COURT OF CHANCERY
OF THE
STATE OF DELAWARE
PATRICIA W. GRIFFIN CHANCERY COURTHOUSE
MASTER IN CHANCERY 34 The Circle
GEORGETOWN, DELAWARE 19947
Final Report: January 23, 2018
Draft Report: January 10, 2018
Date Submitted: December 1, 2017
Darryl Rago, Esquire
Leager & Rago, LLC
1401 Pennsylvania Avenue Suite 101
Wilmington, DE 19806
RE: IMO Theodore Brans
C.A. 2017-0851-PWG
Dear Mr. Rago:
Pending before me is a petition for instructions pursuant to Court of
Chancery Rule 207 filed by co-executors and heirs, Martin Brans (“Martin”) and
Ingrid Yerger (“Ingrid”), of the Last Will and Testament of Theodore J. Brans
(hereinafter “Will”). Petitioners request that the Court order that the real property
of Theodore J. Brans (hereinafter “the decedent”) pass to the heirs as non-probate
property for purposes of accounting because the provision within the Will
pertaining to the distribution of the decedent’s real estate was vague, ambiguous
and subject to interpretation, the decedent’s intent was for both heirs to be treated
equally, and it is impossible to perform the requirements related to distribution of
IMO Theodore J. Brans
C.A. No. 2017-0851-PWG
January 23, 2018
Page 2 of 15
the decedent’s real property under the Will. I recommend that the Court decline to
provide the instructions recommended by the Petitioners.
BACKGROUND
On February 25, 2014, the decedent executed an amendment to a revocable
trust agreement executed on October 17, 2008 (hereinafter “Revocable Trust”),
which amended and restated the Theodore J. Brans Revocable Trust established on
February 8, 1993.1 That amendment revoked section three in its entirety and
replaced it with the following new section three:
At the death of the Trustor, the principal of this trust shall be distributed as
follows:
A. The principal of this Trust shall be distributed to my children,
MARTIN BRANS and INGRID YERGER in equal shares.
B. In the event that MARTIN BRANS or INGRID YERGER
predeceases the Trustor and leaves issue of his or her own surviving,
then that child’s share shall be distributed in equal shares to his or her
surviving issue. In the event that MARTIN BRANS or INGRID
YERGER predeceases the Trustor without leaving issue surviving,
then that child’s share shall be distributed to Trustor’s surviving child
per stirpes.
The decedent executed the Will at issue in this petition on February 8, 2016,
appointing Martin and Ingrid as co-executors of the Will. Paragraph 5 of the Will
provides:
1
Pet. for Instructions, Exh. E (Amendment to the Theodore J. Brans Revocable Trust dated Feb.
8, 1993 and entered into on Oct. 17, 2008)(Feb. 25, 2014).
IMO Theodore J. Brans
C.A. No. 2017-0851-PWG
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FIFTH: I direct that my residence and property at 38407 Boxwood
Terrace, Selbyville, Delaware (hereinafter “the property”) be handled as
follows:
Subsequent to my death, my Co-Executors shall mutually agree upon
a licensed appraiser to determine the fair market value of the property. The
cost of the appraisal shall be paid by my estate. Upon receipt of the
appraisal, MARTIN BRANS shall have fifteen (15) days to decide whether
he wishes to retain the property. Should MARTIN BRANS decide to retain
the property, he shall pay INGRID YERGER one-half (1/2) of the appraised
value of the property. Said payment shall be due within eight (8) months of
my date of death. In the event that my son, MARTIN BRANS, shall elect
not to retain the property, my daughter, INGRID YERGER, shall have
fifteen (15) days from the date she receives notice that MARTIN BRANS
does not intend to purchase the property, to decide whether she wishes to
retain the property. If INGRID YERGER wishes to retain the property, she
shall pay MARTIN BRANS one-half (1/2) of the appraised value. Said
payment shall be due within eight (8) months of my date of death. If neither
MARTIN BRANS nor INGRIG [sic] YERGER wishes to retain the
property, I direct, order and instruct my Co-Executors to sell the property.
The proceeds shall become part of the rest, residue and remainder of my
estate.
