution of the 1996 will, Anna
Catelli had become blind and the only person who could verify that the contents
of the documents had been read to her so that she knew what she was signing was
Thomas, who the disputed documents made her sole heir. As an alternate ground,
the judge analyzed the testimony and the evidence in the nature of an
application for a directed verdict at the close of the plaintiffs case and
determined that Thomas Villone could not prevail on the merits. Because we
affirm the decision of the court based upon the alternate ground, we do not
address the courts public policy rationale. Viewed in the light most favorable
to Thomas Villone, the record discloses the following facts. The testator, Anna
Catelli, was a widow who had no children and who lived alone. She had a number
of nieces and nephews, including Thomas Villone and George Villone. She also
had a brother, Robert, who died in Florida in 1994. Robert had named Thomas,
his nephew, as the executor and principal beneficiary of his estate. Thomas,
who was a self- employed long distance truck driver living in Arizona, had not
had much contact with Anna Catelli, but telephoned to tell her of her brothers
death. In that conversation, Catelli had asked him to come and visit her when
he was next in New Jersey and he thereafter did so. Early in 1994, while Thomas
was visiting her at her home, then in Springfield, Catelli asked him to drive
her to her lawyers office in Maplewood which he did. He learned that day that
Catelli had named him as her alternate power of attorney in the event that her
long-time physician and confidante, Dr. Coppola, was unable to serve. While he
was not aware of it at the time, she had gone to the lawyers office that day to
execute a will that left her estate to a variety of relatives and friends and
to two churches and which included him as one of the residuary beneficiaries.
Later that year, Catelli suffered a significant stroke which left her partially
paralyzed and with limited powers of speech and sight. She was moved by Dr.
Coppola to a nursing home, and thereafter to the Garden Terrace Nursing Home
where she remained until her death. Thomas visited her at the nursing home from
time to time when he was in New Jersey. Shortly before Thanksgiving 1995, Dr.
Coppola telephoned Thomas and told him that Catelli wanted to make him her sole
heir. Dr. Coppola died two or three days later. Following Dr. Coppolas death,
Thomas invoked the power of attorney to make $10,000 gifts to himself, his wife
and his daughter. He next received from Dr. Coppolas son all of the papers
relating to Catellis assets. While Thomas then knew that the designation of him
as the sole heir was a departure from her earlier will, he did not discuss this
apparent change of plans with Catelli. Rather, he immediately consulted an
attorney in Arizona who prepared a living trust, which named Thomas as the
trustee, and a pour-over will which named Thomas as the executor and sole heir.
The Arizona attorney gave the documents to Thomas along with a letter which
instructed him to have the documents reviewed by a New Jersey attorney and
which suggested that Anna be represented by independent counsel. Thomas then
came to New Jersey, arriving on January 6, 1996. While Thomas knew that Catelli
had been represented in the past by the lawyer in Maplewood, he did not contact
him and did not consult with any other New Jersey lawyer. Instead, he went directly
to the nursing home and visited with Catelli.
Over the course of the next three days, while she remained in her bed
and dozed on and off, he read the documents to her. Thomas has a high school
education and concedes that he would not have been able to explain or interpret
any of the language of the trust or the will to Catelli. He was aware that the
trust and the will together would enable him to avoid probate, but he did not
understand why that might be advantageous. At no time did he suggest that Catelli
consult with an attorney or offer to contact her New Jersey lawyer for her.
After three days, Thomas made arrangements with the administrator of the
nursing home to execute the trust and the will. The administrator served as a
notary and two nurses observed Catelli place an "X" on the line
Thomas indicated. Shortly after the execution, Thomas gave up his truck driving
job, employed himself as the full-time manager of Catellis assets and undertook
to gain control of Catellis interest in Excelsior Realty Ltd. (Excelsior), a
family real estate venture, through the trust instrument. Prior to Catellis
death, Thomas efforts to gain control of her interest in Excelsior consisted of
correspondence with his cousin George Villone who was the General Partner of that
venture. George Villone refused to acknowledge the validity of the January 9,
1996 trust agreement and refused to turn control of Catellis interest in
Excelsior over to Thomas. He continued to refuse after Catellis death on July
5, 1997. As a result, in March 1999, Thomas instituted litigation, in his
capacity as the executor of Catellis estate and as her heir, against George
Villone and Excelsior to force a transfer of Catellis interest to him. That
complaint was consolidated with the action filed subsequently by Thomas in the
Chancery Division, Probate Part seeking to have the disputed will admitted to
probate. The judge elected to first receive evidence relating to whether the
1996 will should be admitted to probate. At the close of the evidence offered
in favor of the admission of the will, the trial court held, first, that Thomas
Villone had failed to demonstrate that Catelli knew the contents of the
documents that she had signed. Relying on Harris v. Vanderveers Executor, 21
N.J. Eq. 561, 563 (E. & A. 1870), Hildreth v. Marshall, 51 N.J. Eq. 241,
250 (Prerog. Ct. 1893) and Day v. Day, 3 N.J. Eq. 549, 553-55 (Prerog. Ct.
