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NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37
IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
FRANK W. ALBERT, LATE OF THE PENNSYLVANIA
VILLAGE OF MORRISDALE, MORRIS
TOWNSHIP, CLEARFIELD COUNTY,
PENNSYLVANIA DECEASED
APPEAL OF: ANNA MAE PEZZULLA,
EXECUTRIX OF THE ESTATE OF FRANK
W. ALBERT
No. 1550 WDA 2015
Appeal from the Order August 6, 2015
In the Court of Common Pleas of Clearfield County
Orphans' Court at No(s): 72-238
BEFORE: BOWES, STABILE AND MUSMANNO, JJ.
MEMORANDUM BY BOWES, J.: FILED FEBRUARY 22, 2017
Anna Mae Pezzulla, in her capacity as executrix of the Estate of Frank
W. Albert, has appealed from an orphans’ court order that interpreted a
clause in a will. We affirm.
Frank W. Albert died testate on June 24, 1972. His last will and
testament dated November 23, 1968, was admitted to probate and letters
testamentary were issued to Appellant and Mr. Albert’s wife Alta Frances
Albert, as co-executrixes. The decedent was survived by his wife and three
daughters, Appellant, Doris Eileen Early, and Cheryl Ann Albert. The
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decedent devised his residuary estate one-third to his wife Alta and two-
thirds to be divided equally among his three daughters. The provision of the
will at issue in this appeal was included after Mr. Albert’s directions as to the
distribution of his residuary estate. It stated, “In as much as I am the
owner of several farms, it is my wish that my daughters and my wife
operate said farms if it can be profitably done. If, however, the same cannot
be profitably operated, it is my desire that said farms be sold and the
proceeds divided as provided in this, my last will and testament.” Last Will
and Testament of Frank W. Albert, 11/23/68, at 1-2.
The inventory for the estate established that Mr. Albert owned the
following realty: eight separate parcels of land in Morris Township with an
overall acreage of 528.07, one plot of real estate in Decatur Township that
consisted of 10.16 acres, and five different tracts of realty in Graham
Township with an overall acreage of 258.81. Doris Eileen Early, one of Mr.
Albert's daughters, died intestate in a vehicle accident in 1975, leaving
behind her husband Stanley Myers as her sole heir. Mr. Myers succeeded to
his wife's 2/9 interest in Mr. Albert's residuary estate. Alta Frances Albert
also died, and she bequeathed her interest in her husband’s estate, in equal
shares, to her two grandchildren and two great-grandchildren. Appellant
and Cheryl are the only beneficiaries under Mr. Albert’s will who are still
living. There are now five living beneficiaries who became entitled to
distribution of the residuary estate following Mr. Albert’s death.
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From 1972 to the present day, over four decades, Appellant managed
and controlled the fourteen parcels of land listed in the inventory. She did
so under the language providing that decedent’s wife and daughters were
authorized to operate Mr. Albert’s farms as long as they could do so
profitably. During this period, three first and partial accounts were filed.
After the filing of the third and partial account, Mr. Myers filed exceptions.
Mr. Myers sought an end to Appellant’s stewardship over the land in
question and asked that the assets being managed by Appellant as executrix
be distributed to the beneficiaries under the residuary clause in the will.
The accounts established the following. When Mr. Albert died, all of
the land in question was farm land. Some parcels contained buildings being
rented to other people, one tract contained an airplane landing strip and
hangar, and some of the lots were wooded, untilled acreage. In 1972,
Appellant sold all the decedent’s farm equipment. The third and partial
account covered thirty-seven years, 1975-2012, during which time Appellant
operated and managed all of her father’s real estate.
During the course of those years, Appellant received rental income,
royalties from the extraction of natural gas, coal was mined, timber was
sold, rental was received from the residential real estate, and some of the
property was leased to farmers. Appellant derived income from the
properties that was sufficient to pay for upkeep, taxes, and various expenses
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associated with the estate's properties with the exception of one year, when
Appellant had to sell a piece of land to maintain the other properties.
The orphans’ court reviewed the third and partial account and
conducted a hearing. Appellant conceded at the hearing that she was not
conducting any farming operations on any of the parcels of realty. During
ten of thirty-seven years covered by the third and partial account, no profits
were realized from the operation of the various pieces of land, and the
beneficiaries of Mr. Albert’s estate received no distributions. During 2006-
2007, Appellant had to sell a piece of land to cover upkeep and expenses.
Mr. Myers filed exceptions to the third and partial account. He
contended that Appellant was no longer permitted to operate the land owned
by Mr. Albert. He asserted various theories of relief: 1) Appellant was
entrusted with stewardship only over Mr. Albert’s farms, not all of his real
estate; 2) the clause required that the farms be operated as farms, which
was not occurring; 3) Appellant was not profitably operating the land; and 4)
the will provided that Appellant was not permitted to control the land alone
without any input from her two sisters and mother. Appellant countered
that Mr. Albert’s intent was that the estate remain open and that she
continue to manage and oversee all of the land owned by Mr. Albert when he
died, as long as she generated revenue from that real estate. She asserted
that, even though the clause only mentioned decedent’s farms, Mr. Albert,
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when he used the term farm meant all of his real estate and not just the
tracts of land that he was farming when he died.
