FILED
Sep 20 2017, 5:55 am
CLERK
Indiana Supreme Court
Court of Appeals
and Tax Court
ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE
Karl L. Mulvaney Mark D. Hassler
Gregory J. Duncan Jacob H. Miller
Nana Quay-Smith Hunt, Hassler, Kondras & Miller LLP
Bingham Greenebaum Doll LLP Terre Haute, Indiana
Indianapolis, Indiana
Gerald H. McGlone
McGlone Law
Terre Haute, Indiana
IN THE
COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA
In the Matter of the Revocable September 20, 2017
Trust Agreement created by the Court of Appeals Case No.
Settlor, Anil Kumar Sarkar 84A01-1701-TR-67
Dipa Sarkar, Appeal from the Vigo Superior Court
Appellant-Petitioner, The Honorable David R. Bolk, Judge
Trial Court Cause No.
v. 84D03-1503-TR-1438
Anuradha (“Mili”) Sarkar
Naugle,
Appellee-Respondent
Crone, Judge.
Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 84A01-1701-TR-67 | September 20, 2017 Page 1 of 22
Case Summary
[1] Eighty-six-year-old Dipa Sarkar, the surviving spouse of Anil Kumar Sarkar,
appeals the trial court’s entry of summary judgment in favor of Anuradha
Sarkar Naugle (“Mili”) as successor trustee of the Anil Kumar Sarkar
Revocable Trust Agreement dated August 23, 1993 (“the Trust”). In short, at
the time of Anil’s death, his probate estate had minimal assets because the
lion’s share of his assets, totaling close to $2,000,000, had been placed in or
diverted to the Trust. However, the Trust provided for Dipa, Anil’s wife of
fifty-six years, to receive only $50,000 or roughly 2.5% of his total assets.
Similarly, Anil’s will (“the Will”) made little provision for Dipa, bequeathing
her only his clothes and tangible personal property while providing that the
remaining assets, if any, be transferred to the Trust.
[2] Dipa filed a petition to docket the Trust, which made numerous allegations
regarding the validity of the Trust as well as questions regarding the propriety of
certain assets being diverted to the Trust (rather than to Dipa personally or to
the probate estate) in an attempt to disinherit Dipa. Thereafter, while that
proceeding was pending, Dipa filed an election to take against the Will. Mili
subsequently moved for summary judgment on Dipa’s petition to docket the
Trust, but she did not address Dipa’s election to take against the Will. Dipa
then filed a motion for leave to file a second amended petition to docket the
Trust, bringing her election to take against the Will to the trial court’s attention,
and alleging more specifically her claims regarding the validity of the Trust.
The trial court denied Dipa’s motion to amend, simply concluding that it would
Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 84A01-1701-TR-67 | September 20, 2017 Page 2 of 22
be prejudicial to Mili to allow Dipa to amend her petition. The trial court made
no statement as to the timeliness of Dipa’s election. Thereafter, the trial court
entered summary judgment in favor of Mili on the narrow issue of whether the
Trust was the proper beneficiary of a certain asset, and further declaring that
such order disposed of all outstanding issues between the parties. The trial
court failed to address Dipa’s election to take against the Will or the timeliness
thereof.
[3] On appeal, Dipa asserts that her election to take against the Will was timely,
and because it is a statutory right of a surviving spouse, the trial court erred as a
matter of law in failing to honor the election. We agree and conclude that: (1)
Dipa made a timely election to take against the Will; (2) the trial court abused
its discretion in denying Dipa’s motion to amend her petition to docket the
Trust; and (3) genuine issues of material fact remain, precluding summary
judgment. Accordingly, we affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand for
further proceedings.
Facts and Procedural History1
[4] Anil and Dipa Sarkar were married in 1958, and remained married for fifty-six
years until Anil’s death on February 24, 2015. They had one child, a daughter
named Rumu. Anil had two children from a brief previous marriage, daughter
1
Dipa’s statement of facts section of her brief is overly cumbersome and contains numerous facts that are
meant to inflame our passions but are irrelevant to the issues on appeal. We remind Dipa’s counsel that the
statements of facts section is to be limited to “the facts relevant to the issues presented.” Ind. Appellate Rule
46(A)(6) (emphasis added).
Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 84A01-1701-TR-67 | September 20, 2017 Page 3 of 22
Mili, and son Ashoke. During their marriage, Anil and Dipa, who were both
medical doctors, operated a private pathology practice in Terre Haute called
Sarkar Medical Corporation.
[5] In 1993, Anil created the Trust, which was restated in its entirety on March 31,
1997. The stated purpose of the Trust was “a simplified means of
accomplishing both lifetime and death transfers” of Anil’s assets. Appellant’s
App. Vol. 2 at 27. Anil amended the Trust seven times, with the seventh and
final trust amendment occurring on March 14, 2014. From the original form
through to the fourth amendment, Anil made no provision for distribution of
any Trust assets to Dipa, stating “[b]ecause my spouse, [Dipa], has more assets
than I have and will not need my money or property to support herself, I choose
to leave nothing to her.” Id. at 35. Beginning with the fifth amendment
through the final amendment, Anil provided for Dipa to receive $50,000.
Specifically, in the final amendment, he named Mili as successor trustee and
directed her to distribute $250,000 to Rumu, $30,000 to Ashoke, $50,000 to his
brother Sekhar, and $50,000 to Dipa if she survived him by thirty days. The
remainder of the Trust assets were to be distributed to Mili, or if she was then
deceased, to her descendants per stirpes. Id. at 46.
[6] The Trust was funded by two investment accounts owned by Anil. One
account, titled in the name of the Trust and held by Anil as trustee, consisted of
stocks and bonds and was valued at $924,635 at the time of Anil’s death (“the
Morgan Stanley Trust Account”). During his later years, Anil had his monthly
social security payments diverted into the Morgan Stanley Trust Account. The
Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 84A01-1701-TR-67 | September 20, 2017 Page 4 of 22
second account that funded the Trust was an Individual Retirement Account
valued at $1,007,614 (“the IRA”). In December of 2003, Anil designated the
Trust as the sole beneficiary of the IRA.
[7] On January 20, 2014, Anil executed the Will. In the Will, Anil appointed
Rumu as personal representative and directed that his body be disposed of
without ceremony of any kind. He directed that his probate estate should be
used to pay all his debts, medical expenses, funeral expenses, estate
administration expenses, and “all inheritance, estate, and like taxes … payable
by reason of [his] death and in connection with any property, whether passing
under [the Will] or otherwise” without reimbursement from any person. Id. at
66. Anil made no provision for Dipa or his children in the Will other than
stating that his clothing and tangible personal property would go to Dipa, if she
survived him by thirty days; otherwise, the property would be transferred to the
Trust. The Will provided that anything left in his net residuary estate would be
transferred to the Trust.
[8] Shortly after Anil’s death, on March 10, 2015, Rumu filed a petition to probate
the Will. The Will was admitted to probate and Rumu was appointed as
personal representative the following day. Also on March 10, Dipa filed a
“Petition to Docket Trust and for Relief.” Id. at 18. Dipa averred that: (1) the
Will had been admitted to probate and provided that Anil’s residuary estate be
distributed to the Trust; (2) at the time of Anil’s death, the couple had been
married for fifty-six years; (3) on the date of Anil’s death, nearly all of his assets
were owned by the Trust; (4) the Trust was created in 1993, restated in 1997,
Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 84A01-1701-TR-67 | September 20, 2017 Page 5 of 22
and amended seven times; (5) one of the Trust assets consists of an IRA and
because Dipa signed spousal consent regarding the beneficiary of the IRA under
duress, the IRA should be removed from the Trust; (6) prior to his death, Anil
diverted his social security payments to the Trust, which has left the probate
estate with no assets.2 Based upon these facts, Dipa requested for the Trust to
be docketed by the probate court and for her petition to be heard. She further
requested the court to freeze the assets of the Trust and to remove the IRA from
the Trust. The trial court set a hearing on Dipa’s petition for April 24, 2015.
[9] On March 20, 2015, Dipa filed a motion to remove Mili as trustee or require
her to post a bond to ensure that she performed her duty to pay the estate’s
unpaid claims and expenses. Dipa asserted that Anil’s probate estate was
insolvent, and that the Trust was liable to pay the estate’s unpaid claims
including funeral expenses, costs of administration, and Dipa’s surviving
spouses’s allowance. Mili responded with a request for continuance of the
April 24 hearing date. Following a telephonic hearing on April 21, 2015, the
trial court entered an order docketing the Trust and continuing the April 24
evidentiary hearing. The court ordered that the IRA assets be frozen and not
distributed to the Trust, and that a pretrial conference (rather than an
evidentiary hearing) be held on April 24 to clarify the issues. The trial court’s
order did not address Dipa’s request to freeze the other assets of the Trust.