1831), the judge rejected the will. While each of these decisions includes a
discussion of the effect of visual impairment on the knowing execution of a
will, each of them arose in the context of a dispute based on allegations of
undue influence. Thus, while each of these precedents rejected a proffered will
executed by a testator with a significant visual or other impairment, none requires
proof of knowing execution beyond that specified by the statute. N.J.S.A.
3B:3-2; N.J.S.A. 3B:3-4. The judge, however, reasoned that although the will
had been executed in accordance with the statutory formalities, public policy
demands proof beyond compliance with the formalities of execution if the
testator can no longer see. He held that the will was invalid because there was
no evidence from anyone other than the sole beneficiary that the will had been
read to Catelli and that she knew what she was signing. He therefore created an
additional requirement for probate of a will executed by a visually impaired
person, citing public policy. We appreciate the trial judges concern that a
testatrix with a severe visual impairment is ordinarily unable, without the
intervention of a neutral person, to determine if the will as drafted
accurately memorializes her testamentary instructions. The same, of course, is
true of a testator who cannot read by reason of illiteracy. But whether the
statutory provisions for the witnessing and execution of the wills of such
testators should be augmented to require that the pre-execution reading of the
will to the testator be by a disinterested person is, in our view, a matter
within the province of the Legislature. We are satisfied, at least in this
case, that we need not further consider that issue because, as the judge found,
this record speaks so clearly of undue influence. The trial judge addressed the
alternate ground of undue influence using the standard of a directed verdict at
the close of plaintiffs proofs. R. 4:37-2(b). He found that there was a
confidential relationship between the decedent and the beneficiary, that there
were suspicious circumstances surrounding the execution, that undue influence
was therefore presumed, that the burden to overcome the presumption therefore
shifted to Thomas and that the record before the court made it impossible for
him to carry that burden. He therefore refused to admit the will to probate,
dismissed the complaint against George Villone and Excelsior, admitted Catellis
1994 will to probate, appointed George Villone as the Administrator C.T.A.,
directed Thomas to restore assets to the estate and approved fees and
commissions. We agree with the judges alternate analysis of the probate dispute
and we affirm on that ground. Viewed in terms of undue influence, there can be
no doubt about the issues before us. The judge identified several factors that
supported his analysis of undue influence, including the fact that Thomas
retained his own attorney to prepare the documents, that he did so based only
on the conversation with Dr. Coppola and without any consultation with Catelli
herself, that the documents were markedly different from Catellis prior will,
that Catelli was very debilitated and vulnerable, that the effect of the
documents was an immediate vesting of control of all assets in Thomas through
the inter vivos trust document, and that Thomas immediately upon the death of
Dr. Coppola left his employment and by means of the power of attorney began to
pay himself a commission and dispensed substantial gifts to himself and his
immediate family, which bespoke self-dealing even prior to the time of the
execution of the disputed documents. We concur with the judges analysis of the
effect of these facts. First, Catelli was clearly not well. The nursing
administrator who saw her daily conceded that, while she had made progress in
recovering from her stroke, her level of functioning was seriously diminished.
