REPORTED
IN THE COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS
OF MARYLAND
No. 929
September Term, 2013
ANDREW A. GREEN
v.
BETTY J. MCCLINTOCK
Wright,
Kehoe,
Arthur,
JJ.
Opinion by Arthur, J.
Filed: August 1, 2014
This case concerns a challenge to a last will and testament of the late Kenneth
Green, as well as a contention that Maryland lacks jurisdiction to consider the challenge.
In 2003, the decedent executed a will in which he made his friend, Betty
McClintock, the prime beneficiary. In 2009, when he was terminally ill, regularly taking
opiates for pain, and completely dependent upon his brother, who had taken him from
Maryland to Kentucky and held him there incommunicado, he executed a second will in
which he revoked the earlier will and gave all of his assets to his brother.
McClintock challenged the second will, contending that it had been procured by
fraud and undue influence. After a bench trial that extended over five days, the Circuit
Court for Allegany County agreed. As a consequence of that decision, the earlier will,
which favored McClintock, became the decedent’s last will and testament. We shall
affirm.
F ACTUAL AND P ROCEDURAL H ISTORY
The multi-volume record in this case discloses few areas of agreement between the
contending parties. Our obligation, however, is not to review and weigh the parties’
respective contentions, but to recount the facts in the light most favorable to McClintock,
the party who prevailed below. L.W. Wolfe Enters., Inc. v. Maryland Nat’l Golf, L.P.,
165 Md. App. 339, 343 (2005). Those facts are as follows:
A. The Parties
1. The Testator, Kenneth Green. The testator, Kenneth Green
(“Kenneth”), was born on May 20, 1934, and died on January 19, 2010. Kenneth was
raised on a farm that was owned by his parents in Lonaconing, Maryland. His only
sibling was his brother Albert Green (“Albert”). Kenneth never married and had no
children.
Except for a few brief periods (when he was in the military, when he moved to
Ohio for a job, and at the very end of his life), Kenneth spent the entirety of his life on or
near the Green farm. For much of his life, he worked for Westvaco in Allegany County.
Before his father died, Kenneth lived on the farm with his parents, to whom he was
devoted. After his father’s death, Kenneth remained on the farm alone, raising cattle and
hay. Aside from his mother, the farm and his cattle were the most important things in
Kenneth’s life.1
2. The Beneficiary, Albert Green. Kenneth’s brother Albert also
worked for Westvaco for many years, but moved to West Virginia, near the border with
Garrett County, in 1987. Kenneth’s and Albert’s mother, Ida, joined Albert in West
Virginia after their father died. In 1998, a few years after his mother died, Albert retired
and moved to Kentucky, where his sons lived.
3. The Personal Representative, Andrew Green. Albert’s son,
Andrew Green (“Andrew”), is the personal representative under the will that has been
challenged in this case. Andrew, who lives in Kentucky, had only limited contact with his
1
The record indicates that farm was quite remote in that it was accessible only by a
dirt road and never had landline telephone service.
2
uncle Kenneth for many years.
4. The Caveator, Betty McClintock. Betty McClintock was one of
Kenneth’s co-workers at Westvaco. During the time when she and Kenneth worked for
Westvaco, she spoke with him regularly, on almost a daily basis. Kenneth admired her
because she had raised four children on her own after her husband died in an automobile
accident in the 1970s.
The circuit court found that, from the late 1980s onward, Kenneth and McClintock
had a long-term, stable, caring, and supportive relationship.
B. Ida Green’s Death and the Litigation Over Her Estate
The roots of the present dispute can be traced back to May 1995, when Kenneth’s
and Albert’s mother, Ida, died, without a will to direct who would inherit the Green farm
or her other assets. For several years, no one opened an estate on her behalf. Instead,
Kenneth continued to live on the farm and to raise cattle and engage in other farming
activities there.
In about 2000 or 2001, Kenneth approached James Oberhaus, the president of
Maryland Fuel Corporation, which owned the mineral rights under the Green farm.
Kenneth asked Oberhaus for assistance in obtaining sole title to the Green farm.
Oberhaus hired John Robb, a local attorney familiar with real estate matters, to assist
Kenneth. With Robb’s assistance, Kenneth opened an estate for his mother in August
2002, more than seven years after her death.
3
The estate proceedings prompted a dispute between Kenneth and his brother
Albert. Kenneth contended that the farm was his and that the $192,000.00 in assets in
Ida’s estate were to be divided equally between the brothers; Albert, on the other hand,
contended that the farm and the other assets should be divided evenly between the two
brothers. In October 2003, the orphans’ court agreed with Albert that the farm should go
to the brothers as tenants in common, and Kenneth appealed.
C. Kenneth’s First Will, in 2003
In the midst of the legal dispute between Kenneth and his brother, Oberhaus (of
Maryland Fuel) suggested to Kenneth that he should have a will. Oberhaus was
motivated, in part, by the prospect of obtaining title to the surface rights to the Green farm
(i.e., the right to strip-mine the farm), which he had previously attempted to obtain from
Kenneth. Oberhaus referred Kenneth to Maryland Fuel’s lawyer, Donald Nelson, for the
purpose of drafting a will.
Oberhaus arranged Kenneth’s first meeting with Nelson. The meeting took place
in Oberhaus’s office, and Oberhaus was present for the first 10 to 15 minutes of it.
Kenneth told Nelson that he wanted his entire estate to go to McClintock because
she was a hard worker and had devoted a great deal of effort to raising her children after
her husband’s death. Neither Nelson nor Oberhaus knew McClintock at the time.
Kenneth specifically told Nelson that he did not want Albert or Albert’s wife,
Stella, to get any of his property. Consistent with that directive, the will makes no
4
provision for Albert or any member of Albert’s family.
On Nelson’s advice, Kenneth agreed to have the will include a provision that gave
Maryland Fuel the option to purchase the Green farm from his estate after his death. The
provision contained a mechanism to establish the purchase price. In addition, it directed
that if Maryland Fuel exercised the option, the purchase price would go to McClintock.2
Kenneth executed the 2003 will at an M&T Bank branch office on March 5, 2003.
According to Oberhaus’s employee, Linda Malamis, who was a witness to the will,
Kenneth told a bank employee at the time that he wanted to take care of McClintock. In
addition, according to the bank employee, Kenneth stated that he disliked Albert’s wife
because she wanted all of his money and property and that he did not want Albert’s wife
to receive any of his assets.
D. The Settlement of the Litigation Concerning Ida Green’s Estate
In April 2004, a little over a year after he had executed his will, Kenneth traveled
to Kentucky to take Albert’s deposition in his appeal in the litigation concerning their
mother’s estate. Kenneth had never previously gone to Kentucky in his life.
Before any substantive questioning began in the deposition, Kenneth and Albert
met privately and reached an agreement. Under the terms of the agreement, Kenneth
2
Nelson was not then, and is not now, licensed to practice law in Maryland. In
addition, Nelson represented Oberhaus and Maryland Fuel at the time he drafted
Kenneth’s 2003 will, but obtained no conflict waiver. Albert’s son, Andrew, the personal
representative under the will that has been challenged, makes an issue of these
irregularities. The validity of the 2003 will, however, is not before us in this case.
5
would receive the Green farm, while Albert would receive all the money in their mother’s
estate, except for an advance that Kenneth already received.
While he was in Kentucky in connection with the deposition and the settlement
discussions, Kenneth did not go to Albert’s farm or meet with any of Albert’s family
members, including Albert’s son, Andrew, the personal representative under the will that
has been challenged in this case.
E. After the Settlement With Albert
After the settlement with Albert, the personal representatives of the estate
conveyed the Green farm to Kenneth. Kenneth later told his neighbor, Jeremy Kiddy, that
he had had a hard time getting the farm.