2
The record indicates that Dipa corrected a slight error and filed her first amended petition to docket the
Trust on March 13, 2015. The first amended petition contains the same averments as the original.
Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 84A01-1701-TR-67 | September 20, 2017 Page 6 of 22
[10] On April 24, 2015, Dipa again filed a motion requesting that, in addition to the
IRA, the Trust assets be frozen until the time for filing claims against Anil’s
estate had expired. Dipa sought to ensure that the Trust retained sufficient
assets to pay the estate’s pending claims, costs of administration, and surviving
spouse’s allowance. On that same date, the trial court held an unrecorded
pretrial conference. Regarding Dipa’s motion to freeze the Trust assets, counsel
for both parties agreed to a distribution of 85% of the non-IRA Trust assets to
the Trust’s beneficiaries. The remaining funds were not to be distributed “until
such time as the Court determines which, if any, allowable claims and expenses
of [the estate] shall be paid out of the Trust’s assets pursuant to applicable
Indiana law.” Id. at 119. Dipa received $42,500 from the Trust.
[11] On May 29, 2015, Dipa filed a petition to collect her surviving spouse’s
statutory allowance from Anil’s probate estate pursuant to Indiana Code
Section 29-1-4-1. Dipa alleged that the value of the estate was zero and thus the
transferees of Anil’s nonprobate property (the Trust and its beneficiaries) were
responsible to pay her claim. Mili, as trustee, objected to Dipa’s petition. The
parties disagreed on numerous issues, including who should pay Anil’s funeral
expenses and whether the Trust would be entitled to a setoff against Dipa’s
spousal allowance for Dipa’s distribution as a beneficiary under the Trust.
[12] On June 16, 2015, Rumu’s counsel filed a report advising the trial court that he
had received a check for $64,569.58 from Terre Haute Savings Bank. He
reported that this amount was the balance of two bank accounts Anil held at the
bank. Counsel stated that he had known about the accounts but mistakenly
Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 84A01-1701-TR-67 | September 20, 2017 Page 7 of 22
believed that they were Trust assets rather than estate assets, thus causing him
to believe that the estate was insolvent. Because the estate was not insolvent,
on that same date, Dipa filed her election to take against the Will pursuant to
Indiana Code Section 29-1-3-1.
[13] Three months later, Mili filed a motion for summary judgment on Dipa’s
petition to docket the Trust. Mili’s motion addressed only whether Dipa’s
consent was necessary to effectuate Anil’s designation of the Trust as
beneficiary of his IRA. Mili argued that there was no genuine issue of material
fact that Dipa’s consent was not required, and therefore Dipa’s claim that she
signed the consent under duress was irrelevant. Mili’s summary judgment
motion did not address Dipa’s prior-filed election to take against the Will.
[14] Thereafter, Dipa’s counsel filed a motion to withdraw and new counsel entered
an appearance on October 1, 2015. Dipa’s new counsel moved for, and was
granted, continuances regarding the trial date, discovery cutoff, and the time for
response to Mili’s summary judgment motion. On December 18, 2015, Dipa
filed a motion for leave to file a second amended petition3 to docket the Trust
pursuant to Indiana Trial Rule 15(A). The second amended petition brought
Dipa’s prior-filed election to take against the Will to the trial court’s attention,
and also alleged more specifically her claim regarding the validity of the Trust
and her request that the Trust assets be included in the probate estate for the
3
See supra footnote 1.
Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 84A01-1701-TR-67 | September 20, 2017 Page 8 of 22
purpose of calculating her elective share. Dipa’s motion to amend noted that
no prejudice would result to either party from the granting of the petition.
[15] Mili objected to the proposed amendment, arguing that it was futile because
Dipa’s election against the Will was untimely pursuant to Indiana Code Section
29-1-3-2(a), in that it was filed more than three months after the date of the
order admitting the Will to probate. Dipa responded by arguing that her
proposed amendment was not futile as her election was timely pursuant to
Indiana Code Section 29-1-3-2(b), because at the time the election was filed,
litigation was pending to determine a matter of law or fact which would affect
the amount of Dipa’s elective share.