After a hearing, the orphans’ court rejected Appellant’s positions. It
noted that the record established that decedent owned farms as well as real
estate that was not used to farm and that the language in the clause at issue
provided that his daughters and wife could continue to operate his farms.
The orphans’ court found that this language covered only the decedent’s
farms and that the clause in question also required that the farms be
operated as such. It also concluded that the land in question was not being
operated profitably. The court granted Mr. Myers’ exceptions and ordered
that the administration of the estate be concluded and the estate assets
distributed in accordance with the terms of the residuary clause.
This appeal followed.1 On appeal, Appellant raises this contention:
“Did the orphans[’] court commit an abuse of discretion or a clear error of
law in directing the termination of the business of the decedent's estate,
contrary to the terms of the last will of decedent?” Appellant’s brief at 4.
Our standard of review of an orphans’ court decree is deferential. In re
Fiedler, 132 A.3d 1010, 1018 (Pa.Super. 2016). When we review such a
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1
The order was appealable as of right under Pa.R.A.P. 342(a)(3) (“An
appeal may be taken as of right from the following orders of the Orphans'
Court Division . . . [a]n order interpreting a will or a document that forms
the basis of a claim against an estate or trust[.]”).
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decree, this Court “must determine whether the record is free from legal
error and the court's factual findings are supported by the evidence.” Id.
Of significance herein is that the orphans’ court operates as the finder of fact
and thus “determines the credibility of the witnesses and, on review, we will
not reverse its credibility determinations absent an abuse of that discretion.”
Id. An orphans’ court’s “decision will not be reversed unless there has been
an abuse of discretion or a fundamental error in applying the correct
principles of law.” Id.
Appellant’s attack on the orphans’ court decision is two-fold. First,
Appellant maintains there is nothing in the will requiring that the real estate
be operated as a farm, and the court’s decision to the contrary is erroneous.
Appellant’s brief at 12. As a subsidiary to this position, Appellant suggests
that the only reason proffered by Mr. Myers to obtain closure of the estate is
that enough time has passed and the estate should be concluded. Second,
Appellant argues that she has profitably managed the property in question
during the past forty-five years.
Initially, we examine the pertinent language of the will. It states, “In
as much as I am the owner of several farms, it is my wish that my
daughters and my wife operate said farms if it can be profitable done. If,
however, the same cannot be profitably operated, it is my desire that said
farms be sold and the proceeds divided as provided in this, my last will and
testament.” Last Will and Testament of Frank W. Albert, 11/23/68, at 1-2
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(emphases added). The inventory of the estate established that the
decedent owned fourteen separate pieces of real estate of varying acreage.
The accounts proved that many of those pieces of land were not farms; they
included property with buildings that were rented, including a parcel with an
airstrip and hanger, and wooded, untillable land.
The law is clear that a testator’s intent is the “the polestar in the
construction of his will[.]” Estate of Smertz, 701 A.2d 268, 270 (Pa.Super.
1997). “To ascertain that intent,” the Superior Court “must focus first on
the precise wording of the will; we may only resort to general rules of
construction if the testator's intent still remains uncertain.” Id. In this
case, the orphans’ court observed, and we concur, that the term farm is
clear and unambiguous and that only the land that Mr. Albert was farming
was subject to the clause in question. Cf. Estate of Getz, 618 A.2d 456,
457 (Pa.Super. 1992) (emphasis added) (wherein the testator allowed the
“executors, if they shall so elect, to continue and operate during the
administration of our estate, any farming operation, business or other
enterprises in which we are interested at the time of our death”).
The orphans’ court opined that the term at issue, farm, is completely
free of any ambiguity. It further noted that, “Nothing in the will suggests
that Mr. Albert intended the word ‘farm’ to mean anything other than the
common usage of the word namely ‘an area of land and its buildings used
for growing crops and rearing animals.’” Trial Court Opinion, 8/7/15, at 4.
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(quoting Compact Oxford English Dictionary, 361 (Oxford University Press
2005). The record irrefutably establishes that some of the fourteen parcels
of land owned by Mr. Albert when he died were farms while other tracts
were not used as farms. Under the clear and unambiguous language of the
will, Appellant, her sisters, and her mother, were entitled to operate only the
farms that Mr. Albert owned and not all of his real property, regardless of
whether it was a farm.
In an attempt to overcome the clear import of the language in
question, Appellant testified at the hearing that, by the term “farm,” Mr.
Albert actually meant all of his real estate. The orphans’ court
acknowledged that Appellant’s assertion was that the testator used the term
farm to encompass all of his realty, regardless of whether it actually was a
farm. It rejected that position because it required the review of extrinsic
evidence that “the Court cannot properly consider when discerning the
testator's intent from an unambiguous will.” Id. at 5.
The orphans’ court nevertheless did weigh Appellant’s testimony. It
stated that, “assuming arguendo, that the Court were to consider
[Appellant’s] contention that the testator intended farm to mean ‘the whole
conglomeration of what he owned,’ the Court remains unconvinced.” Id.