Over the next several years, Kenneth continued to live alone on the farm and to
work the farm. He remained close to a small circle of friends and had no meaningful
contact with Albert, Albert’s wife Stella, or Albert’s son Andrew. Kenneth’s friends
included Kiddy, who helped him on the farm and saw him on almost a daily basis from
2004 until late July 2009, and McClintock, who accompanied Kenneth on errands and
saw him on at least a weekly basis from March 2006 until late July 2009.
In addition to the farm, Kenneth owned a number of annuities, savings bonds, bank
accounts, and brokerage accounts. Beginning in 2004, Kenneth started making
McClintock the beneficiary on his accounts. In addition, he enlisted the aid of
Oberhaus’s employee, Linda Malamis, to make McClintock the payee on his savings
6
bonds upon his death.
F. Kenneth’s First Serious Illness, in 2006, and Its Aftermath
In May 2006, Kenneth was diagnosed with rectal cancer. Several months earlier,
he had given McClintock a healthcare power of attorney.
After undergoing a colostomy in Morgantown, West Virginia, Kenneth stayed with
his niece (Albert’s daughter) Amy Thompson. While he was staying with the
Thompsons, however, Kenneth asked McClintock to take him to his chemotherapy
treatments.3
Kenneth became distrustful of Thompson’s family, suspecting that someone had
gone through the personal papers that he kept in the trunk of his car. He told Malamis
that he did not want his family to know his financial situation. He requested that
McClintock keep all of his banking and investment records, which she did until
September 2009.
G. The Period from Late 2006 to Early 2009
After several months with the Thompsons, Kenneth returned to the Green farm.
Thereafter, McClintock and Kenneth would meet at least weekly, and she would
accompany him on his errands. On one of those excursions, Kenneth took McClintock to
the Green cemetery, showed her his parents’ graves, and told her that he wanted to be
3
The circuit court found that Albert’s son, Andrew, did not visit Kenneth or send
him any cards during this illness. The court made no findings about whether Albert or his
wife Stella visited Kenneth or corresponded with him at that time.
7
buried beside his parents.
During this same period, Kenneth instructed Malamis and the lawyer, Nelson, that
he wanted McClintock to inherit all of his assets and that he wanted to leave nothing to
his brother and his family. He expressed similar sentiments to his neighbor, Kiddy.
H. The Onset of Kenneth’s Second and Final Illness
In April 2009, McClintock took Kenneth to his regular physician, who told
Kenneth that he was experiencing a relapse. In May 2009, McClintock took Kenneth to
an oncologist, who diagnosed Kenneth with metastatic rectal cancer, which had spread to
his lungs.
Around this time, Albert, his son Andrew, and other family members visited
Kenneth on the Green farm for Kenneth’s birthday (which was on May 20). After the
guests left, Kenneth told Kiddy that he informed Albert and his family that they did not
need to worry about the farm because they would not be inheriting it.
Shortly thereafter, Kenneth underwent surgery. During his recovery, Kenneth
stayed with Adam Johnson, his great-nephew (and Albert’s grandson). McClintock
continued to see Kenneth once a week during this period.
I. Kenneth’s Admission to Sacred Heart Hospital
On July 31, 2009, McClintock went to visit Kenneth at the home of his great-
nephew and saw that he appeared to be very ill. On that day, Kenneth was admitted to
Sacred Heart Hospital in Cumberland.
8
Upon his admission, Kenneth’s discharge plan was that he would return to the
Johnson home upon his release. In fact, the Johnsons requested that home health services
from the hospital be made available when Kenneth arrived at their home. While at the
hospital, Kenneth was placed on a fentanyl patch and oxycodone. The hospital nurses
noted some confusion on Kenneth’s part and described Kenneth as giddy or happy.
Kenneth remained on those opioid analgesics until his death several months later.4
McClintock visited Kenneth in the hospital every day until his discharge on August
13, 2009.
J. Albert’s Offer of Assistance
On August 3, 2009, a few days after Kenneth’s admission to the hospital, Albert
told the hospital staff that he was willing to take Kenneth to Kentucky and that he did not
want Kenneth to live in a nursing home. Kenneth’s medical records, however, contained
no previous mention of a nursing home. Moreover, the reference to a nursing home
conflicts with the prior discharge plan, under which Kenneth was to return to his great-
nephew’s home in Maryland.5
On August 6, 2009, a few days after Albert had offered to take Kenneth to
4
The circuit court found that Kenneth was on morphine as well as fentanyl and
oxycodone, but Andrew correctly points out that the record does not support that finding.
The court’s error is, however, immaterial in view of the other narcotics that Kenneth was
indisputably taking.
5
It is unclear whether Albert’s conversation with the staff took place by telephone
or whether Albert had traveled from Kentucky to Maryland as of the date of that
conversation (August 3, 2009).
9
Kentucky, Albert met with Kenneth’s oncologist and Kenneth. While he was in
Maryland, Albert and his son Andrew also visited the Green farm.
K. The Limited Power of Attorney in Favor of McClintock
On August 7, 2009, Malamis brought Kenneth’s advance directive to the hospital,
and it was inserted into his medical records. Kenneth told the hospital staff that he did
not want his family to know that he had a do-not-resuscitate order in effect.
While Malamis was at the hospital, Kenneth informed her that he wanted
McClintock to perform some tasks for him, and they discussed giving her a power of
attorney. Kenneth then spoke by telephone with his attorney, Nelson, who prepared a
limited power of attorney in favor of McClintock. Nelson emailed the power of attorney
to Malamis, and Malamis presented it to Kenneth, who executed it. The limited power of
attorney instructed McClintock that Kenneth wanted his records to go to her home, that he
wanted her to close his account at First Peoples Federal Credit Union and to deposit the
proceeds into his M&T Bank account, and that she should cash some of his savings bonds
to pay some of the medical bills that had accumulated.
After executing the power of attorney, Kenneth spoke to Oberhaus of Maryland
Fuel and confirmed that the instrument appropriately documented his wishes.
Albert and his son Andrew were at the hospital on that date. Notably, as of that
date, the discharge plan remained unchanged – Kenneth was to return to his great-
nephew’s house in Maryland.
10
L. Kenneth’s Announcement that He “Had to Go to Kentucky”
On McClintock’s regular, daily visit to the hospital on August 9, 2009,6 Kenneth
told her that he “had to go to Kentucky” with Albert. Otherwise, Kenneth said, he would
have to go to a nursing home. Kenneth had never previously said anything to McClintock
or to his acquaintances (Malamis, Nelson, or Kiddy) about going to Kentucky after his
discharge.
McClintock offered to allow Kenneth to stay at her house and questioned why he
would want to leave Maryland and stay with Stella, whom he disliked.7 During the
conversation, Kenneth became distraught and had a breakdown. McClintock did not
pursue the issue further.
M. Stella Green’s Conversation with the Hospital Social Worker
On August 11, 2009, the hospital “staff” informed a hospital social worker that
Kenneth wanted to go to Kentucky. According to Kenneth’s medical records, the social
worker had talked to Albert’s wife, Stella, who told her that “they want to bring him back
to the farm where they live and where they grew up.” The circuit court found that the
reported statement was “blatantly and deliberately false,” as Kenneth had gone to
Kentucky only once in his life – for his brother’s deposition in their litigation over their
6
In its findings of fact, the circuit court stated that this conversation occurred on
August 12, 2009, but the record reflects that it occurred on August 9.
7
Over the years, Kenneth had told numerous people, including McClintock,
Malamis, Nelson, and Kiddy, that he did not like or trust Stella and that his mother had
not liked her either.
