J-A25012-17
NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37
ESTATE OF: HOLLIS C. GORDON, : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
SR., DECEASED : PENNSYLVANIA
:
:
APPEAL OF: JAMES A. GORDON :
:
:
:
: No. 1175 EDA 2017
Appeal from the Decree December 5, 2016
In the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County
Orphans' Court at No(s): 955 AP of 2014
BEFORE: OTT, J., STABILE, J., and STEVENS, P.J.E.
MEMORANDUM BY OTT, J.: FILED NOVEMBER 15, 2017
James A. Gordon appeals pro se from the decree entered December 5,
2016, in the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County, that sustained
preliminary objections (“Second Preliminary Objections”) filed by Willie
Canada, executrix of the Estate of: Hollis C. Gordon, Sr., Deceased, to the
Petition for Citation for Will Appeal (“Fifth Petition”), filed by Gordon, and
joined by Evonia E. Scott and Mary H. Gordon. We affirm on the basis of the
trial court opinion.
The parties are well acquainted with the relevant facts and procedural
history of this case, which are fully set out in the orphans’ court’s opinion and
need not be restated herein. See Orphans’ Court Opinion, dated 3/20/2017,
at 1–5.
____________________________________________
Former Justice specially assigned to the Superior Court.
J-A25012-17
Gordon presents two questions for our review, which we have reordered,
as follows:
Whether probate may be attacked on the ground of fraud
practiced upon the Register of Wills after the time fixed by statute
for an appeal has run?
Does an heir-at-law of Decedent have standing to appeal the
probate decree, when the heir-at-law is allegedly not a beneficiary
under Decedent’s probated [2014] will, and there is a prior
testamentary document allegedly executed by the Decedent
allegedly excluding the heir-at-law as a beneficiary[1]?
Appellant’s Brief, at 4 (some capitalization removed).2
The following principles guide our review:
[T]he Orphans’ [C]ourt decision will not be reversed unless there
has been an abuse of discretion or a fundamental error in applying
the correct principles of law.
In re Estate of Whitley, 50 A.3d 203, 206-207 (Pa. Super. 2012) (internal
quotation marks and citation omitted).
On an appeal from an order sustaining preliminary
objections, we accept as true all well-pleaded material
facts set forth in the appellant’s complaint and all
reasonable inferences which may be drawn from those
facts. Preliminary objections seeking the dismissal of a
cause of action should be sustained only in cases in which
it is clear and free from doubt that the pleader will be
unable to prove facts legally sufficient to establish the right
to relief; if any doubt exists, it should be resolved in favor
of overruling the objections.
____________________________________________
1 Under Decedent’s prior, 2009 Will, Gordon received a $5.00 specific bequest.
2 Gordon timely complied with the order of the orphans’ court to file a
Pa.R.A.P. 1925(b) statement of errors complained of on appeal.
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J-A25012-17
Threshold issues of standing are questions of law; thus, our
standard of review is de novo and our scope of review is plenary.
Rellick-Smith v. Rellick, 147 A.3d 897, 901 (Pa. Super. 2016) (internal
citations and quotation marks omitted). In addition, “whether the statute of
limitations has run on a claim is generally a question of law for the trial judge.”
Wilson v. Transp. Ins. Co., 889 A.2d 563, 570 (Pa. Super. 2005) (internal
quotation marks and citation omitted).
Mindful of our standard of review, and having examined the record, the
briefs of the parties, the applicable law, and the well-reasoned opinion of the
Honorable John W. Herron, we conclude Gordon’s issues warrant no relief.
Judge Herron’s opinion comprehensively addresses and properly disposes of
both questions raised by Gordon in this appeal. See Orphans’ Court Opinion,
dated 3/20/2017, at 5–13 (finding, inter alia: (1) Petitioners’ Fifth Petition is
untimely filed beyond the applicable statute of limitations, 20 Pa.C.S. §
908(a),3 and orphans’ court cannot set aside the one year time limit in this
case where there is only a threadbare allegation that “both the [2014 Will]
____________________________________________
3 Section 908 of the Probate, Estates, and Fiduciaries Code provides that any
“party in interest seeking to challenge the probate of a will or who is otherwise
aggrieved by a decree of the register . . . may appeal therefrom to the
[orphans'] court within one year of the decree.” 20 Pa.C.S. § 908(a).
-3-
J-A25012-17
and the [2009 Will] are fraudulent and were not drafted by”4 Decedent,5 and
(2) the orphans’ court could have dismissed Petitioners’ Fifth Petition based
on the fact that Petitioners lacked standing since, under the 2009 Will, which
could be probated if the 2014 Will was invalidated, petitioners were effectively
disinherited by the nominal bequest of $5.00 each, and therefore do not
qualify as a “party in interest” under 20 Pa.C.S. § 908(a); Estate of
Briskman, 808 A.2d 928, 932 (Pa. Super. 2002) addresses a similar issue. 6).
Accordingly, we affirm based upon the sound reasoning of the trial court.
____________________________________________
4 Orphans’ Court Opinion, dated 3/20/2017, at 6, quoting Gordon’s Answer to
the Second Preliminary Objections, 11/28/2016, ¶14. See also Gordon’s Fifth
Petition, 9/1/2016, at ¶12.