The orphans’ court observed that, in the residuary clause of the will, the
testator devised “‘[a]ll the rest, residue and remainder of my estate whether
the same be real, personal or mixed’ to his wife and daughters[.]” Id. Then,
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in the clause under construction herein, Mr. Albert decided to “distinguish
the farms separately.” Id.
In addition, the orphans’ court rejected Appellant’s testimony that her
father used the term farm to encompass all of his real estate. It stated that
it found “no credible reason to believe that the Testator defined the word”
farm other than in accord with its common and ordinary meaning. Id.
(emphasis added). By stating that there was no credible reason to believe
that Mr. Albert meant to use the term “farm” to mean anything other than a
farm, the orphans’ court was discrediting Appellant’s proposition that her
father gave a tortured interpretation to the word “farm” by using it to mean
any real estate that he owned. As the sole arbiter of credibility in this
action, the orphans’ court was free to reject Appellant’s position that Mr.
Albert meant all of his real estate rather than just his farms when he used
the word “farm” in the clause in question. In accordance with our above-
elucidated standard of review, we are bound by that credibility
determination.
In light of our affirmance of the determination that Mr. Albert meant
his farms, we necessarily affirm the orphans’ court’s concomitant conclusion
that Appellant was not operating the land in accordance with the terms of
will because she was not farming the tracts under her control. The will
expressly states that, “it is my wish that my daughters and my wife operate
said farms if it can be profitably done.” Last Will and Testament of Frank W.
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Albert, 11/23/68, at 1 (emphasis added). This wording evidences Mr.
Albert’s intent that his wife and daughters and wife operate the farms as
such.
The record establishes that none of the land is now being operated by
Appellant as a farm.2 She admittedly sold all the farm equipment in 1972,
as established by the second and partial account herein. At the hearing,
Appellant also acknowledged that she does not personally engage in any
farming activity. Only one piece of Mr. Albert’s land is being used as a farm,
but it is being rented to people who do the actual farming. We concur that
Mr. Albert’s intent was “that his daughters and his now deceased wife
operate the farms themselves, not rent the land out to others to farm.” Trial
Court Opinion, 8/7/15, at 6. Thus, the court’s decision rested firmly upon a
valid interpretation of the language of the will. Appellant was permitted
under the clause at issue to operate only what were decedent’s farms and
had to operate the farms as such.
The orphans’ court did observe that under Appellant’s position, the
estate could remain open indefinitely, to the detriment of the living
residuary-clause beneficiaries. Id. (“under [Appellant’s] interpretation of
the will the Estate may never close. The Estate may drag on in perpetuity
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2
We also observe that Appellant never attempted to establish which of the
fourteen pieces of real estate in her father’s estate were being operated as
farms when Mr. Albert died.
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as long as the totality of the Decedent’s properties have an income that
exceeds its expenses”). However, this statement in the opinion was merely
an observation that was made after the orphans’ court conducted a cogent
analysis of the terms of the will at issue and after it properly applied the
pertinent law. Contrary to Appellant’s position, the statement in question
was not a basis for the court’s ruling that Appellant must wind up her
administration of the estate and distribute it to the present beneficiaries
under the residuary clause.
We likewise reject Appellant’s second position, which is that the “lands
have been managed effectively, profitably, and responsibly” since 1972.
Appellant’s brief at 12. The third and partial account established that in ten
of the thirty-seven years from 1975 to 2012, there were no distributions and
thus no profit from what constitutes a significant amount of real estate.
Although the third and partial account listed a $1,000 distribution in 2006
and 2007, it also established that a parcel of land was sold that year for
approximately $30,000. Hence, in 2006-2007, Appellant operated the land
at a loss, having to sell a tract in order to meet her operating expenses. An
asset cannot be considered profitable when it generates no income over
twenty-five percent of the time, and operates at a significant loss during one
year. We thus affirm the orphans’ court alternative basis for its conclusion
that Appellant is no longer entitled to operate the land and must end her
administration of the estate and distribute its assets to the beneficiaries of
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the residuary clause. That basis was that the land was not being operated
profitably.
Mr. Myers makes another valid point in his brief. The will clearly
states that the farms were to be operated by the decedent’s wife and his
three daughters. This language obviously was intended to permit Appellant,
her mother, and her two sisters, acting in concert, to continue to farm the
land that Mr. Albert was farming when he died. Appellant’s mother and one
of her sisters are now deceased, and Appellant is managing all of the
estate’s assets by herself in her capacity as executrix. The language in the
will was not intended to create a fiat by which Appellant could retain control
of all of her father’s estate assets for over four decades to the exclusion of
any input from five of the people who are now beneficiaries of Mr. Albert’s
estate. For all of the foregoing reasons, we find that the orphans’ court did
not abuse its discretion and that it properly applied the controlling law.
Order affirmed.
Judge Musmanno joins the memorandum.
Judge Stabile concurs in the result.
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Judgment Entered.
Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
Prothonotary
Date: 2/22/2017
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