11
mother’s estate.
In addition, according to the medical records, Stella reportedly warned the social
worker to be careful of McClintock, saying that she was an old co-worker with the
reputation of being a “black widow” and that she was using a power of attorney to keep
Kenneth in Maryland.8
N. Kenneth’s Conversation with Kiddy about Going to Kentucky
Like McClintock, Kenneth’s neighbor, Kiddy, would also regularly visit Kenneth
in the hospital. Kiddy reported that Kenneth was concerned about his farm and his cattle.
Kiddy thought that Kenneth’s discharge plan was for him to stay with Betty
McClintock.9 On a visit on August 13, 2009, however, Kenneth told Kiddy that he was
leaving for Kentucky with Albert. When Kiddy questioned the reasons for this sudden
change of plans, Kenneth said that he was staying there only for two weeks and would
then return to the farm. Albert confirmed that he would bring Kenneth back in two
weeks.
O. McClintock’s Last Conversation with Kenneth
On that same day, August 13, 2009, McClintock visited Kenneth again and
8
In its findings of fact, the circuit court observed that Stella did not testify at the
trial. Nor did Albert.
9
In its findings of fact, the circuit court incorrectly stated that, in Kiddy’s
understanding, the discharge plan was for Kenneth to return to the home of his great-
nephew, Adam Johnson. The error is immaterial: the essential point is that the discharge
plan was for Kenneth to remain in Allegany County, and not to go to Kentucky.
12
reiterated that he could stay at her house. When McClintock had to leave for work,
Kenneth asked if she would come back after work. She replied that she would.
McClintock never saw Kenneth again: later that day, Albert and his son Andrew
removed Kenneth from the hospital and took him to Kentucky.
P. The First Kentucky Power of Attorney
The following day, August 14, 2009, Andrew downloaded a power of attorney
from the internet. He called a friend and a notary to request that they come to Albert’s
home to witness the signing of a power of attorney by his uncle. Kenneth was seated in a
hospital bed, with metal rails to prevent him from falling out, when Andrew read the
document to him. Kenneth executed the power of attorney, which was in favor of Albert
Green.
Q. Andrew and Albert Take Control of Kenneth’s Accounts
A day or two later, Andrew and Albert returned to Maryland to obtain control of
Kenneth’s assets. They went first to the First Peoples credit union, where Albert
presented the new power of attorney. There, they learned that Kenneth’s account had
been closed and the proceeds disbursed.10
Upon receiving that information, Andrew and Albert telephoned Kenneth and told
10
As stated above, Kenneth had previously given McClintock a power of attorney
and instructed her to close the account and deposit the proceeds in Kenneth’s M & T bank
account. She carried out those instructions on August 14, 2009, the day after Albert and
Andrew took Kenneth to Kentucky.
13
him that McClintock had closed the account and taken his money. Andrew and Albert
then went to M & T Bank and obtained Kenneth’s records, using the power of attorney.11
In addition, they effected a change of address to Albert’s home in Kentucky.
While they were in Maryland, Andrew and Albert retrieved some items from
Kenneth’s home. Either on this visit or an earlier visit when Kenneth was still in the
hospital, Andrew and Albert obtained Kenneth’s lock box and brought it back to
Kentucky. Among other items, the box contained Kenneth’s 2003 will.
A few days later, Albert, using the power of attorney, withdrew $10,162.55 from
Kenneth’s M & T bank account. During this same period, Albert and Andrew
communicated with Robert Watson, a Maryland attorney, with regard to the Green farm.
R. The Powers of Attorney
On August 23, 2009, Andrew asked two friends and a notary to come to Albert’s
house to witness Kenneth’s signing of several additional documents: a statement denying
that Kenneth had executed the power of attorney in favor of McClintock; a document
indicating his desire to transfer his farm to Albert; and a statement directing the attorney,
Nelson, to cease activity on Kenneth’s behalf. The signing was recorded on video at
Andrew’s insistence.
11
Although Andrew testified that Kenneth drafted a letter to M & T Bank
requesting that Betty McClintock’s power of attorney and name be removed from the
account and that the bank only wrote a check payable to Andrew after speaking with
Kenneth, the circuit court chose not to credit that testimony.
14
Andrew read the series of documents to Kenneth, who was wearing a hospital
gown and lying in a hospital bed in Albert’s house. Albert was present as well, as was an
unidentified woman whose voice is heard on the recording.
While he was signing the third document, Kenneth, who was smiling at the time,
said: “We can handle it. It may not be right, but we can handle it. Rescind any power of
attorney to Donald Nelson . . . . Where to sign . . . knows he needs to sign his name.”
When Kenneth had finished signing, Andrew said, “[T]hat will be good enough, I hope.”
On that same day, August 23, 2009, Kenneth executed another power of attorney,
this one in favor of Andrew. No one made a video recording of the execution of that
power of attorney.12
S. Efforts to Cut Off Kenneth’s Access to McClintock
Meanwhile, on August 27, 2009, a palliative care visit occurred at Albert’s house.
The medical records from the visit reflect that someone – presumably a member of
Albert’s family – told the nurse that McClintock was one of Kenneth’s former friends and
that she should not be provided any information about Kenneth’s health status.
On the following day, August 28, 2009, Dr. Ann Colbert visited Kenneth at
Albert’s house. During the visit, Stella told the doctor that “there had been a lot of
trouble with a woman named Betty McClintac [sic] who had forged her signature on the
12
The circuit court correctly observed that because of the two powers of attorney
on August 14 and August 23, 2009, respectively, Andrew and Albert had entered into a
fiduciary relationship with Kenneth.
15
[power of attorney].” Stella also told the doctor that McClintock had wanted to place
Kenneth in a nursing home and had “taken quite a bit of his money.” She instructed the
doctor that McClintock was “not to be involved” in Kenneth’s care and that she and
Albert had prevented McClintock from coming to visit or being involved.
T. The 2009 Will
By September 2, 2009, Leslie Richardson, a Kentucky attorney, had drafted a new
will for Kenneth. The circuit court found no evidence, however, that Richardson actually
knew Kenneth or had ever met him. Instead, Andrew had communicated with Richardson
about the will, and Albert and Stella had picked up the draft will from her office.
Kenneth was housebound and thus unable to pick up the will.13
On September 2, 2009, Andrew asked a few of his friends to come to his father’s
home and witness the execution of the new will. While Kenneth was in his hospital bed,
Andrew stood beside the bed and read the will. Kenneth “agreed” with the will and
executed it, and it was witnessed and notarized. No one made a video recording of the
execution of the will.
U. The Use of the Power of Attorney to Convey the Farm to Albert
On September 3, 2009, the day after the execution of the will, Andrew traveled to
Maryland to see Robert Watson, his Maryland attorney. Using his power of attorney,
13
Andrew asserted that Kenneth talked on the telephone with Richardson about
what he wanted in his will, but the circuit court did not credit that testimony.
16
Andrew executed a deed by which he conveyed Kenneth’s farm to Albert. The deed
recites that Kenneth is “incapacitated.” 14
V. Additional Steps to Take Control of Kenneth’s Assets
On September 16, 2009, Albert used his power of attorney to open a bank account
for himself and Kenneth at Citizens Bank in Kentucky. Despite the power of attorney,
Albert established the account as a joint account rather than as a fiduciary account.
Meanwhile, beginning in mid-August 2009, either Albert or Andrew had
communicated with Kenneth’s investment managers and with others who held his assets.