5 The orphans’ court acknowledges that in Estate of Colucci, 492 A.2d 1155,
1156 (Pa. Super. 1985), this Court remanded the case to the orphans’ court
“to afford Appellant the opportunity to amend his Notice specifying his
allegations and for an appropriate evidentiary hearing on the existence of
forgery in the signature of the will admitted to probate.” Id. at 1156. Here,
however, the orphans’ court concludes the threadbare allegation of fraud in
Gordon’s Fifth Petition does not warrant an evidentiary hearing. See Orphans’
Court Opinion, dated 3/20/2017, at 8–9 n.5, citing In re Estate of
Kirkander, 415 A.2d 26 (Pa. 1980).
In Kirkander, a will appeal was allowed two years after the statute of
limitation had run where the petition contained well pleaded allegations the
decedent’s and a witness’s signatures on the will were forgeries. See id. at
27. We agree with the orphans’ court’s conclusion that a comparison of the
specificity of the fraud allegation in Kirkander with the allegation of fraud in
Gordon’s petition demonstrates reversal and remand for an evidentiary
hearing is not appropriate here.
6In Estate of Briskman, supra, this Court held that an heir of law of the
decedent who was not a beneficiary, but was a named successor trustee under
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J-A25012-17
Decree affirmed.7
Judgment Entered.
Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
Prothonotary
Date: 11/15/2017
____________________________________________
a prior will, was not “a party in interest aggrieved by the decree of the register”
with standing to appeal. 808 A.2d at 931. The Court explained: “[The heir at
law’s] contingent interest, either as a successor trustee under the 1984 will,
or as an intestate heir at law if both wills are deemed invalid, is too remote to
confer upon her an interest in the probate of the 1993 will. Id. at 933.
7In the event of further proceedings, the parties are directed to attach a copy
of the orphans’ court’s opinion, dated March 20, 2017, to this memorandum.
-5-
Circulated 10/16/2017 10:32 AM
COURT OF COMMON PLEAS OF PHILADELPHIA
ORPHANS' COURT DIVISION
Estate of Hollis C. Gordon, Sr., Deceased
O.C. No. 955 AP of2014
Control No. 165214
Opinion Sur Appeal
There are two pertinent issues that this opinion addresses: (1) Can a court waive the
statutory time period to appeal the probate of a wil1 based only on a threadbare allegation that the
will was fraudulent? and (2) Does an heir that received nothing in a probated will have standing
to challenge that will where a successful challenge would result in the probate of a prior will
under which the heir received a de minim is bequest of $5.00?
In a Decree dated December 5, 2016, this Court sustained Preliminary Objections
("Second Preliminary Objections") by Willie Meana Canada ("Respondent"), Executor of the
Estate of Hollis C. Gordon, Sr., deceased, to the Petition for Citation for Will Appeal ("Fifth
Petition"), filed by James A. Gordon and joined by Evonia E. Scott and Mary H. Gordon
{collectively "Petitioners"), because the Fifth Petition was filed on September I, 2016, which is
more than one year after the date that the Will of Hollis C. Gordon, Sr., deceased was probated.
On December 23, 2016, Petitioners appealed that decision to the Superior Court. For the reasons
explained herein, this Court properly sustained the Second Preliminary Objections.
I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
Hollis C. Gordon, Sr. ("Decedent") died on November 27, 2014 survived by 10 children,
including Petitioners, Patricia A. Conway, and Respondent. See Fifth Petition ,i,i 1-2. Decedent
had executed or purportedly executed two wills during his lifetime--one on July 16, 2009
("2009 Will") and one on May 20, 2014 ("2014 Will"). See Second Preliminary Objections, 114,
Ho!hs C Gordon, Sr, Appeal From Register
1
I 111111111111111111111
20140095502043
11.1 The 2009 Will bequeaths "only the amount of $5.00 each, and nothing else" to Petitioners
and bequeaths the residue in equal shares to the other seven children. See Second Preliminary
Objections, Ex. C. The 2014 Will bequeaths nothing to Petitioners, makes several specific
bequests, and bequeaths the residue in equal shares to the other seven children and three
grandchildren. See Second Preliminary Objections, Ex. G.
On July 23, 2015, upon consideration of a petition by Respondent and Patricia A.
Conway to admit to probate the 2009 Will and objections thereto. by Petitioners, the Probate
Court of Screven County, Georgia admitted the 2009 Will to probate and issued Letters
Testamentary. See Second Preliminary Objections, ~ IO and Ex. F. On August 14, 2015, upon
consideration of a petition by Respondent, the Register of Wills of Philadelphia County admitted
to probate the 2014 Will and granted Letters Testamentary to Respondent. See Second
Preliminary Objections, ~ 13 and Ex. H.