Her short-term memory was significantly impaired. Her vision had deteriorated
substantially. She required total care by the staff at the nursing home,
needing daily assistance with feeding, bathing, and other basic needs. During
the three days prior to the execution of the document, she did not leave her
room, but remained in bed, dozing from time to time and barely communicating
with anyone. While she was undoubtedly fond of Thomas, who was virtually her
only visitor after the death of Dr. Coppola, she was especially vulnerable to
his influence. Moreover, Thomas acted in a manner which made his intentions
clear. Even accepting as true his testimony that he learned from Dr. Coppola
that Catelli intended to make him her sole heir, his behavior proves that he
acted so as to overbear her will. He made no effort to discuss Catellis
intentions with her prior to acting for his unilateral benefit. He knew that
Catelli had an attorney in New Jersey who had prepared at least one earlier
will, but he deprived Catelli of the opportunity to consult with him. He did so
in spite of the urging of his personal attorney from Arizona to have the
documents reviewed by New Jersey counsel and to give Catelli the benefit of
independent legal advice. He knew as well that the 1994 will left significant
assets to the two churches and a hospital, left numerous specific bequests to
friends and to a few family members, and included him only as one of the
residuary beneficiaries. Nonetheless, he made no effort to discuss with Catelli
why all were to be rejected in favor of him alone. Nor did he simply carry out
the instruction that he be made her sole heir. Instead, he used his own
attorney to secure immediate control of her assets. He knew that Catelli had
not previously utilized a trust and he knew from his own lawyer that a living
trust with a pour-over will would give him control before Catelli died. In fact
as soon as he had the ability to exercise any control through the power of
attorney, he gave $30,000 in gifts to himself, his wife and his daughter, an
act well in excess of any prior expression of generosity by Catelli and not one
she authorized. Shortly thereafter, he embarked on a new career, hiring himself
to be the full time manager of her assets, in spite of his lack of any relevant
training or experience. Those acts are the behavior not of one with Catellis
interests at heart, but of one bent on his own enrichment at her expense. The
law governing undue influence is well established. While we generally presume
that the testator is of sound mind and competent to execute a will, Gellert v.
Livingston, 5 N.J. 65, 71 (1950), even a will which on its face appears to have
been validly executed can be overturned upon a demonstration of undue
influence. Haynes v. First Natl State Bank, 87 N.J. 163, 175-76 (1981).
Similarly, an inter vivos transfer, as was this trust, is equally governed by
the undue influence analysis. In re Dodge, 50 N.J. 192, 227-29 (1967); see
Pascale v. Pascale, 113 N.J. 20, 29-31 (1988). Undue influence is "defined
as mental, moral or physical exertion which has destroyed the free agency of a
testator by preventing the testator from following the dictates of his own mind
and will and accepting instead the domination and influence of another."
Haynes v. First Natl State Bank, supra, 87 N.J. at 176 (quoting In re Neuman,
133 N.J. Eq. 532, 534 (E. & A. 1943)). Where the will benefits one who
enjoyed a confidential relationship with the testator, and where there are
suspicious circumstances surrounding the will, the law presumes undue influence
and the burden is upon the proponent of the will to disprove the presumption.
In re Rittenhouses Will, 19 N.J. 376, 378-79 (1955). The confidential
relationship between Thomas and Catelli is both plain and conceded. See Haynes
v. First Natl State Bank, supra, 87 N.J. at 176; In re Estate of Hopper, 9 N.J.
280, 282 (1952). The suspicious circumstances surrounding the will need only be
"slight" to shift the burden of proof to the proponent to overcome
them. See In re Estate of Lehner, 70 N.J. 434, 436 (1976); In re Blakes Will,
21 N.J. 50, 55-56 (1956). Once the burden has shifted, the will proponent must
overcome that presumption by a preponderance of the evidence. Haynes v. First
Natl State Bank, supra, 87 N.J. at 177-78; In re Estate of Weeks, 29 N.J.
Super. 533, 538-39 (App. Div. 1954); see In re Estate of Churik, 165 N.J.
Super. 1, 5 (App. Div. 1978), affd o.b., 78 N.J. 563 (1979). See also Pascale
v. Pascale, supra, 113 N.J. at 31 (holding that donee of inter vivos gift bears
burden of proof by clear and convincing evidence). The record before us
discloses no evidence by which Thomas could meet this burden. On the contrary,
the record is overwhelmingly supportive of the finding of undue influence. The
combination of the confidential relationship and the suspicious circumstances
was more than sufficient to shift the burden to Thomas. The absence of any
evidence tending to negate the presumption and the abundant evidence of
self-dealing by Thomas support the conclusion that the testators will was
overborne. The trial judge, having heard and considered the evidence,
appropriately found that the burden that had shifted to Thomas was one that he
was unable to carry. Affirmed.
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