By October 1, 2009, Albert and Andrew had succeeded in changing all beneficiary
designations on Kenneth’s accounts from McClintock to Albert.15
Andrew or Albert sold Kenneth’s cattle during this time period as well. There was
no evidence that the proceeds of the cattle sale were deposited into any of Kenneth’s bank
accounts.16
Between October 1, 2009, and December 31, 2009, Albert withdrew $21,338.38
from Kenneth’s account to pay for an addition to Albert’s home. Also, on January 15,
14
We are informed that the validity of that conveyance is currently the subject of
other pending litigation in Allegany County.
15
Andrew argues that Kenneth himself made the changes to the beneficiary
designations, but the circuit court did not credit this testimony.
16
Andrew asserts that the proceeds were deposited into the joint account at
Citizens Bank in Kentucky, but admits that there was no testimony to support that
assertion.
17
2010, four days before Kenneth’s death, Albert paid Andrew $2,000 from Kenneth’s
account as “reimbursement for travel.”
W. Additional Efforts to Hold Kenneth Incommunicado
Beginning in mid-August 2009, Malamis and Kiddy repeatedly tried to
communicate with Kenneth in Kentucky. Kiddy was successful in talking briefly to him
on one occasion, but Malamis was unable to reach him. Both Kiddy and Malamis left
numerous phone messages that were never returned. Kiddy even traveled to Kentucky to
find Kenneth, but was unable to locate Albert’s farm.
In September 2009, Nelson, the attorney, spoke with Kenneth once as well.
Kenneth wanted to make sure that “everything was okay” with his property and will, and
Nelson reassured him that nothing was amiss based on the information that he had at the
time.
Between August 13, 2009, when Albert and Andrew took him to Kentucky, and
his death on January 19, 2010, Kenneth had no other contact with anyone in Maryland
with whom he had previously been close.
Throughout that period, Kenneth was homebound. He went outside only once. He
left his brother’s house only to be transported to a hospice shortly before he died. He was
completely dependent on his brother and sister-in-law for food, shelter, and medical care.
X. The Orphans’ Court Proceedings
After Kenneth’s death, Malamis and Nelson sought to introduce the 2003 will to
18
probate, while Andrew Green sought to introduce the 2009 will. In his notice of judicial
probate, Andrew specifically asserted that Kenneth was domiciled in Allegany County at
the time of his death.
On June 18, 2010, the orphans’ court held a hearing for the purpose of admitting
the 2009 will to probate. At the hearing, Andrew asserted that, although Kenneth’s death
certificate states that Allegany County was his usual residence, he had established a
residence in Kentucky by the time of his death. Thus, Andrew asserted that the estate
should be opened in Kentucky rather than Maryland. The orphans’ court, however,
unanimously decided that the estate should remain in Maryland. In so doing, the court
accepted the 2009 will for probate and appointed Andrew to administer the estate.17
Andrew did not appeal the orphans’ court’s rejection of his argument that
Kentucky, and not Maryland, was the appropriate forum for the proceedings to probate
Kenneth’s estate. He informed us at oral argument that he has taken no steps to open an
estate in Kentucky.
Y. The Caveat Proceeding
On September 9, 2010, McClintock filed a petition to caveat the 2009 will,
alleging that the will was procured as a result of fraud, undue influence, or duress
imposed by Albert or Albert’s other family members. In response, Andrew petitioned to
17
The orphans’ court noted that, according to Kenneth’s death certificate,
Allegany County was his usual residence.
19
transfer the caveat proceeding to the circuit court in accordance with Md. Rule 6-434. In
his response, Andrew specifically stated that Rule 6-434 empowers the orphans’ court “to
transmit issues of fact within its jurisdiction for trial in the Circuit Court.”
When the orphans’ court transferred its record to the circuit court for the caveat
proceeding, the register of wills certified that she had sent “the original papers as stated
on the estate docket in the Estate of Kenneth William Green, late of Allegany County,
Maryland.”
As previously stated, after a lengthy bench trial, the Circuit Court for Allegany
County held that the 2009 will was invalid because it was procured by fraud and undue
influence. Andrew filed this timely appeal, in which he not only challenges several
rulings at trial, but also whether Maryland had jurisdiction to adjudicate the validity of the
will that he himself submitted to probate.18
Q UESTIONS P RESENTED
Andrew presents three questions for our review, which we have rephrased as
follows:
I. Does Maryland lack subject matter jurisdiction over
the estate of Kenneth Green?
II. Did the circuit court err in allowing Kenneth Green’s
18
Although the circuit court invalidated the will on grounds of fraud and undue
influence, it rejected McClintock’s contentions that Kenneth was incompetent when he
made the 2009 will, that Kenneth did not execute the will, and that the will was the
product of duress. McClintock has not challenged those conclusions.
20
former attorney, Nelson, to testify regarding
confidential communications made by Kenneth Green
with regards to the 2003 will?
III. Was there sufficient evidence for the court to find that
the 2009 will was the product of fraud and undue
influence?
We find no error and, hence, shall affirm.
D ISCUSSION
I. Maryland Has Jurisdiction
Andrew submitted the 2009 will to probate in Maryland, specifically asserting that
Kenneth was domiciled in Allegany County at the time of his death. As a consequence, a
Maryland probate court vested Andrew with the status of Kenneth’s personal
representative. As such, Andrew gained a number of procedural advantages in the
dispute with McClintock, including the right to assert Kenneth’s attorney-client privilege
and the ability to require McClintock to bear the burden of proof in the caveat proceeding.
Andrew himself petitioned to transmit the caveat proceeding to the circuit court,
asserting, in support of his petition, that Md. Rule 6-434 empowered the orphans’ court to
transmit contested issues of fact “within its jurisdiction.” Nonetheless, now that the
circuit court has ruled against him in that dispute, Andrew raises a preliminary issue that
he either chose not to raise or neglected to raise in the circuit court – whether Maryland
may exercise subject matter jurisdiction over Kenneth’s estate.
It is tempting to hold that Andrew has either waived that issue (because of his
21
neglect) or is equitably estopped from raising it (because of his gamesmanship). A party,
however, cannot waive an objection to a court’s subject matter jurisdiction. See, e.g.,
State v. Walls, 90 Md. App. 300, 305 (1992). Moreover, just as parties are unable to
agree to confer subject matter jurisdiction upon a court (Stewart v. State, 287 Md. 524,
527 (1980); Walls, 90 Md. App. at 305), so too are they unable to create subject matter
jurisdiction by estoppel. See, e.g., StreetEasy, Inc. v. Chertok, ___ F.3d ____, 2014 WL
2521472, at *5 (2d Cir. June 5, 2014) (citing Williams v. United States, 947 F.2d 37, 39
(2d Cir. 1991)). Indeed, because a court has no power to decide a dispute unless it has
subject matter jurisdiction, a party can question the existence of subject matter
jurisdiction at any time – even on an appeal in a case in which the existence of
jurisdiction was neither raised nor decided below. Harris v. Simmons, 110 Md. App. 95,
113 (1996); Walls, 90 Md. App. at 305. Consequently, we must consider Andrew’s
challenge.
Although Andrew frames his challenge in terms of subject matter jurisdiction, he
does not explain why, in his view, the subject matter of this dispute falls outside the scope
of what the orphans’ court and circuit court were empowered to decide. He certainly does
not raise a typical objection to subject matter jurisdiction, such as an objection that a court
has decided a type of case that it is not empowered to decide (e.g., an objection that a
circuit court decided a replevin action, which lies within the exclusive original
jurisdiction of the district court). Md. Code (2013 Repl. Vol.), § 4-401(2) of the Courts
22
and Judicial Proceedings Article. Nor does he complain that the court purported to
exercise a power that has not been conferred upon it (e.g., a complaint that a district court
attempted to exercise general equity jurisdiction, which, by statute, see id. § 4-402(a), it
does not have). In fact, in none of his arguments about subject matter jurisdiction does
Andrew ever cite or discuss the statutory basis for probate jurisdiction in Maryland.