On November 25, 2015, Petitioners filed with this Court a Petition for Citation for Will
Appeal, which this Court dismissed without prejudice for failure to allege facts to support
disturbing the Register of Wills' decision to probate the 2014 Will. This Court also dismissed
without prejudice the Petitioners' Petition for Citation for Will Appeal filed on January 5, 2016
for the same reasons. This Court dismissed without prejudice the Petitioners' Petition for
Citation for Will Appeal filed on March 30, 2016 for failure to include "the names and addresses
of all parties in interest" as required under what was then Phila. O.C. Rule 10.2.C(2)(c). On April
25, 2016, Petitioners filed another Petition for Citation for Will Appeal ("Fourth Petition")
wherein they asserted that "the decedent lacked mental capacity procured by undue influence
1 As will be discussed infra, Petitioners allege that both the 2009 Will and 2014 Will "are fraudulent and were not
drafted by [Decedent]." See Fifth Petition, ,i 12.
2
[sic], duress and/or constraint to execute a Will on May 20, 2014."2 See Fourth Petition j 11.
The Fourth Petition complied with Phila. 0.C. I 0.2.C(2)(c) and contained non-
conclusory factual allegations that gave plausibility and context to the assertion of lack of
testamentary capacity, including the following allegations: Decedent was admitted to the hospital
on May 29, 2014 (nine days after he executed the 2014 Will) with "symptoms and diagnosis of a
severe stroke"; physicians at the hospital determined that Decedent was "deteriorating as a
starving victim, since his internal-body-system [sic) was feeding off his internal-body-organs
[sic] as their only source of nutrition leading the hospital's medical staff to classify [Decedent]
for immediate placement for hospice as a terminally ill patient"; and "hospital medical staff
concluded [that Decedent's] mental and physical capacity was severely diminishing long before
his May 29, 2014 hospital admission." See Fourth Petition j'[ 5-8. Accordingly, this Court
granted a Citation in a Preliminary Decree dated April 26, 2016, which required Respondent to
show cause why this Court should not sustain the Will Appeal and revoke the Letters
Testamentary due to Decedent's alleged lack of testamentary capacity at the time that he
executed the 2014 Will.
On June 8, 2016, Respondent filed Preliminary Objections ("First Preliminary
Objections") to the Fourth Petition wherein she argued that Petitioners lacked standing to
challenge the probate of the 2014 Will.3 Her argument was essentially as follows; if the 2014
2 Petitioners seemed 10 be asserting that Decedent lacked testamentary capacity when he executed the Will, the
Will was procured by undue influence, and the Decedent was under duress when he executed the Will. However,
the Fourth Petition lacked specific factual allegations to support the latter two assertions.
3 In her First Preliminary Objections, Respondent also included allegations that James A. Gordon "had a long
history of abusing and harassing" her, the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County previously issued a
Final Protection from Abuse Order against Petitioner, and she was afraid of James A. Gordon and the prospect of
,m
"being cross-examined by her abuser." See First Preliminary Objections, 29-33. The Court did not consider
these allegations relevant to the disposition of the First Preliminary Objections and Respondent cited no law to
suggest that they were relevant.
3
Will was invalidated, the 2009 Will could be probated; the 2009 Will left only $5.00 each to
Petitioners compared to nothing in the 2014 Will; "[llosing out on $5.00 does not confer on
[them] an interest ... that is substantial, direct, and immediate" and did not cause them to be
"reasonably aggrieved by the decision of the Philadelphia Register of Wills"; and, therefore, they
do not have standing to challenge 2014 Will. See First Preliminary Objections.v[ 26. No response
was filed to the First Preliminary Objections within the 20 day time period set forth in what was
then Phila. O.C. Rule 3.2.A(3)(b) and, on July 11, 2016, this Court issued a Decree sustaining the
First Preliminary Objections without prejudice on the ground of standing.
On September 1, 2016, Petitioners filed yet another Petition for Citation for Will Appeal
(uFifth Petition"), In a Preliminary Decree dated October 12, 2016, this Court granted a Citation
that required Respondent to show cause why the Court should not sustain the Will Appeal and
revoke the Letters Testamentary due to Decedent's alleged lack of testamentary capacity at the
time that he executed the 2014 Will.
On November 10, 2016, Respondent filed the Second Preliminary Objections wherein
she argues once again that Petitioners lack standing and further notes that the Fifth Petition was
filed 18 days after the expiration of the one year statute of limitations that governs Petitioners'
appeal of the Register of Wills' decision to grant Letters Testamentary to Respondent on August
14, 2015. See Second Preliminary Objections 125. Petitioners timely filed an Answer to the
Second Preliminary Objections, but the Answer mostly rehashed the Fifth Petition and did not
address the timeliness issue or even contain a paragraph 25. Since the Fifth Petition was filed 17
days after the expiration of the one year period during which an appeal may be taken from a
decree of the Register of Wills under 20 Pa.C.S. § 908(a), the Court issued a Final Decree dated
December 5, 2016 ("Final Decree") sustaining the Second Preliminary Objections.
4
Petitioners filed a Notice of Appeal on December 23, 2016. This Court issued a Decree
dated January 4, 2017 ordering Petitioners to file a concise statement of errors complained of on
appeal ("Statement") pursuant to Pa.R.A.P. l 925(b ). Petitioners timely filed the Statement,
which contains 17 numbered paragraphs.
II. DISCUSSION
There are two main issues relevant to this appeal: (1) whether the Fifth Petition was
timely filed and (2) whether Petitioners have standing to appeal the Register of Wills' decision to
probate the 2014 Will. These relatively straightforward issues are obfuscated in the Statement by
17 paragraphs consisting mostly of assertions that this Court improperly ignored certain
information. Most of the information that Petitioners assert this Court improperly ignored is
irrelevant or was not alleged before Petitioners filed his Notice of Appeal.