[16] On July 13, 2016, the trial court entered its order denying Dipa’s motion to
amend, and instructing Dipa to respond to Mili’s summary judgment motion
regarding the narrow issue of the validity of the IRA beneficiary designation.
In its order, the trial court mentioned Dipa’s election to take against the Will,
but made no finding regarding the timeliness or untimeliness thereof. Instead,
the trial court determined that allowing Dipa to “now assert[] a claim for
spousal rights pursuant to IC § 29-1-3-1 … is unduly prejudicial ….” Id. at 17.
Dipa filed a motion to reconsider which was also subsequently denied by the
trial court. After her request to certify the order for interlocutory appeal was
denied by the trial court, Dipa responded to Mili’s motion for summary
Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 84A01-1701-TR-67 | September 20, 2017 Page 9 of 22
judgment, focusing on her election to take against the Will and claiming a right
to recover her elective share from the Trust assets.4
[17] On December 16, 2016, the trial court entered summary judgment in favor of
Mili concluding that the Trust was the proper beneficiary of the IRA. The trial
court did not address Dipa’s election to take against the Will. The court
declared that its entry of summary judgment resolved “all outstanding issues”
between the parties, and to the extent any unresolved “minor issues” remained,
there was no just reason for delay and the court’s order constituted a final
judgment. Id. at 14.
[18] On January 9, 2017, Dipa filed a renewed election to take against the Will
stating that a final judgment on all pending litigation was entered on December
16, 2015, and that her renewed election was filed within thirty days of that
judgment pursuant to Indiana Code Section 29-1-3-2(b). Mili filed a motion to
strike the renewed election claiming it was untimely. The trial court granted
Mili’s motion, concluding that the renewed election was “redundant and of no
effect.” Appellant’s App. Vol. 6 at 31. This appeal ensued.
Discussion and Decision
[19] Dipa appeals the trial court’s entry of summary judgment.
4
Dipa filed a cross-motion for summary judgment on October 14, 2016. However, the trial court
subsequently struck Dipa’s motion as untimely and she does not challenge that conclusion on appeal.
Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 84A01-1701-TR-67 | September 20, 2017 Page 10 of 22
We review such rulings de novo. Pursuant to Indiana Trial Rule
56(C), a summary judgment movant must make a prima facie
showing that there are no genuine issues of material fact and that
it is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. If the movant
satisfies this burden, the nonmoving party may not rest on its
pleadings, but must designate specific facts demonstrating the
existence of a genuine issue for trial. A “genuine issue” is one
upon which the parties proffer differing accounts of the truth, or
as to which conflicting inferences may be drawn from the parties’
consistent accounts; a “material fact” is one that affects the
outcome of the case. We must construe all evidence and resolve
all doubts in favor of the non-moving party, so as to avoid
improperly denying that party’s day in court. Summary judgment
is not a summary trial, and it is inappropriate merely because the
nonmoving party appears unlikely to prevail at trial. The party
that lost in the trial court has the burden of persuading the
appellate court that the trial court erred.
Morris v. Crain, 71 N.E.3d 871, 879 (Ind. Ct. App. 2017) (quoting Bah v. Mac’s
Convenience Stores, LLC, 37 N.E.2d 539, 546 (Ind. Ct. App. 2015) (citations and
some quotation marks omitted), trans denied (2016)). In addition, upon
appellate review of summary judgment, questions of statutory interpretation are
questions of law, which are reviewed on a de novo basis by appellate courts.
Moryl v. Ransone, 4 N.E.3d 1133, 1137 (Ind. 2014).
Section 1 – Dipa made a timely election against the Will.
[20] In entering summary judgment in favor of Mili, the trial court ruled on the
narrow issue of whether the Trust, rather than Dipa personally, was the proper
beneficiary of the IRA. We do not disagree with the trial court’s determination
of that narrow question, and we affirm partial summary judgment on that
Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 84A01-1701-TR-67 | September 20, 2017 Page 11 of 22
issue.5 However, the trial court failed to acknowledge or address Dipa’s
invocation of her right to take her elective share of Anil’s estate, and the effect
that election has, or might have, on the assets of the Trust. Dipa asserts that the
trial court erred as a matter of law in claiming to have resolved “all outstanding
issues” between the parties, but failing to honor her election. Appellant’s App.
