[Cite as Dragovich v. Dragovich, 2012-Ohio-4114.]
STATE OF OHIO, MAHONING COUNTY
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS
SEVENTH DISTRICT
ESTATE OF LISA DRAGOVICH ) CASE NO. 11 MA 200
)
PLAINTIFF-APPELLEE )
)
VS. ) OPINION
)
JEFFREY DRAGOVICH )
)
DEFENDANT-APPELLANT )
CHARACTER OF PROCEEDINGS: Civil Appeal from Court of Common
Pleas, Probate Division, of Mahoning
County, Ohio
Case No. 11 ES 248
JUDGMENT: Affirmed.
APPEARANCES:
For Plaintiff-Appellee: Atty. Lynn Sfara Bruno
412 Boardman-Canfield Road
Youngstown, Ohio 44512
For Defendant-Appellant: Atty. John F. Shultz
4822 Market Street, Suite 220
Boardman, Ohio 44512
JUDGES:
Hon. Joseph J. Vukovich
Hon. Cheryl L. Waite
Hon. Mary DeGenaro
Dated: September 7, 2012
[Cite as Dragovich v. Dragovich, 2012-Ohio-4114.]
VUKOVICH, J.
{¶1} Appellant Jeffrey Dragovich appeals the decision of the Mahoning
County Probate Court, which dismissed his election to take against the will of Lisa
Dragovich. The issue on appeal is whether a separation agreement incorporated into
a judgment entry eliminates the husband’s right as a surviving spouse to elect
against the decedent’s will, which excluded him as a beneficiary. We conclude that
where a separation agreement evinces the parties’ intention to fully and finally
dispose of each party’s prospective property rights in the property of the other, then
the right to elect to take against a will is considered to have been relinquished unless
the separation agreement expressly provides otherwise. The trial court’s judgment is
affirmed.
STATEMENT OF THE CASE
{¶2} The Dragovichs married in 1995 and had no children. They filed for
divorce in the Mahoning County Domestic Relations Court. They then mutually
agreed to convert the divorce pleadings into those for legal separation. On February
9, 2010, the domestic relations court entered a Final Judgment Entry of Legal
Separation. The introduction stated that the parties:
do settle and determine and hereby provide for present and future
spousal support, the division of all property owned by the parties or
either of them, real or personal, the payment of all liabilities of the
parties or either of them, and all other benefits and privileges conferred
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and all obligations imposed on either of the parties by virtue of their
marital relationship.
{¶3} The separation entry provided that the parties would evenly split the
$870 monthly checks they receive as a result of a marital business they previously
sold. The entry also provided that should the husband predecease the wife, the wife
will be able to claim and receive the entire amount of the check from the husband’s
estate (as she would no longer receive the agreed upon spousal support or health
insurance).
{¶4} In April of 2011, the wife executed a will devising any money she was
receiving from the sale of the former marital business to her mother and two sisters.
The will stated that her husband was to receive nothing from her estate, specifically
including in this prohibition the funds to which she was entitled under the final
judgment entry of legal separation. The separation entry was attached to the will.
The wife died two weeks later. On May 5, 2011, her sister applied to have the will
probated.
{¶5} On September 23, 2011, the husband filed a timely election to take
against the will. See R.C. 2106.25 (must be filed within five months from the
appointment of the executor). The executor filed a motion to dismiss the election
request, arguing that his election violates the portion of the separation document
stating that the wife will receive half of the proceeds of the sale of the business. The
executor pointed out that the separation agreement was valid as the husband did not
file an action to set it aside within four months of the executor’s appointment as
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required by another statute. See R.C. 2106.22 (separation or antenuptial agreement
valid unless action to set it aside is filed or it is otherwise attacked within four months
of fiduciary’s appointment).
{¶6} The husband replied that he was not seeking to set aside the
separation agreement, also noting that there existed a separation entry rather than a
mere separation agreement. He argued that there is no language in the separation
agreement or entry that relinquished his statutory right to share in his wife’s estate.
He urged that the court should not infer the waiver of the right to elect against a will
by the mere fact of legal separation.
{¶7} On November 16, 2011, the probate court dismissed the husband’s
election request. The court recognized that the separation entry does not specifically
refer to rights that may emanate to a surviving spouse under probate law but relied
on the introductory paragraph declaring that the parties have provided for the division
of all property and have settled and determined all other benefits and privileges
conferred by virtue of marriage.