A. The Court Properly Sustained the Second Preliminary Objections
Petitioners' Fifth Petition was clearly untimeJy fiJed and thus the Court properly
sustained the Second Preliminary Objections on the ground of untimeliness. "Any party in
interest seeking to challenge the probate of a will or who is otherwise aggrieved by a decree of
the register ... may appeal therefrom to the court within one year of the decree." 20 Pa.C.S. §
908(a). Here, the Register of Wills of Philadelphia County issued a decree on August 14, 2015
probating the 2014 Will and granting Letters Testamentary to Respondent. The Fifth Petition was
filed on September 1, 2016, which is more than one year after August 14, 2015.
The orphans' court may not set aside the one year time limit for an appeal from the
probate of a will absent "a fraud on the court or the Register of Wills." Dempsey v. Figura, 374
Pa. Super. 347, 351, 542 A.2d 1388, 1390-91 (1988) (citing In re Kirkander's Estate, 490 Pa. 49,
415 A.2d 26 (1980)). Even in cases involving fraud, the statutory time period cannot be set aside
5
if the appealing party knew or should have known about the alleged fraud during the one year
period. See In re Kiger's Estate, 487 Pa. 143, 148, 409 A.2d 5, 8 (1979) (upholding orphans'
court dismissal of an untimely will appeal notwithstanding allegations of fraud because the
alleged fraud was "known or at least should have been known at the time the will was
probated"). Furthermore, a general avennent of fraud is insufficient to set aside the one year time
period; ''[aJllegations must be specific in order to compel the court to conduct a hearing." Estate
of Jackson v. Jackson, No. 1612 WDA 2014, 2015 WL 6951263, at *3 (Pa. Super. Ct. June 26,
2015) (quoting In re Estate of Karschner, 919 A.2d 252, 256 (Pa. Super. Ct. 2007)) (internal
quotations marks omitted).
Based on the pleadings before this Court in this case, the Court lacked the authority to
disregard or extend the one yeru; time limitation set forth in 20 Pa.C.S. § 908(a) and therefore
was obligated to sustain the Second Preliminary Objections resulting in the dismissal of the
untimely Fifth Petition. Although Petitioners alleged in paragraph 14 of their Answer to the
Second Preliminary Objections that they "will prove ... both the [2014 Will] and the [2009 Will)
are fraudulent and were not drafted by" Decedent, there are no specific factual allegations to
support this threadbare allegation of fraud. It is not uncommon nor impermissible for someone
other than a decedent to draft his or her will and Petitioners failed to allege any facts that suggest
that such a common practice somehow amounted to fraud in this case. Given the lack of
specificity in the fraud allegation, the Court could not set aside the one year time period on the
basis of fraud. Additionally, the Court could not set aside the one year time limit because there
was no allegation that the Petitioners had just recently received information that they previously
did not know and could not have been reasonably expected to know that led them to believe that
the 2014 Will was fraudulent. Just as in In re Kiger's Estate, the orphans' court properly declined
6
to extend the time period for filing a will appeal because the alleged fraud in the form of undue
influence was "known or at least should have been known at the time the will was probated,"
here the court properly declined to extend the statutory time period because Petitioners did not
allege any facts that suggest that they did not know of the alleged fraud at the time that the 2014
Will was probated. See 409 A.2d at 8. Unlike in In re Culbertson's Estate, where the challenging
parties alleged that the will admitted for probate was forged and the court extended the statutory
time period because the will appeal "was made promptly upon the discovery of the forgery," here
there are no allegations to indicate that Petitioners acted promptly upon discovering the alleged
fraud or even when they discovered it.4 See 301 Pa. 438, 447, 152 A. 540, 543 (1930).
Given the lack of any supporting details pertaining to this alleged fraud, we do not think
that Petitioners are entitled to a hearing simply because they wrote the word "fraudulent" on a
pleading. In Estate of Jackson v. Jackson, the appellant sought to appeal after the one year time
period in 20 Pa.C.S. § 908(a) a decree from the Register of Wills issuing letters of
administration. 2015 WL 6951263 at *2. The appellant alleged that the administrator "committed
fraud upon the Register by falsely acknowledging in her petition for grant of letters of
administration ... that Decedent left no Will." id at *3 (internal quotation marks omitted).
However, the Superior Court upheld the orphans' court's dismissal of the will appeal because
"the validity of a document or 'paper presented' is not questioned" and"[ n]o forgery of a
4 The Objection to Petition to Probate Will in Solemn Form ("Objection") that Petitioners submitted to the Probate
Court of Screven County, Georgia to oppose the probate of the 2009 Will alleges that Respondent and Patricia
Conway "inserted their 'New Page 2' contrary to [Decedent's] devise and bequeath in his Original Last Will and
Testament." See Second Preliminary Objections, Ex. E. Due to Petitioners' lack of allegations lo support the
assertion that the 2014 Will is "fraudulent," it is unclear what the alleged fraud consists of. If the alleged fraud
was the unscrupulous insertion ofa forged page as Petitioners seems to allege in their Objection was the case
with the 2009 Will that was probated in Georgia, we note that Petitioners' Objection was dated April 28, 2015,
which demonstrates that they were aware of the alleged fraud as it pertained to the 2009 Will months before the
probate of the 2014 Will.