The basis for that jurisdiction is found in title 2, subtitle 1, of the Estates and
Trusts Article. Under Md. Code (1974, 2011 Repl. Vol.), § 2-102(a) of the Estates and
Trusts Article, the orphans’ court “may conduct judicial probate, direct the conduct of a
personal representative, and pass orders which may be required in the course of the
administration of an estate of a decedent.”19 Furthermore, under Md. Code (1974, 2011
Repl. Vol.), § 2-105(b) of the Estates and Trusts Article, the orphans’ court “shall”
transmit issues of fact to “a court of law” upon “the request of an interested party” “made
before the [orphans’ court] has determined the issue of fact.” 20 The courts in this case
19
In full, § 2-102(a) provides:
(a) Powers. – The court may conduct judicial probate, direct the conduct of a
personal representative, and pass orders which may be required in the course of the
administration of an estate of a decedent. It may summon witnesses. The court
may not, under pretext of incidental power or constructive authority, exercise any
jurisdiction not expressly conferred.
20
In full, § 2-105(b) provides:
(b) Transfer of determination to law court. – At the request of an interested
person made within the time determined by the court, the issue of fact may be
determined by a court of law. When the request is made before the court has
(continued...)
23
proceeded in precise accordance with these jurisdictional grants: the orphans’ court
conducted judicial probate proceedings (in response, in part, to the notice of judicial
probate that Andrew had filed); the probate proceedings included the caveat petition that
McClintock had filed; and at McClintock’s request (and with Andrew’s consent), the
orphans’ court transmitted the caveat case to the circuit court, a court of law, for a
determination of the relevant factual issues. In these circumstances, it is not immediately
clear how the Maryland courts have exceeded their subject matter jurisdiction.
Without citation to any authority, however, Andrew argues that in a probate case a
Maryland court has subject matter jurisdiction only if the decedent was domiciled in
Maryland at the time of his or her death. Andrew’s argument is difficult to reconcile with
Md. Code (1974, 2011 Repl. Vol.), § 5-103(a) of the Estates and Trusts Article, which
specifically recognizes that a Maryland court can probate the estate of a person who was
domiciled elsewhere at the time of his or her death, at least as long as the decedent owned
property in Maryland at that time:
The venue for administrative or judicial probate is in the county in which
the decedent had his domicile at the time of his death, or, if the decedent
was not domiciled in Maryland, the county in which the petitioner believes
the largest part in value of the property of the decedent in Maryland was
located at the time of his death.
Accord Wright v. Nugent, 23 Md. App. 337, 353 (1974), aff’d, 275 Md. 290 (1975) (per
20
(...continued)
determined the issue of fact, the court shall transmit the issue to a court of law.
24
curiam) (holding that Talbot County was the proper venue for administrative probate of
the estate of a decedent who was domiciled in the District of Columbia at the time of his
death, because the petitioner for probate believed that the decedent’s property in Talbot
County represented the largest part in value of his property located in Maryland); see also
Restatement (Second) of Conflicts of Law § 314 cmt. b (1971) (stating that, as a general
rule, “[a]ny state has jurisdiction to admit a will to probate or to appoint an executor or
administrator for a decedent”).
In other words, if the decedent was domiciled in a particular county at the time of
death or if the decedent had more property in that county than anywhere else in the State
(in the belief of the person who petitions for probate), the orphans’ court for that county is
the proper venue for probate proceedings. But because a court can be a proper venue
only if it has jurisdiction, jurisdiction cannot depend solely on whether the decedent was
domiciled in Maryland at the time of his or her death: the court may also have jurisdiction
if the decedent simply had property in Maryland at the time of death. See Kortobi v.
Kass, 182 Md. App. 424, 431 (2008), aff’d, 410 Md. 268 (2009) (stating that the State
may subject all property within its borders to its laws).
Both parties urge us to decide where Kenneth was domiciled at the time of his
death. The issue of domicile, however, requires a fact-intensive inquiry into Kenneth’s
intentions (see Blount v. Boston, 351 Md. 360, 367-73 (1998)), which the circuit court
was not asked to conduct, and which it would be inappropriate for an appellate court to
25
conduct in the first instance. Cf. Von Dunser v. Aronoff, 915 F.2d 1071, 1072-76 (6th Cir.
1990) (where party challenged subject matter jurisdiction for first time on appeal by
raising issue of domicile, and thus of diversity of citizenship, court remanded for factual
determination regarding domicile).
Furthermore, although it is fairly clear that Kenneth owned at least some property
in Allegany County at the time of his death,21 we need not decide whether Maryland had
jurisdiction over his estate on that ground: the orphans’ court rejected Andrew’s challenge
to its jurisdiction at the outset of the case, and Andrew failed to exercise his right to
appeal that ruling. Hence, the orphans’ court’s ruling operates as collateral estoppel on
the issue of jurisdiction. Tucker v. Tucker, 35 Md. App. 710, 712-15 (1977).
In Tucker, 35 Md. App. at 711, Mr. Tucker moved to revise a divorce decree that
obligated him to pay his ex-wife’s medical expenses and those of their minor children. In
support of his motion, Mr. Tucker contended that the court had lacked jurisdiction to
enter that portion of its decree. Id. The circuit court disagreed, and Mr. Tucker failed to
appeal – nor, apparently, did he pay the expenses. Id. Instead, in a subsequent
proceeding, in which his ex-wife sought to have him held in contempt, he attempted to
reassert his jurisdictional argument. Id. The circuit court declined to entertain the
21
The record discloses that Malamis or McClintock possessed a number of
Kenneth’s savings bonds, which were payable to McClintock upon death. Thus, even
assuming the validity of the conveyance of Kenneth’s farm to Albert for no consideration,
the sale of Kenneth’s cattle, and the liquidation of Kenneth’s accounts, Kenneth owned
some property in Maryland at the time of his death.
26
argument, and this Court affirmed, stating that “principles of res judicata apply to a
jurisdictional question when that question has actually been raised, litigated and
determined in favor of jurisdiction.” Id. at 713.
These same principles apply in this case. When the orphans’ court rejected his
jurisdictional challenge to a Maryland court’s power to administer Kenneth’s estate,
Andrew had the right to appeal either to this Court22 or to the circuit court,23 because the
ruling was a “final judgment” in the context of the probate proceedings. Wright v.
Nugent, 23 Md. App. at 357-58 (a party may appeal from the orphans’ court’s
determination that it has jurisdiction over an estate and that it may admit a will to probate,
because the determination is a “final judgment” for purposes of probate proceedings); see
also Pattison v. Firor, 146 Md. 243, 249 (1924) (a party may appeal from the orphans’
court’s denial of a petition contending that the decedent had not resided in the jurisdiction
22
Md. Code (1973, 2013 Repl. Vol.), § 12-501(a) of the Courts and Judicial
Proceedings Article. Section 12-501(a) states that “[a] party may appeal to the Court of
Special Appeals from a final judgment of an orphans’ court.”
23
Md. Code (1973, 2013 Repl. Vol.), § 12-502(a) of the Courts and Judicial
Proceedings Article. Section 12-502(a) states that, “[i]nstead of a direct appeal to the
Court of Special Appeals pursuant to § 12-501 of this subtitle, a party may appeal to the
circuit court for the county from a final judgment of an orphans’ court.” Section 12-502
does not apply in Harford County and Montgomery County, where the circuit court sits as
the orphans’ court. The appeal to the circuit court must be heard de novo and must “be
treated as if it were a new proceeding and as if there had never been a prior hearing or
judgment by the orphans’ court.” Id., § 12-502(a)(1)(ii)-(iii). In addition, the circuit
court must “give judgment according to the equity of the matter.” Id., § 12-502(a)(1)(iv).