Vol 2 at 14. Mili responds that the trial court properly did so because Dipa’s
election to take against the Will was not timely filed and therefore was invalid.
[21] It is well established that in Indiana, surviving spouses hold certain statutory
rights upon the death of their spouse. Boetsma v. Boetsma, 768 N.E.2d 1016,
1020 (Ind. Ct. App. 2002), trans. denied. Our statutory law protects a spouse
from being disinherited by providing a spousal allowance from their deceased
spouse’s estate and the ability of the surviving spouse to take against the
provisions of the deceased spouse’s will, thus ensuring a certain degree of future
support. Brown v. Guardianship of Brown, 775 N.E.2d 1164, 1167 (Ind. Ct. App.
2002) (citing Ind. Code §§ 29-1-4-1 and 29-1-3-1). An election to take against a
will is best described as a “right to take a statutory share of the deceased
spouse’s real and personal property.” Dunnewind v. Cook, 697 N.E.2d 485, 488
(Ind. Ct. App. 1998), trans. denied. Indeed, Indiana Code Section 29-1-3-1(a)
provides in pertinent part:
When a married individual dies testate as to any part of the
individual’s estate, the surviving spouse is entitled to take against
5
Dipa does not directly challenge the trial court’s determination of this narrow issue.
Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 84A01-1701-TR-67 | September 20, 2017 Page 12 of 22
the will under the limitations and conditions stated in this
chapter. The surviving spouse, upon electing to take against the
will, is entitled to one-half (½) of the net personal and real estate
of the testator. ….
In determining the net estate of a deceased spouse for the purpose
of computing the amount due the surviving spouse electing to
take against the will, the court shall consider only such property
as would have passed under the laws of descent and distribution.
An election to take the statutory share shall be in writing, signed and
acknowledged by the surviving spouse, and shall be filed in the office of the
clerk of the court. Ind. Code § 29-1-3-3(a).6 Regarding the time limitation for
filing such election, our legislature has fixed the time in which a surviving
spouse may elect to take against a will as follows:
(a) Except as provided in subsection (b), the election by a
surviving spouse to take the share hereinbefore provided must be
made not later than three (3) months after the date of the order
admitting to probate the will against which the election is made.
(b) If, at the expiration of such period for making the election,
litigation is pending to test the validity or determine the effect or
construction of the will or to determine the existence of issue
surviving the deceased, or to determine any other matter of law or fact
which would affect the amount of the share to be received by the surviving
spouse, the right of such surviving spouse to make an election
6
Mili challenges only the timeliness of Dipa’s election. She makes no claim that the form or substance of
Dipa’s election was somehow improper. See Ind. Code § 29-1-3-3(a) (providing form of election to take
against will, including required acknowledgment, and directing clerk how to record same).
Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 84A01-1701-TR-67 | September 20, 2017 Page 13 of 22
shall not be barred until the expiration of thirty (30) days after the
final determination of the litigation.
Ind. Code § 29-1-3-2 (emphasis added). This section extended the time
permitted under the previous probate code in order “to give the surviving
spouse an opportunity to determine the value of the estate before exercising his
[or her] right of election.” See id. (Indiana Probate Code Study Commission
1953 cmts. § 302).7
[22] The parties here agree that Dipa’s election to take against the Will, initially filed
on June 16, 2015, was filed five days after the expiration of the three-month
election period pursuant to Indiana Code Section 29-1-3-2(a). They disagree,
however, as to whether the election was timely filed pursuant to what may
properly be characterized as the saving provision in Indiana Code 29-1-3-2(b).
Under the facts presented, we think there is no question that Dipa’s invocation
of her statutory right was timely pursuant to subsection (b). This is because, as
of June 11, 2015, there was litigation pending to determine matters of law or
fact which would affect the amount of the share of Anil’s estate to be received
by Dipa.
7
Our supreme court has noted that in 1953, based upon the work of the Indiana Probate Code Study
Commission and guided by the American Bar Association’s Model Probate Code, our General Assembly
enacted “our state’s modern Probate Code, ‘the first major modification of Indiana law relating to the
administration of decedents’ estates in more than half a century.’” Markey v. Estate of Markey, 38 N.E.3d 1003,
1007 (Ind. 2015) (quoting Possession and Control of Estate Property During Administration: Indiana Probate Code
Section 1301, 29 IND. L. J. 251, 252 (1954)).
Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 84A01-1701-TR-67 | September 20, 2017 Page 14 of 22
[23] Specifically, despite having entered into an agreed order disposing of some
issues raised by Dipa’s original petition to docket the Trust, the parties were still
embroiled in litigation disputing the Trust’s obligations to pay Anil’s funeral
expenses as well as Dipa’s $25,000 surviving spouse’s allowance under the Will.
Questions remained as to whether Anil’s tangible personal property that was
left to Dipa as part of the probate estate, and the value of which was unclear,
would be used to satisfy the estate’s expenses in the event it was determined
that the Trust was not so obligated. Indeed, not only did the parties dispute the
Trust’s obligations to the estate, but Mili also challenged the estate’s
responsibility in the first place to pay some of the expenses based upon an
alleged breach of fiduciary duty by Rumu as personal representative.
Moreover, in addition to the IRA, a portion of the Trust’s non-IRA assets
remained frozen at Dipa’s request, with the ultimate fate of those assets
unknown as of June 11, 2015. These disputes undeniably could and would
affect the value of the net probate estate and the amount of the elective share to
be received by Dipa.
[24] Mili asserts that none of the matters subject to the Trust litigation would have
affected Dipa’s elective share as contemplated by subsection (b) because, as of
June 11, 2015, the parties believed that the probate estate was essentially
insolvent. We disagree. First, as stated above, the final value of the net probate
estate had yet to be determined due to the outstanding issues that involved, at
least to some extent, the ample assets of the Trust. Second, despite the parties’
belief, the probate estate was, in fact, not insolvent, as the later discovered funds
Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 84A01-1701-TR-67 | September 20, 2017 Page 15 of 22
in two bank accounts titled in Anil’s name alone became part of the probate
estate on the date of Anil’s death. See Ind. Code § 29-1-1-3(a)(24) (defining
“Probate estate” as property transferred at death of decedent under decedent’s
will or under Indiana Code Section 29-1-2). Thus, any unresolved litigation
regarding the obligations and expenses of a solvent estate would affect the
amount of the surviving spouse’s elective share.
[25] Pursuant to the applicable statutory language, Dipa’s right to invoke her
statutory election was not barred until the expiration of thirty days after the
final determination of the Trust litigation, which did not occur until the trial
court entered summary judgment on December 16, 2016.8 Accordingly, Dipa’s
election to take against the Will made on June 16, 2015, was timely filed.
Because Dipa timely invoked her statutory right to elect against the Will, the
trial court erred when it entered summary judgment ignoring the election.9
8
Having concluded that the election was timely filed based upon the pending litigation regarding Dipa’s
original petition to docket the Trust, we need not address Dipa’s assertion that her second amended petition,
(discussed in Section 2, infra) related back in time to the original petition pursuant to Indiana Trial Rule
15(C), thus also satisfying the pending litigation requirement of Indiana Code 29-1-3-2(b).
9
Although Mili focuses on the timeliness of Dipa’s election, she also implies that Dipa perhaps waived or at
least should be precluded from pursuing her statutory right of election due to her original attorney’s
“characterization” of her claims against the Trust during prior proceedings before the trial court as well as
Dipa’s May 6, 2016, agreement to allow disbursement of a large portion of the Trust assets. Appellee’s Br. at
24-25. However, Indiana Code Section 29-1-3-6 governs a surviving spouse’s waiver of the right to take
against a will and provides in pertinent part:
The right of election of a surviving spouse ... may be waived before or after marriage by a
written contract, agreement or waiver, signed by the party waiving the right of election, after full
disclosure of the nature and extent of such right ....
Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 84A01-1701-TR-67 | September 20, 2017 Page 16 of 22
Section 2 – The trial court abused its discretion in denying
Dipa’s motion to amend her petition to docket the Trust.
[26] Having determined that Dipa made a timely election to take against the Will,
we turn to the related matter of the trial court’s denial of Dipa’s motion to
amend her petition to docket the Trust to more specifically allege her claim
against the Trust assets to satisfy her elective share. Indiana Trial Rule 15(A)
governs the amendment of pleadings, providing in relevant part:
(A) Amendments. A party may amend his pleading once as a
matter of course at any time before a responsive pleading is
served or, if the pleading is one to which no responsive pleading
is permitted, and the action has not been placed upon the trial
calendar, he may so amend it at any time within thirty [30] days
after it is served. Otherwise a party may amend his pleading only
by leave of court or by written consent of the adverse party; and
leave shall be given when justice so requires.