7
document connected to [the administrator's] petition [for letters of administration] is alleged.', Id.
at *4. Here, as in Estate of Jackson v. Jackson, there is not a specific allegation that any
document submitted to the Register was a forgery or that fraudulent concealment of any material
fact occurred. Unlike in in re Kirkander 's Estate, where the Pennsylvania Supreme Court
remanded a will appeal back to the orphans' court for an evidentiary hearing on the issue of
fraud where the appellant had specifically alleged that the decedent's and a witness's signature
on the probated will were forged, here, as in Estate of Jackson v. Jackson, Petitioners have not
specifically alleged how the 2014 Will is "fraudulent" and thus this Court respectfully suggests
that the Superior Court should not remand the case for an evidentiary hearing. See in re
Klrkander's Estate, 490 Pa. 49, 51, 415 A.2d 26, 27 (1980). In sum, Petitioners have offered
nothing other than a bald assertion that the 2014 Will and 2009 Will are "fraudulent" and their
allegation that the 2014 Will and 2009 Will were not drafted by Decedent provides no useful
information because it is common and permissible for a testator to have someone else (frequently
an attorney) draft his or her will. 5
s We feel inclined to note a case, Estate of Colucci, which would arguably support the notion that this Court
should have held an evldentlary hearing despite the fact that the fraud allegation was threadbare. See 342 Pa.
Super. 349, 352, 492 A.2d 1155, 1156 {1985). In sstote of Colucci, the orphans' court dismissed a will appeal
flied more than one year after the probate of the will for untimeliness and declined to set aside the time limit
based on threadbare allegations of fraud and forgery. Id. at 1155. The Superior Court acknowledged that the
notice of appeal did not allege sufficient facts to support the concluslon "that there was a forgery of the w1tl
admitted to probate amounting to fraud on the Register of Wills sufficient to toll the one-year statute of
llmltatlons," but nonetheless remanded the case back to the orphans' court In~ 2-1 decision "to afford
Appellant the opportunity to amend his Notice specifying his allegations and for an appropriate evrdentlarv
hearing on the existence of forgery In the signature of the wlll admitted to probate." Id. at 1156.
The dissent, filed by Judge Popovich, noted that "the party attacking the [w]III nowhere asserts the basis for his
fraud and forgery allegations" and thus concluded that "the Majority act(ed] prectpltouslv In remanding solely
on appellant's bald allegationls]" of fraud and forgery. Id. at 1157 (Popovich, J., Dissenting). The dissent
believed that "appellant's 'boiler-plate' allegations of fraud and forgery, left unsubstantiated, fall short of
preserving an attack on the probate of [the decedent's) will." Id. at 1158 (Popovich, J., Dissenting). We agree
with Judge Popovich's well-reasoned and thoughtful dissent. The fstate of Colucci majority's reliance on
8
Even ifthe Fifth Petition was timely filed or fraud that would permit an extension of the
one year limitation was sufficiently alleged, for the reasons hereafter discussed the Court could
have properly dismissed the Fifth Petition based on the fact that Petitioners lacked standing to
appeal from the probate of the will. As is discussed in more depth below, the 2009 Will, which
could be probated if the 2014 Will was invalidated, effectively disinherited Petitioners and thus
I
II the fact that they are intestate heirs does not confer upon them standing to challenge the 2014
Will.
j B. The Court Properly Sustained the First Preliminary Objections
I
I In their Statement, Petitioners assert that this Court improperly sustained without
prejudice the First Preliminary Objections, which effectively dismissed the Fourth Petition
I
I
without prejudice, because (l) this Court "ignor[ed] the fact [that} Petitioners' Appeal from the
I · Register of Wills addressed the grounds of standing" and (2) Respondent never served upon him
Respondent's First Preliminary Objections or a twenty day notice to plead. We will address both
of these arguments.
1. The Petltloners Lacked Standing to Challenge the 2014 Will
Notwithstanding Their Statuses as Intestate Heirs
Only a "party in interest" may "challenge the probate of a will." 20 Pa.C.S. § 908(a).
Klrkonder's Estate was misplaced because, unltke in this case and In Estate of Colucci, the appellants in
Kfrkander's Estate speclflcally alleged that the decedent's and a witness's signature on the wlll were forged. See
Klrkatidet's Estate, 415 A.2d at 27. Here, Petitioner's allegation that he "will prove ... both the [2014 Will] and
the (2009 Will) are fraudulent and were not drafted by" the decedent does not give the court "any Insight as to
the substance of the claims." See Estate of Co/luci, 492 A.2d at 1157 (Popovich, J., Dissenting}.
I Therefore, notwithstanding the 2-1 decision In Estate of Colucci, this Court respectfully suggests that the
I
I
Superior Court may wish to examine the difference between the tack of specificity of the fraud allegation In this
case and the specificity of the fraud allegations in Kirkander's Estate that the Pennsylvania Supreme Court
considered when it decided to reverse and remand that case and conclude that, unlike In Kfrkander's Estate
where there was a specific allegation of fraud, here a reversal and remand rs not appropriate due to the
threadbare nature of the fraud allegation.