{¶8} The court concluded that the issuance of a separation entry intended to
settle and determine all property rights between the parties and thus terminated the
right of the surviving spouse to elect to take against the will. The court agreed with
case law holding that implicit in the grant of a final decree of legal separation is the
termination of the rights of the surviving spouse. See Hering v. Hering, 9th Dist. No.
03CA8410, 2005-Ohio-262; In re Estate of Ramminger, 12th Dist. No. CA2002-08-
189, 2003-Ohio-3697. See also In re Estate of Robinson, 2d Dist. No. 85CA16
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(Sept. 19, 1985) (Kearns, J., dissenting). The probate court noted by analogy that
there is a statute providing that a will to a former spouse is revoked (and the estate
passes as if the surviving spouse predeceased the decedent) if the parties entered
into a separation agreement intending to fully and finally settle their prospective
property rights in the property of the other. See R.C. 2107.33(D)-(E).
{¶9} The husband filed timely notice of appeal from the probate court’s
dismissal of his election action, which was a final order. See In re Estate of Riley,
164 Ohio App.3d 471, 847 N.E.2d 22, 2006-Ohio-956, ¶ 11 (4th Dist.) (finding the
dismissal of election action to be a final appealable order and explaining how certain
election options could be foreclosed if appeal waited until final administration, such
as right to certain property that could be sold by executor during administration). See
also In re Estate of Geanangel, 147 Ohio App.3d 131, 137, 2002-Ohio-850, 768
N.E.2d 1235, ¶ 12-29 (3d Dist.2002) (order overruling an application for letters
testamentary is a final, appealable order).
ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR
{¶10} The husband’s sole assignment of error provides:
IT IS REVERSIBLE ERROR FOR THE COURT, IN THE ABSENCE OF
A SPECIFIC AGREEMENT WAIVING THE STATUTORILY CREATED
RIGHT OF A SURVIVING SPOUSE TO TAKE AGAINST THE WILL OF
A DECEASED SPOUSE, TO DISALLOW THE ELECTION TO TAKE
AGAINST THE WILL BY THE SURVIVING SPOUSE.
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{¶11} The husband makes three points: this is a separation, not a divorce; the
separation was by judgment entry, not a mere agreement; and the entry was devoid
of language explicitly waiving the right to elect against a decedent’s will. He asks this
court to adopt the position of the Second District in Robinson over the position of the
Twelfth District in Ramminger and the Ninth District in Hering.
{¶12} The executor initially emphasizes that the husband has not sought to
set aside or otherwise attack the validity of the separation agreement and entry.
However, he need not do so because he does not wish to modify or eliminate the
provisions of the entry. Rather, he asks for a ruling that the entry contains no specific
language prohibiting him from exercising his statutory right to elect against his wife’s
will and thus he is not so prohibited; whereas, the executor argues that when two
spouses enter a legal separation intending to fully and finally determine property
rights, each implicitly waives their rights as a surviving spouse.
{¶13} In the Twelfth District’s Ramminger case, a legal separation decree
provided the wife with child and spousal support and divided the property between
the parties. Ramminger, 12th Dist. No. CA2002-08-189. The wife then died, and the
husband filed an election against the will under R.C. 2106.13 asking for a family
allowance. Id. The Twelfth District noted that the separation entry did not include a
clause waiving the rights of a surviving spouse but ruled that such a clause was not
required because the decree extensively addressed and definitively made a full and
final determination of the parties’ property and support rights. Id. That court
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announced: “We find implicit in the grant of the legal separation in the instant case is
the termination of the rights of the surviving spouse at issue here.” Id.
{¶14} The Ninth District was presented with a case where the wife argued that
the domestic relations court abused its discretion by failing to include in a separation
decree a proposed provision releasing the right of inheritance and other property
rights in anticipation of the wife’s death. Hering, 9th Dist. No. 03CA8410 at ¶ 4. The
appellate court ruled that a provision waiving the rights of the surviving spouse was
unnecessary because “where two spouses enter into a legal separation decree
intending to fully and finally determine property rights between them, each implicitly
waives their rights as surviving spouse.” Id., citing Ramminger, 12th Dist. No.
CA2002-8-189 at ¶ 11 and R.C. 2107.33(D).
{¶15} The Second District has ruled to the contrary. In the Robinson case
relied upon by the husband here, the domestic relations court filed an Agreed Final
Judgment Entry for Alimony Only, which incorporated the terms of an oral separation
agreement, divided all of the parties’ property, and provided for support. The
Robinsons did not divorce because the wife was ill and needed health insurance.