[27] It is well settled that although the trial court retains broad discretion in granting
or denying amendments to pleadings, amendments should be liberally allowed,
while giving proper regard for any prejudice to the nonmoving party. Hilliard v.
Jacobs, 927 N.E.2d 393, 398 (Ind. Ct. App. 2010), trans. denied. We will reverse
only upon a showing of an abuse of discretion. Id. An abuse of discretion
occurs when the trial court’s decision is clearly against the logic and effect of
Mili makes no claim that Dipa signed any agreement waiving her right of election after full disclosure of the
nature and extent of such right. A waiver not complying with statutory requirements may not be enforced by
the court. Bohnke v. Estate of Bohnke, 454 N.E.2d 446, 449 (Ind. Ct. App. 1983). Moreover, the fact that a
large portion of the Trust assets had already been distributed by agreement of the parties, although not ideal,
did not divest Dipa of the right to invoke her statutory election.
Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 84A01-1701-TR-67 | September 20, 2017 Page 17 of 22
the facts and circumstances before the court, or if the court has misinterpreted
the law. Id.
[28] Dipa’s original petition to docket the Trust made numerous allegations that, in
accordance with our standards of notice pleading, put Mili on notice that the
validity of the Trust and Anil’s attempt to essentially disinherit her was at
issue.10 As stated above, while that litigation was still pending, Dipa timely
filed her election to take against the Will. The record indicates that three
months after Dipa filed her election, Mili moved for summary judgment on
Dipa’s petition to docket the Trust but did not address Dipa’s prior-filed
election in her summary judgment motion. Thereafter, Dipa filed her motion
for leave to file a second amended petition to docket the Trust to bring her
election to the trial court’s attention, and to more specifically allege a claim
against the Trust assets. In denying Dipa’s motion for leave to file her second
amended petition, the trial court reasoned,
The Court believes that permitting [Dipa] to now amend the
relief sought; to wit: to assert a claim for spousal rights pursuant
to I.C. 29-1-3-1 against the Trust assets in addition to the attempt
to set aside the transfer of the IRA, is unduly prejudicial and
contrary to the interests of justice after extensive discovery has
10
Indiana’s notice pleading rules do not require a pleading to adopt a specific legal theory of recovery to be
adhered to throughout the case or require the complaint to state all elements of a cause of action. Shields v.
Taylor, 976 N.E.2d 1237, 1244-45 (Ind. Ct. App. 2012). The notice pleading rules merely require that a
pleading contain the operative facts so as to place the defendant on notice as to the evidence to be presented
at trial. Id. at 1245. “A complaint’s allegations are sufficient if they put a reasonable person on notice as to
why a plaintiff sues.” Id.
Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 84A01-1701-TR-67 | September 20, 2017 Page 18 of 22
been conducted, the Summary Judgment deadline has passed
and the original trial date vacated.
Appellant’s App. Vol. 2 at 17.
[29] As this reasoning makes clear, the trial court denied Dipa’s motion to amend
because it believed that allowing Dipa to assert her statutory right to election
would cause undue prejudice to Mili. While we do not agree that the
amendment is unduly prejudicial, we find that in denying the motion to amend,
the court conflated its discretion to deny a motion to amend with a surviving
spouse’s statutory right to timely elect to take against the will. Indeed, the trial
court essentially placed a requirement upon Dipa that does not exist in the
Probate Code, that is, to request trial court permission to assert her right of
election. She need not do so.
[30] In other words, Dipa was not required to assert her right of election in a
pleading or in an amendment thereto. Dipa had no obligation to include her
election in her initial petition to docket the Trust or to amend her petition to
include the election, as her election was independent of these pleadings. Once
her election was timely filed in the form required by statute, as we conclude it
was, her election was self-effectuating. See Walker v. Lawson, 526 N.E.2d 968,
970 (Ind. 1988) (noting that election to take against will is a “simple statutory
election not subject to litigation.”); Miller v. Stephens, 158 Ind. 438, 849, 63 N.E.