I
I 9
j
Since Petitioner's "cause of action arises from § 908 ... [his) standing is a 'jurisdictional
prerequisite" to the action." See In re Estate of Briskman, 2002 PA Super 287, 113, 808 A.2d
928, 933 (2002) (quoting Grom v. Burgoon, 448 Pa.Super 616, 672 A.2d 823, 824 (1996)). As
previously explained, the First Preliminary Objections were based on Petitioners' alleged lack of
standing given that the invalidation of the 2014 Will would cause the 2009 Will to be operative
and Petitioners would only receive $5.00 each under the 2009 Wi11 compared to nothing under
the 2014 Will. See In re Estate of Sid/ow, 374 Pa. Super. 624, 628, 543 A.2d 1143, 1145 (1988)
(noting that "absent a specific revocation, the doctrine of relative revocation revives an earlier
will [that] has been impliedly revoked by a subsequent will [that] is later declared invalid").
After the Court sustained the First Preliminary Objections without prejudice in a Decree dated
July 11, 2016, Petitioners had 34 days to re-file a will appeal addressing the standing issue within
the one year time limitation, but they did not do so. Furthermore, the Fifth Petition, filed 17 days
after the expiration of the one year period, did not include any additional allegations that would
have established Petitioners' standing to challenge the probate of the 2014 Wil1.
Petitioners' assertion that they "addressed the grounds of standing" in the Fourth Petition
seems to be based on the fact that the Fifth Petition alleged that they are intestate heirs of
Decedent. While Petitioners did clearly allege in the Fourth Petition that they are intestate heirs
of Decedent (Fourth Petition ~1 l, 13), the Superior Court has rejected the notion that an intestate
heir "would always be permitted to file an appeal from probate of a will in which the heir is not a
named beneficiary." Estate of'Brlskman, 808 A.2d at 932. Rather, an intestate heir lacks standing
under 20 Pa.C.S. § 908(a) to challenge a will if a successful challenge to that will would revive a
prior will under which the heir had no interest, even if the heir planned to challenge that will too,
because the heir's interest "is too remote" at that point. Id at 933. See also In re Knecht's Estate,
10
341 Pa. 292, 298, 19 A.2d 111, 114 ( 1941) (holding that decedent's husband had no standing to
challenge the probate of a will and codicil thereto where a prior will existed under which "he
would receive precisely the same interest in the estate"); In re Estate of Swenson, No. 2289
MDA 2013, 2014 WL 10889531, at *3 (Pa. Super. Ct. Aug. 1, 2014)(citingEstate of Briskman
and holding that heir had no standing to challenge will because there were prior wills that would
have to be invalidated in order for the heir to have an interest in the decedent's estate). But See
Estate of Gralak, 2014 WL 2921592 at*5 (Pa. Com. Pl. June 24, 2014) (citing to Estate of
Briskman, but nonetheless declining to sustain preliminary objections to standing where an
intestate heir challenging the probate of the will had no interest under a prior will that could be
probated if the probated will was invalidated because the heir "alleged that all known purported
wills of [the decedent] are invalid").
While Petitioners arguably have some interest in the 2009 Will because they inherit $5.00
each under the 2009 Will, in order for that to confer standing on them, it must be a substantial
interest. See Estate of Briskman, 808 A.2d at 933 (internal citation omitted). We agree with
Respondent's assertion in paragraph 26 of the First Preliminary Objections that the $5.00 bequest
in the 2009 Will is not sufficiently substantial to confer standing. See id Decedent effectively
disinherited Petitioners in the 2009 Will by leaving them a de rninimis bequest of $5.00. See
Estate a/Susanna H. Praley, Deceased, No. 3244 of 1977, 1979 WL 139272, 3 Phila.Co.Rptr.
359, 362) (Pa. Orph. Dec. 11, 1979), ajj'd sub nom. In re Proley's Estate, 492 Pa. 57, 422 A.2d
136 (1980) (noting that "the decedent desired to disinherit» certain heirs "by leaving $1.00 to
each of them"). We cannot find a published Pennsylvania appellate court case that addresses the
.,
exact question of whether an heir has standing to challenge a will under which he or she receives
I
I nothing if a successful challenge to that will would result in the probate of a prior will under
i
11
which the heir received only a nominal bequest. However, several other state appellate courts
that have addressed similar issues have sensibly concluded that a de minimis bequest in a prior
will does not confer standing on an heir seeking to challenge a will under which he or she
receives nothing.
In a Tennessee case, Jolley v. Henderson, two heirs of the decedent argued that they had
standing to challenge the probated will because prior wills bequeathed $10.00 to each of them.
154 S.W.3d 538, 541 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2004). The court, after noting that one "must have a
substantial interest" in the outcome of a will contest, held that the $10.00 bequest was "de
minimis and thus insufficient to confer standing." Id. at 543.6 To bolster this conclusion, the
court cited to a previous case holding that a $1.00 bequest was not sufficiently substantial to
confer standing and observed that "[tjhere is no difference between $1 and $10 in the context of
the matter under discussion." Id. (citing In re Es/ale of Spivey, No. OIAOJ ~9407-CH-00309, 1994
WL 697884, at *2 n.2 (Tenn. Ct. App., filed Dec. 14, 1994)).