Before dying, the wife executed a will omitting her husband. He then filed an election
to take against the will. The probate court denied his request to elect against the will,
finding that although the domestic judgment was silent regarding a release of claims
against the other’s estate, the elimination of such right is inferred.
{¶16} The Second District reversed, applying the reasoning of the Ohio
Supreme Court in a case dealing with a prenuptial agreement. Robinson, 2d Dist.
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No. 85CA16, citing Troha v. Sheller, 169 Ohio St. 397, 159 N.E.2d 899 (1959). In
Troha, the Court held that “strong and unmistakable language” was necessary in a
prenuptial agreement in order to deprive a surviving spouse of the special benefits
conferred by statute such as the right to elect against a will. Troha, 169 Ohio St. 397
(agreement specifically waived statutory rights the surviving spouse had in her
spouse’s estate).
{¶17} The Second District then held that waiver of the statutory right to take
against a spouse’s will cannot be inferred; rather, there must be “a clear indication
that he intended” to waive the right to election. Robinson, 2d Dist. No. 85CA16. The
court concluded that the statement that the parties “have arrived at an agreement
pertaining to a division of property as well as the establishment of alimony and other
matters” was insufficient to waive election rights. Id.
{¶18} The dissent opined that a written waiver, while desirable, is not
necessarily required where the intentions of the parties are readily discernible. Id.
(Kearns, J., dissenting) (expressing that the parties essentially agreed to a de facto
divorce with both agreeing to the total property each would take from the marriage).
We note here that the language in the case before us is more specific than the
language used in the agreement at issue in Robinson.
{¶19} As aforementioned, the probate court here cited the following statutory
provisions by analogy:
(D) If after executing a will, a testator is divorced, obtains a dissolution
of marriage, has the testator's marriage annulled, or, upon actual
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separation from the testator's spouse, enters into a separation
agreement pursuant to which the parties intend to fully and finally settle
their prospective property rights in the property of the other, whether by
expected inheritance or otherwise, any disposition or appointment of
property made by the will to the former spouse or to a trust with powers
created by or available to the former spouse, any provision in the will
conferring a general or special power of appointment on the former
spouse, and any nomination in the will of the former spouse as
executor, trustee, or guardian shall be revoked unless the will expressly
provides otherwise.
(E) Property prevented from passing to a former spouse or to a trust
with powers created by or available to the former spouse because of
revocation by this section shall pass as if the former spouse failed to
survive the decedent, and other provisions conferring some power or
office on the former spouse shall be interpreted as if the spouse failed
to survive the decedent. If provisions are revoked solely by this section,
they shall be deemed to be revived by the testator's remarriage with the
former spouse or upon the termination of a separation agreement
executed by them. (Emphasis added.)
R.C. 2107.33(D)-(E).
{¶20} Under the husband’s argument, a separated decedent that had a prior
will would have the terms of the will revoked if they benefit the surviving spouse
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under division (D) and such surviving spouse’s right to election would be eliminated
by division (E), but the estate of a separated decedent without a will or with a will
made after separation that excludes the surviving spouse would be subject to
election, even where the terms of the separation agreements used in the opposing
examples are identical. Although not directly on point, these statutory provisions
support our conclusion that the proper rule in this case is that where spouses actually
separate, a legal separation agreement which intends to fully and finally settle their
prospective property rights will revoke a surviving spouse’s right to elect against the
will unless the agreement expressly provides otherwise.
{¶21} Here, the separation agreement provided for the division of prospective
property rights in the monthly checks they receive. In fact, it provided the wife with
the right to receive the husband’s half of the checks upon his death over the claims of
his estate. This supports a conclusion that other language in the agreement waived
the right to elect against the will, because this provision is the only exception to the
general language providing for the elimination of all benefits usually conferred by
virtue of the marital relationship. Regarding that other language, the separation entry
and agreement specifically stated that the parties:
do settle and determine and hereby provide for present and future
spousal support, the division of all property owned by the parties or
either of them, real or personal, the payment of all liabilities of the
parties or either of them, and all other benefits and privileges conferred
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and all obligations imposed on either of the parties by virtue of their
marital relationship.
{¶22} The right to elect against a will is one of the “benefits and privileges
conferred * * * by virtue of their marital relationship.” As such, we conclude that the
parties intended their separation agreement to fully and finally settle their prospective
property rights in the property of the other, and thus, the right to elect against the will
has been waived by the husband.
{¶23} Judgment affirmed.
Waite, P.J., concurs.
DeGenaro, J., concurs.