27
and thus that the court should not issue letters testamentary or of administration).24
Indeed, Andrew was not only permitted to appeal the ruling on jurisdiction, but he
was required to appeal if he continued to dispute the court’s power to administer the
estate. Once a probate court has rebuffed a challenge to its jurisdiction, as it did here, the
court (and interested parties) are entitled to act in reliance upon that decision in disbursing
estate assets to creditors, professionals, and (in some estates) perhaps even some
beneficiaries. Thus, if a party, like Andrew, could challenge the court’s jurisdiction after
it had authorized those sorts of disbursements, the party could create great uncertainty in
estate administration by threatening to invalidate the court’s actions long after they had
occurred. It follows that if an orphans’ court rejects a party’s challenge to its jurisdiction,
the party must immediately exercise its right to appeal, and must prevail on its appeal, or
else he or she will be barred from raising future challenges to the court’s jurisdiction.25
24
As Maryland courts have repeatedly recognized, the concept of an appealable
“final judgment” for purposes of orphans’ court proceedings is very different from the
concept of a final judgment in conventional civil litigation. See, e.g., Banashak v.
Wittstadt, 167 Md. App. 627, 656-58 (2006); Hegmon v. Novak, 130 Md. App. 703, 709
(2000) (referring to the “unusual definition of a ‘final judgment’” in orphans’ court
proceedings).
25
In most civil proceedings, “‘a trial court’s order denying a challenge to its
jurisdiction is a nonappealable interlocutory order.’” Maryland State Bd. of Educ. v.
Bradford, 387 Md. 353, 384 (2005) (quoting Gruber v. Gruber, 369 Md. 540, 547
(2002)). This approach serves “the very purpose of the final judgment rule, which is to
avoid piecemeal appeals that create inefficiencies in both the appellate and trial courts.”
Id. In probate proceedings, however, the interests of efficiency are often better served by
permitting some immediate appeals, and thus a modified final judgment rule applies. See
Schlossberg v. Schlossberg, 275 Md. 600, 612 (1975) (explaining that the appealable final
(continued...)
28
Andrew may have failed to appeal the orphans’ court’s ruling because he was
unaware of his appellate rights. Or he may have failed to appeal because he was willing
to forgo his rights in light of the court’s acceptance of what was, in effect, his alternative
argument, that he should be the personal representative if the estate were to be
administered in Maryland. In either case, however, collateral estoppel bars him from
relitigating the issue of jurisdiction after it had been “raised, litigated and determined”
against him in a final, appealable judgment, from which he had the right to appeal
(Wright v. Nugent, 23 Md. App. at 357-58), but from which he failed to appeal. Tucker,
35 Md. App. at 713. Accordingly, we reject Andrew’s attack on the circuit court’s
exercise of subject matter jurisdiction.
II. The Circuit Court Did Not Commit Prejudicial Error in Permitting
Kenneth’s Attorney to Testify About Kenneth’s Estate Plan
Andrew argues that the circuit court erred when it allowed Kenneth’s attorney,
Nelson, to testify about communications with Kenneth about his estate planning and the
preparation of the 2003 will and about a communication with Kenneth after Albert and
Andrew had taken him to Kentucky. Andrew complains that the court violated Kenneth’s
attorney-client privilege, which Andrew, as personal representative, was entitled to assert.
We see no error, and certainly no prejudicial error.
25
(...continued)
judgments of an orphans’ court are “those judgments, orders, decisions, etc. which, in
caveat proceedings, finally determine the proper parties, the issues to be tried and the
sending of those issues to a court of law”).
29
Kenneth undoubtedly had an attorney-client relationship with Nelson, at least in
connection with the 2003 will and the limited power of attorney that he drafted for
Kenneth while he was hospitalized in Maryland in August 2009. Hence, the attorney-
client privilege potentially applies at least to some communications between Kenneth and
Nelson. See, e.g., Zook v. Pesce, __ Md. __ , No. 75, Sept. Term, 2013, Slip Op. at 7-8
(Ct. of App. May 16, 2014); Greenberg v. State, 421 Md. 396, 408-09 (2011); E.I. du
Pont de Nemours & Co. v. Forma-Pack, Inc., 351 Md. 396, 414-15 (1998); Harrison v.
State, 276 Md. 122, 134-35 (1975).
Maryland has adopted Wigmore’s definition of the attorney-client privilege:
(1) Where legal advice of [any] kind is sought, (2) from a professional legal
adviser in his capacity as such, (3) the communications relating to that
purpose, (4) made in confidence, (5) by the client, (6) are at his insistence
permanently protected, (7) from disclosure by himself or by the legal
adviser, (8) except the protection [may] be waived.
See, e.g., Harrison, 276 Md. at 135 (quoting 8 John H. Wigmore, Wigmore on
Evidence § 2922, at 554 (McNaughton rev. ed. 1961); accord Greenberg, 421 Md. at
409; Forma-Pack, 351 Md. at 415.
Nonetheless, the Court of Appeals has cautioned that, “because the application of
the attorney-client privilege withholds relevant information from the fact finder, the
privilege contains some limitations and should be narrowly construed.” Forma-Pack, 351
Md. at 415.
Within its proper bounds, the attorney-client privilege will survive the client’s
30
death. See Zook, 2013, Slip Op. at 7-8; Trupp v. Wolff, 24 Md. App. 588, 609 (1975).
Ordinarily, therefore, an attorney may not disclose a client’s confidential communications
even after the client dies. Trupp, 24 Md. App. at 609. As the Supreme Court has
explained, “Knowing that communications will remain confidential even after death
encourages the client to communicate fully and frankly with counsel” without concern
about “reputation, civil liability, or possible harm to friends and family.” Swidler &
Berlin v. United States, 524 U.S. 399, 407 (1998); accord Zook, Slip Op. at 8.
But despite the general rule of continued confidentiality after death, Maryland
recognizes a “testamentary exception” to the attorney-client privilege. That exception
establishes that, “in a dispute between putative heirs or devisees under a will or trust, the
attorney-client privilege does not bar admission of testimony and evidence regarding
communication between the decedent and any attorneys involved in the creation of the
instrument, provided that evidence or testimony tends to help clarify the donative intent of
the decedent.” Zook, Slip Op. at 10; see Benzinger v. Hemler, 134 Md. 581, 586 (1919).
Andrew concedes the existence of the testamentary exception, but contends that it
applies only to the will that is being contested – i.e., in this case, to the 2009 will. Hence,
he contends that the circuit court erred in permitting Nelson to testify about Kenneth’s
intentions in regard to his earlier will and estate plan. In Zook, however, the Court of
Appeals rejected a similar contention. Zook, Slip Op. at 20.
In that case, the beneficiary of a trust alleged that her sister had exercised undue
31
influence over their father, the settlor, in inducing him to revise the trust shortly before
his death. Zook, Slip Op. at 1-4. Because a change in the father’s estate plan could
constitute proof of undue influence (see Moore v. Smith, 321 Md. 347, 353 (1990)), the
beneficiary sought to discover and to introduce the earlier trust. Zook, Slip Op. at 5. The
Court of Appeals held that it was error (though not reversible error in the circumstances
of that case) for the circuit court to bar the discovery and introduction of the earlier trust.
Id., Slip Op. at 20. In view of the allegations of undue influence in this case, therefore, it
might well have been error for the circuit court not to have permitted testimony about
Kenneth’s intentions before he radically altered his estate plan in adopting the 2009 will.