In a Florida case, Newman v. Newman, a son of the decedent who received nothing under
the probated will and was bequeathed $1.00 under a prior will challenged the probated will. 766
So.2d 1091, 1093 (Fla. Dist. Ct. App. 2000). The court noted that the aforesaid son "was actually
disinherited in [the decedent's prior) will since he was bequeathed only one dollar in that wilt>'
and that he "did not stand to gain by having the [probated] will declared invalid" given that "[h]e
would have only taken one dollar under [the decedent's] previous will." Id. at l 093-94 (internal
citations omitted). Therefore, the court ruled that he did not have standing to challenge the
6
Although in Jo/{ey the last will that the decedent executed before the probated will also left nothing to the two
challenging heirs whlle the three wills before that bequeathed $10.00 to them, the court's analysis, namely the
court's focus on how a $10.00 bequest in a prior will is insufficient to confer standing on an heir, suggests that
the outcome would have been the same even if all prior wills of the decedent bequeathed a nominal sum to
the two challenging heirs.
12
probated will. Id. at 1095. But see Danforth v. Danforth, 663 S.W.2d 288, 295 n.3 (Mo. Ct. App.
1983) (internal citation omitted) (noting that a child of the decedent who received nothing under
the challenged will but received one dollar under the prior will was a necessary party to the will
challenge "[djespite the deminimus [sic] amount of the legacy under the [prior] will").
Just as in Jolley and Newman, nominal sums bequeathed in prior wills to challenging
heirs in the amount of $10.00 and $1.00, respectively, amounted to a disinheritance and did not
confer standing on the heirs to challenge a probated will under which they received nothing, here
the fact that Petitioners were bequeathed $5.00 each in Decedent's 2009 Will does not confer
standing on them to challenge the 2014 Will under which they received nothing. 7 See 154
S. W.3d 543; 766 So.2d at 1093. To hold differently would undermine the Superior Court's very
clear and well-reasoned ruling in Estate of Briskman, It is not uncommon for a testator to
bequeath a nominal sum to an heir in order to disinherit that heir.8 Permitting a nominal bequest
to be the basis for standing would arbitrarily allow a disinherited heir to challenge a will under
which he receives nothing because a prior will disinherited the heir by bequeathing a nominal
sum rather than disinheriting the heir by bequeathing nothing. We do not think such a result
conforms to the Superior Court's holding in Estate of Briskman and thus decline to so hold.
2. Petitioners' Alleged Lack of Notice of the First Preliminary Objections is
Irrelevant Given Their Lack of Standing
Petitioners allege in their Statement that Respondent never served the First Preliminary
Objections on them nor gave them notice to plead within 20 days. See Statement.'[ 11-12. This is
1 Decedent stated In the 2009 Wiii that "I give the amount of 5.00 each, and nothing else" to Petitioners.
8 The somewhat common practice of leaving a nominal sum to an heir to dislnherit that heir may be caused, In
part, by the "popular error" that, In order "to disinherit the helrl.] he must be 'cut off with a shllllng/" See in re
emetnecker's Estate, 218 Pa. 369, 371, 67 A. 701 (1907) (holding that destroyed will cannot be probated where
testator died before having the opportunity to execute a new will after destroying a prior will due to the
"erroneous belief" that she must bequeath a nominal sum to an heir In order to effectively disinherit that heir).
. 13
the first time that Petitioners have made these allegations, so the Court did not have an
opportunity to conduct a hearing on this issue. Respondent included with her First Preliminary
Objections a Certificate of Service certifying that the First Preliminary Objections were served
via mail on Respondents. Respondent also included a copy of the notice given to Respondents,
which contained a 20 day notice to plead.9 Therefore, absent information suggesting otherwise,
the Court proceeded as if Petitioners were properly notified of the First Preliminary Objections.
Ultimately, the issue of whether or not Petitioners received proper notice of the First
Preliminary Objections is irrelevant because "when a statute creating a cause of action includes
the designation of who may sue, then [the issue of] standing" is .. interwoven with that of subject
matter jurisdiction" and "becomes a jurisdictional prerequisite to an action" that the court may
raise sua sponte. See Hill v. Divecchio, 425 Pa. Super. 3 55, 361, 625 A.2d 642, 645 (1993);
Barndt v. Barndt, 397 Pa. Super. 321, 325, 580A.2d 320, 322 (1990). Since 20 Pa.C.S. § 908(a)
creates a cause of action and designates who may sue, namely "a party in interest seeking to
challenge the probate of a will," this Court could have raised the issue of standing sua sponte and
dismissed the Fourth Petition after determining that the Court did not have jurisdiction to decide
the matter. See Hill, 625 A.2d at 645 n.3; Es/ate of Brtskman, 808 A.2d at 933 (quoting Grom v.
Burgoon, 672 A.2d at 824). Therefore, even if the First Preliminary Objections were never filed
and regardless of whether Petitioners received proper notice of the filing thereof, this Court had
the authority to raise the issue of standing sua sponte and dismiss the Fourth Petition for lack of
standing.