847 (1902) (noting that right of election is “purely statutory” and conditioned
only upon its “timely and solemn execution” as prescribed by the legislature).
Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 84A01-1701-TR-67 | September 20, 2017 Page 19 of 22
[31] Under the circumstances presented, it is evident that the trial court
misinterpreted the law in denying Dipa’s motion to amend. This
misinterpretation, coupled with the stated policy of this Court and our supreme
court “to freely allow such amendments in order to bring all matters at issue
before the court” persuades us to conclude that an abuse of discretion occurred.
Rusnak v. Brent Wagner Architects, 55 N.E.3d 834, 843 (Ind. Ct. App. 2016)
(quoting Kreilein v. Common Council of City of Jasper, 980 N.E.2d 352, 358 (Ind.
Ct. App. 2012)), trans. denied. As the impact of Dipa’s valid statutory election
was an issue between the parties that needed to be addressed moving forward,
the trial court should have granted the motion to amend to bring all matters at
issue before it. Thus, we conclude that the trial court abused its discretion in
denying Dipa’s motion to amend her petition to docket the Trust.
Section 3 – Genuine issues of material fact remain regarding
the validity of the Trust.
[32] Dipa maintains that while summary judgment in Mili’s favor was
improvidently granted, summary judgment in her favor is appropriate.
Specifically, she contends that she is entitled to reach the assets in the Trust to
satisfy her elective share as a matter of law. We think genuine issues of
material fact remain.
[33] As already stated above, in determining the net estate of the deceased spouse
for the purpose of computing the amount due the surviving spouse electing to
take against the will, the court considers only such property as would have
passed under the laws of descent and distribution. Ind. Code § 29-1-3-1(a). A
Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 84A01-1701-TR-67 | September 20, 2017 Page 20 of 22
valid inter vivos trust does not pass under the laws of descent and distribution
and thus does not become part of the decedent’s probate estate. Dunnewind, 697
N.E.2d at 488-89. Accordingly, “there is no right in the surviving spouse to any
of the assets of that trust to satisfy an elected distributive share at the settlor’s
death.” Id. (quoting Leazenby v. Clinton Cty. Bank & Trust Co., 171 Ind. App.
243, 248, 355 N.E.2d 861, 864 (1976)).
[34] An invalid inter vivos trust, however, such as one which is testamentary in
effect, will not withstand a surviving spouse’s election. Id. at 490. Indeed,
“[w]hen a testator executes a trust in contemplation of his impending death and
does so in order to defeat the surviving spouse’s statutory share, the trust will be
considered testamentary in nature and will not defeat the spouse’s share.” In re
Estate of Weitzman, 724 N.E.2d 1120, 1123 (Ind. Ct. App. 2000). In other
words, a settlor may not devise a means to defeat his spouse’s elective share in
contemplation of his death. Dunnewind, 697 N.E.2d at 489.
[35] The question of whether a testator has established a trust in contemplation of
death and with the intent of defeating his surviving spouse’s statutory share is a
fact-sensitive inquiry. See Estate of Weitzman, 724 N.E.2d at 1124. This is a
question that the trial court has not yet considered, and one that the parties
have not had a full opportunity to explore. Contrary to Dipa’s arguments, she
is not somehow automatically entitled to invade the Trust assets to satisfy her
statutory election simply because we have found her election timely and
permitted her proposed second amended petition. As noted by Mili, Dipa
conceded in her motion to reconsider that at least some additional discovery
Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 84A01-1701-TR-67 | September 20, 2017 Page 21 of 22
would be necessary by both parties in the event she was permitted to amend her
petition to docket the Trust. Appellant’s App. Vol. 3 at 158. We agree with
Mili that genuine issues of material fact remain, thus precluding summary
judgment.
[36] In sum, we affirm partial summary judgment on the narrow issue determined
by the trial court that the Trust is the proper beneficiary of the IRA. We
conclude that Dipa made a timely election against the Will, and that the trial
court abused its discretion in denying her motion to amend her petition to
docket the Trust to bring all issues between the parties before the court.
Because genuine issues of material fact remain regarding the impact of the
timely statutory election on the Trust assets, we remand for further proceedings
consistent with this opinion.
[37] Affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded.
Vaidik, C.J., and Mathias, J., concur.
Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 84A01-1701-TR-67 | September 20, 2017 Page 22 of 22