See id.; accord In re Everett’s Will, 105 Vt. 291, 166 A. 827, 835 (1933) (holding that
“evidence of previous wills, executed or unexecuted, was admissible” in determining
whether there was undue influence in procuring a later will).
In any event, even if the circuit court erred in allowing Nelson’s testimony about
the 2003 will, we would still affirm, because the testimony was cumulative and thus
harmless. See Zook, Slip Op. at 20 (to obtain reversal, an appellant “must not only show
error but must demonstrate that the error was prejudicial”). In his testimony concerning
the 2003 will, Nelson focused on three matters: (1) Kenneth’s intention to give his estate
to McClintock; (2) his antipathy toward his sister-in-law, Stella; and (3) his approval of
the option in favor of Maryland Fuel. Yet, other witnesses, including McClintock, Kiddy,
Malamis, and Oberhaus, gave similar testimony concerning these same matters. For
32
instance, Malamis testified that, when Kenneth executed the will at an M&T Bank branch
office in 2003, he told her and a bank employee why he wanted to give his estate to
McClintock and explained his disdain for Stella. Similarly, Oberhaus testified that
Kenneth “was agreeable” to the option in favor of Maryland Fuel. Indeed, the 2003 will
itself evidences Kenneth’s intention to give his estate to McClintock and to grant the
option.
As a separate and final matter, while Andrew also objected to Nelson’s testimony
about a September 2009 conversation in which Kenneth asked him whether “everything is
still okay” with his property and his will, we think that the testimony also falls well within
the testamentary exception. In particular, the testimony “helps to clarify the donative
intent of the decedent,” Zook, Slip Op. at 10, as it suggests that Kenneth had no idea at
the time that he had changed his will (or that Andrew had used a power of attorney to
convey the farm to Albert). The circuit court, therefore, did not err in permitting Nelson
to testify about that conversation.
III. The Record Contains Sufficient Evidence to Support the Circuit Court’s
Findings of Fraud and Undue Influence
In his final challenge, Andrew argues that there was insufficient evidence to
support a finding of fraud or undue influence. In view of the abundance of evidence that
Andrew and Albert employed false pretenses to abduct their dying relative from Maryland
and then held him, incommunicado, in Kentucky, where he was housebound, highly
medicated, and completely dependent on them for sustenance and support, we disagree.
33
In examining Andrew’s argument, we must employ two different standards of
review. First, we must evaluate whether the record contains sufficient evidence to
support the circuit court’s factual findings. Then, we must evaluate whether those factual
findings support the conclusion that the will was the product of fraud or undue influence.
We review the circuit court’s factfinding under the clearly-erroneous standard,
under which the findings will not be overturned unless there is no competent and material
evidence to support them. See, e.g., L.W. Wolfe Enters., 165 Md. App. at 343.
A. Undue Influence
We shall first address the sufficiency of the evidence to support the circuit court’s
conclusion regarding undue influence.
The Court of Appeals has stated that, “‘[g]enerally, undue influence amounts to
physical or moral coercion that forces a testator to follow another’s judgment instead of
his own.’” Zook, Slip Op. at 16 (quoting Moore, 321 Md. at 353). To be “undue,” the
influence must be “‘unlawful,’” “‘on account of the manner and motive of its exertion,
and must be exerted to such a degree as to amount to force or coercion, destroying free
agency.’” Zook, Slip Op. at 17 (quoting Koppal v. Soules, 189 Md. 346, 351 (1947));
accord Moore, 321 Md. at 353 (quoting Nalley v. Nalley, 253 Md. 197, 202 (1969)). The
caveator bears the “heavy” burden of establishing undue influence (Zook, Slip Op. at 17),
but “the quantum of proof necessary to establish undue influence varies according to the
susceptibility of the testator.” Moore, 321 Md. at 360.
34
Although the Court of Appeals has “not laid down a test to determine the existence
of undue influence with mathematical accuracy,” Moore, 321 Md. at 353, it “has
recognized the following list of elements characteristic of undue influence” (Zook, Slip
Op. at 16):
1. [t]he benefactor and beneficiary are involved in a relationship of
confidence and trust;
2. [t]he will contains substantial benefit to the beneficiary;
3. [t]he beneficiary caused or assisted in effecting execution of will;
4. [t]here was an opportunity to exert influence;
5. [t]he will contains an unnatural disposition;
6. [t]he bequests constitute a change from a former will; and
7. [t]he testator was highly susceptible to the undue influence.
Id., Slip Op. at 16; Moore, 321 Md. at 353.
A caveator need not prove the presence of all seven of these factors,
Orwick v. Moldawer, 150 Md. App. 528, 534 (2003), but the first and seventh factors
(relationship of confidence and trust, and high susceptibility to undue influence) do
appear to be necessary conditions for a finding of undue influence. See id. at 533-34; see
Upman v. Clarke, 359 Md. 32, 49 (2000) (affirming a finding of no undue influence
where the evidence showed no abuse of a confidential relationship); Anderson v.
Meadowcroft, 339 Md. 218, 229 (1995) (affirming the dismissal of a complaint alleging
undue influence where the pleading did not contain sufficient allegations of the testator’s
35
high susceptibility to influence).
Nearly all of the factors are present in this case, including the essential first and
seventh factors.
As for the first factor, a confidential relationship exists when “‘two persons stand
in such a relation to each other that one must necessarily repose trust and confidence in
the good faith and integrity of the other.’” Upman, 359 Md. at 42 (quoting Green v.
Michael, 183 Md. 76, 84 (1944)). “[D]ependence” is “the key factor” in the existence of
a confidential relationship. Id. at 41 (citing Green, 183 Md. at 84).
Here, there is no question that Albert and Kenneth were in a relationship of trust
and confidence and thus that the crucial first factor is satisfied. After Albert and Andrew
took Kenneth from the hospital in Maryland to Albert’s house in Kentucky, he was in
what the circuit court found to be a “severely weakened condition” – dying of cancer that
had metastasized through his body, on “opiates for pain,” “house bound” [sic], and
“totally dependent upon his brother and Stella for food, personal hygiene and a roof over
his head.” Kenneth was also dependent on his brother and nephew to manage his
finances, having given them the powers of attorney that they used to convey his farm to
Albert (for no consideration), sell his cattle, and liquidate his accounts. See Moore, 321
Md. at 358 (“[i]n light of the intimate nature of [the testator’s] physical limitations and
reliance on [the defendant] to attend his personal and physical needs, as well as [the
testator’s] financial affairs, the development of a confidential relationship was
36
inevitable”). Even Andrew concedes that there was a relationship of trust between the
brothers.26
The analysis is similar for the crucial seventh factor (high susceptibility to
influence). Kenneth’s advanced illness, the pain medications that he took, his almost-
total immobility, and his abject dependence on Albert and his family “created a perfect
setting over which someone could take advantage.” Moore, 321 Md. at 357. Worse yet,
Albert and his family members cut off Kenneth’s ability to communicate with his friends
and acquaintances in Maryland, including McClintock, thereby further isolating him and
rendering him even more susceptible to influence. Hence, not only was this second factor
clearly satisfied, but Kenneth’s confirmed susceptibility has the effect of diminishing the
“quantum of proof” that McClintock would otherwise have to establish. Id. at 360.27
The second and third factors are satisfied as well. Regarding the second factor, the
will contains substantial benefits for Albert because it grants him the entire estate.
Regarding the third, Albert assisted in executing the will by putting Andrew in contact
26
He merely disputes the finding that this trust was abused.