9
The notice said ''{i)f you have any objections to the Preliminary Objectlons, you must state them ln writing and
file them within 20 days from the date of this Notice or by June 28, 2016." The form of the notice to plead set
forth In Pa.0.C. Rule 3.S(b)(1) more accurately uses the term "response" whereas Respondent used the term
"objections."
14
C. Most of the Facts that the Court Supposedly Ignored Are Irrelevant
Most of the paragraphs in Petitioners' Statement, namely paragraphs 4, 6-10, and 13-17,
allege that the Court ignored information or allegations that are not relevant to the Court's
decision. To the extent that Petitioners complain that the Court dismissed without prejudice the
first, second, and third petitions for citation for will appeal, the Court notes that such dismissals
were appropriate given the lack of factual allegations in those petitions to support the general
assertions of duress, undue influence, fraud, or lack of testamentary capacity. The Court granted
a Citation based on the Fourth Petition due to the inclusion of some factual allegations that at
least tended to support the assertion that Decedent Jacked testamentary capacity when he
executed the 2014 Will. With respect to Petitioners' assertion in paragraph 13 of their Statement
that the Court ignored that Respondent "had a history of abusing, harassing, and stalking" James
A. Gordon, the Court notes that the allegations of abuse and harassment between 'the parties are
irrelevant to the issue of whether the Court properly dismissed the Fourth Petition and Fifth
Petition. Contrary to Petitioners' implication in paragraph 14 of his Statement, the Court did not
make any decision in this case based on the fact that Respondent alleged in her First Preliminary
Objections and Second Preliminary Objections that she was afraid of being cross-examined by
James A. Gordon. The reasons for this Court's decisions sustaining the First Preliminary
Objections and the Second Preliminary Objections are set forth above.
D. Petitioners Did Not Previously Raise the Issue of Decedent's Domicile
Petitioners assert in paragraph 3 of their Statement that the Court ignored that "Sylvania,
County of Screven, State of Georgia is the [Dlecedent's domicile[.] which is not the jurisdiction
of this court . ., Under 20 Pa.C.S. § 3131, the Philadelphia County Register of Wills would only
have jurisdiction to grant letters testamentary upon Decedent's Estate if at least one of the
15
following two statements is true: (1) Decedent died while a domiciliary of Pennsylvania and
Decedent's last principal residence was in Philadelphia County or (2) Decedent had property
located in Philadelphia County at the time of his death. In paragraph 3 of the Second Preliminary
Objections, Respondent alleges that "[a]t the time of his death, Hollis C. Gordon, Sr. was a
resident of Pennsylvania" although, in the Petition to Probate Will in Solemn Form that
Respondent and Patricia A. Conway filed in the Probate Court of Screven County, Georgia,
Respondent alleged that Decedent's "place of domicile" was an address in Screven County,
Georgia. See Answer to Second Preliminary Objections, Ex:. D. In paragraph l of the Fifth
Petition, Petitioners allege that Decedent "died ... in Philadelphia County, Pennsylvania," but
Petitioners did not clearly allege where Decedent was domiciled when he died until they filed
their Statement. Since Petitioners failed to raise this issue before this Court, it is "waived and
cannot be raised for the first time on appeal." See Pa.R.A.P. 302(a). Even if Petitioners did not
waive this issue, for the reasons stated supra they lacked standing to challenge the probate of the
2014 Will in the first place.
III. CONCLUSION
This Court properly dismissed Petitioners' Fourth Petition for lack of standing because,
even if the 2014 Will was invalidated, the 2009 Will, under which Petitioners do not have a
substantial interest, could be probated. The fact that Petitioners are intestate heirs of Decedent is
irrelevant because, as the Superior Court clearly set forth in Estate of Briskman, the interest of
intestate heirs is too remote to confer standing if those heirs have no interest in a prior will that
could be probated upon invalidation of the challenged will, regardless of whether the heirs desire
to challenge the prior will. Since standing is a jurisdictional prerequisite given that the persons
entitled to appeal the probate of a will are set forth in 20 Pa.C.S. § 908(a), this Court was
16
permitted to raise the issue of standing sua sponte. Thus, any alleged defect in the notice that
Petitioners received or did not receive of the First Preliminary Objections was harmless since the
Court could have dismissed the Fourth Petition on its own motion.
The Court properly dismissed Petitioners' Fifth Petition because it was filed after the one
year statutory period for filing an appeal from the probate of a will under 20 Pa.C.S. § 908(a)
expired and Petitioners failed to make allegations of fraud sufficient to set aside the statute of
limitations. But even if this Court could have set the one year period aside based on the presence
of the word "fraudulent" in a pleading, this Court's failure to do so is irrelevant given that
Petitioners lack standing and thus the Court could have also properly dismissed the Fifth Petition
sua sponte for lack of standing.
For the reasons set forth in this opinion, the Court properly dismissed the Fourth Petition
and Fifth Petition and, therefore, the Court's decision should be affirmed,
BY THE COURT:
Dated this Zo-it day of March 2017.
James A. Gordon, prose
Evonia E. Scott, prose
Mary H. Gordon, pro se
Bradley Newman, Esquire
17