27
While Andrew challenges the court’s findings that Kenneth was cut off from his
Maryland contacts and about the medications he took, we cannot say that the court was
clearly erroneous. Andrew does not dispute that Kenneth received a total of only two
phone calls over the course of five months from friends who had previously visited him in
the hospital nearly every day. Nor can Andrew dispute the evidence that at least two of
these people tried to reach him on multiple occasions. Furthermore, even though Andrew
is correct that Kenneth was on only two opiates (fetanyl and oxycodone), instead of three
(fetanyl, oxycodone, and morphine), it does not change the fact that he was highly
medicated and highly susceptible to influence.
37
with the lawyer who drafted it, picking up the will from the lawyer, and having Andrew
arrange for witnesses and a notary to be present at the signing of the will. See Moore, 321
Md. at 359 (finding undue influence in part because the caveatee arranged for the attorney
who prepared the new will).
For the fourth factor, Albert had the opportunity to exert influence because
Kenneth was secluded in Kentucky, immobilized in a hospital bed, housebound in
Albert’s and Stella’s home, and highly medicated. In fact, the court’s findings imply that
Albert did not merely have the opportunity to exert influence, but that he did exert it –
by, for example, spiriting Kenneth away to Kentucky on the false pretense that he would
return in two weeks, having his son use a power of attorney to convey Kenneth’s farm to
him for no consideration, moving Kenneth’s assets into a joint account of which he was
the co-owner, and using Kenneth’s funds to construct an addition on his house. The
fourth factor also weighs in favor of a finding of undue influence.
The fifth factor tends to weigh against a finding of undue influence, because the
2009 will contains a “natural” disposition in the sense that it gives Kenneth’s property to
a family member. See Rowe v. Rowe, 124 Md. App. 89, 94 (1998) (“[i]n Maryland, there
exists a common law presumption against disinheritance of . . . next of kin”).
Nonetheless, given Kenneth’s antipathy toward Albert’s wife, his struggle to win the farm
from his brother in the litigation over their mother’s estate, his continued frustration about
that struggle (as reported to his neighbor, Kiddy), his reported statement to Albert in as
38
late as May 2009 that Albert would not inherit the farm, and his long-term, stable, caring,
and supportive relationship with McClintock, a sudden decision to divest McClintock and
to give his entire estate to his brother could be construed as unusual. Consequently, this
factor is neutral at best; it is certainly not dispositive in Andrew’s favor.
Finally, for the sixth and last factor, the will is completely changed from the 2003
will, which gave McClintock the entirety of the estate. See Moore, 321 Md. at 358
(affirming a finding of undue influence in part because of an abrupt change in a
longstanding plan). While Andrew attacks the legitimacy of the earlier will, that issue
was not before the circuit court, nor is it before us.
In summary, based on the circuit court’s central findings, which have not been
shown to be clearly erroneous, a reasonable factfinder, viewing the facts in the light most
favorable to McClintock, could conclude that the will resulted from the exertion of undue
influence by Albert and his family members. Accordingly, we reject Andrew’s challenge
to the sufficiency of the evidence supporting that conclusion.
B. Fraud
Lastly, we turn to the issue of fraud, which, in a will contest, a caveator is required
to prove only by a preponderance of the evidence, and not by the higher standard of clear
and convincing evidence that applies to common-law fraud. See Krouse v. Krouse, 94
Md. App. 369, 378 (1993) (citing Griffith v. Diffenderfer, 50 Md. 466, 489 (1879)).
Andrew argues that, in a will contests, fraud occurs only when someone deceives
39
the testator about the will’s provisions or when the testator does not know that he or she is
signing a will (as opposed to some other kind of document). Thus, he argues that fraud in
the inducement will not suffice to invalidate a will. His position is inconsistent with
longstanding principles of Maryland law.
In Tufts v. Poore, 219 Md. 1, 15 (1959), the Court of Appeals affirmed a jury
verdict that invalidated a will on grounds of fraud in the inducement. In that case, the
testator, Mrs. Poore, had originally executed a will that gave her 14-acre estate to her
daughter, Nancy Poore Tufts, for life, with the remainder to her granddaughter, Suzanne
Poore. See id. at 6. The daughter, Tufts, knew of her mother’s plans and was
embarrassed that she would receive the estate only for her life (evidently because her
family members might regard it as a kind of slight). See id. at 9. Consequently, Tufts
promised her mother that if she changed her will to give Tufts the estate in fee simple,
Tufts would simultaneously execute a will by which she would convey her interest, at
death, to the granddaughter Suzanne. See id. (she “would simultaneously execute and
continue in existence of will of her own which would accomplish substantially the same
disposition of her mother’s estate”). Tufts “made the promise with a present intention not
to perform the agreement,” id. at 10, which amounts to fraud in the inducement. Id. at 10-
11. In fact, while Tufts did execute a will, she did not deliver it to the bank with her
mother’s will, but retained possession of it and later destroyed it (id. at 9), never telling
her mother “that the will was destroyed.” Id. at 8. On these facts, the Court of Appeals
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held that the circuit court properly submitted the issue of fraud to the jury. Id. at 11, 12.
In reaching that decision, Tufts cited and quoted Davis v. Calvert, 5 Gill & J. 269
(1833). In that case, the Court of Appeals reversed the verdict in a caveat proceeding
because the court had excluded evidence that the defendants had deceived the testator into
believing that he had fathered the children for whom he provided in the will. It would
appear, therefore, that the doctrine of fraudulent inducement is not a recent development
in will contests in Maryland.28
Under Tufts and Davis, McClintock generated sufficient evidence of fraud. Based
on the trial court’s findings, Andrew and Albert falsely asserted that McClintock stole
Kenneth’s money in order to deceive Kenneth and to make him change his will and
disinherit McClintock. While Andrew and Albert deny that those statements were false,
we defer to the judgment of the trial judge on the credibility of witnesses. Morris v. State,
153 Md. App. 480, 489 (2003). The trial judge chose to believe McClintock when she
stated that she closed Kenneth’s bank account and sold off his assets only at his behest.
28
Consistent with this long lineage, the Maryland Civil Pattern Jury Instructions
recognize fraudulent inducement as a ground for invalidating a will. MPJI-Cv 29:5
(“[f]raud means that a false representation was made to the maker of the will by another
person who knew the representation was false and who made the representation with an
intent of deceiving the maker”); see also Krouse v. Krouse, 94 Md. App. 369, 375-78
(1993) (affirming a finding of fraud in a case in which the court employed the pattern jury
instruction concerning fraudulent inducement as a ground for invalidating a will);
Restatement (Second) of Property, Donative Transfers, § 34.7 cmt. c (1992) (a fraudulent
transfer may occur if a person makes “fraudulent representations [that] cause the donor
not to make a donative transfer that the donor would otherwise have made and instead
makes the donative transfer to someone else”).
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Thus, because the judge found Andrew’s and Albert’s statement to be false, and because
it was clearly aimed at turning Kenneth against McClintock, it is sufficient to support a
finding fraud.
C ONCLUSION
In summary, we hold that the Maryland courts have subject matter jurisdiction over
Kenneth’s estate; that the circuit did not err in admitting Nelson’s testimony concerning
Kenneth’s intentions in regard to his 2003 will or, in the alternative, that any error was
harmless because the testimony was cumulative; that the circuit court did not err in
admitting Nelson’s testimony concerning his September 2009 testimony with Kenneth;
and that the circuit court was not clearly erroneous in finding the 2009 will to be invalid
on grounds of fraud and undue influence. Accordingly, we affirm the judgment below.
JUDGMENT OF THE CIRCUIT
COURT FOR ALLEGANY COUNTY
AFFIRMED. COSTS TO BE PAID
BY APPELLANT.
42