The Will’s residuary clause identifies the Revocable Trust as the vehicle for
disposing of the residuary estate:
SIXTH: All the rest, residue, and remainder of my property and estate of
whatever kind and wherever situated and of which I might die seized and
possessed or to which I may be in any manner entitled at the time of my
death, I give, devise and bequeath absolutely to the trustee(s) of the
THEODORE J. BRANS REVOCABLE TRUST AGREEMENT DATED
FEBRUARY 8, 1993, AS AMENDED AND RESTATED OCTOBER 17,
2008, and any amendments thereto, to be held and administered in
accordance with the terms and provisions of said Trust Agreement.
IMO Theodore J. Brans
C.A. No. 2017-0851-PWG
January 23, 2018
Page 4 of 15
The decedent passed away on March 27, 2016, and the decedent’s estate was
opened on April 8, 2016. Since the decedent’s wife predeceased him, Martin and
Ingrid (or “Petitioners”) are co-executors and heirs of the estate, and successor
trustees of the Revocable Trust.
Petitioners wish to take the decedent’s real property at 38407 Boxwood
Terrace, Selbyville, Delaware (hereinafter “the property”) together jointly. They
allege they discussed this goal with the estate’s former counsel, who told them that
Paragraph 5 of the Will did not allow them to take the property jointly without
incurring probate fees, and that the Will gave them 15 days following the
decedent’s death to decide if one of them wanted to keep the property before it
would be subject to sale.2 Petitioners allege they voiced concerns to former
counsel about his interpretation of Paragraph 5, but went ahead and obtained an
appraisal of the property on April 27, 2017, which valued the property at $410,000.
Petitioners met with former counsel on July 28, 2017 to discuss their concerns, and
following that meeting, counsel withdrew from representation of the estate by
letter dated August 17, 2017.
IMO Theodore J. Brans
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Petitioners obtained new counsel and were granted an extension for filing
the estate’s accounting until January 8, 2017. On November 29, 2017, they filed
this action in which they are asking the Court to order that the decedent’s real
property pass to them as non-probate property for purposes of accounting.
ANALYSIS
Paragraph 5 of the Will contains five conditions related to the decedent’s
real property – three of which must be met within specified time frames. First, the
Will required Martin and Ingrid to get an appraisal of the property from a mutually
agreed upon appraiser after the decedent’s death. There is no time frame for
obtaining that appraisal. Next, the Will gives Martin 15 days after the appraisal is
received to decide if he wishes to retain the property. If Martin declines to keep
the property, Ingrid has 15 days after receiving notice of Martin’s decision to
decide whether she will retain the property. If either one keeps the property, then
they must pay the other for their share of the property within eight months of the
decedent’s death. If neither Martin nor Ingrid retain the property, Paragraph 5 of
2
The email from the former counsel states, in part, that “With regard to the probate tax, the Will
specifically states that you each had 15 days following your father’s death to decide to purchase
the property; otherwise, it was to be sold to a third party. Per Delaware law, the sale proceeds
would be subject to the DE probate tax of 1.25%. You are free to retain the home but the
Register of Wills will still require that they receive 1.25% of the FMV of the home. To that end,
we will need to have the home appraised . . .” Pet. for Instructions, Exh. A, Email from M.
Robinson to I. Yerger (Apr. 25, 2017).
IMO Theodore J. Brans
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the Will directs that the property be sold, with the proceeds from the sale becoming
part of the residuary estate. There is no time frame specified in the Will related to
the fifth condition – the sale of the property.
Petitioners argue that Paragraph 5 of the Will is vague, ambiguous and
subject to interpretation. Petitioners assert that the last sentence of Paragraph 5
stating that “if neither MARTIN BRANS nor INGRID YERGER wishes to retain
the property,” when read in conjunction with the rest of Paragraph 5, allows for an
implied third option that the heirs can take the real property together as non-
probate real estate. They argue that the decedent appointed Martin and Ingrid to
act jointly as co-executors of the estate and intended for both heirs to be treated
equally, which contravenes an interpretation that they could not jointly take
possession of the property under the Will. Further, they allege an ambiguity exists
because the Will fails to address the situation where both heirs want to keep the
property jointly. They also claim that, if the Court finds no ambiguity, then the
proceeds from the forced sale of the property would be distributed through the
residuary clause of the Will and, since that clause names a “dead instrument, the
Revocable Trust, as taker with no alternative taker,” the result would be an “invalid
devise.”3
3
Pet. for Instructions, ¶ 24.
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The Court of Chancery follows two principles in reviewing a will upon a
petition for instructions: “1) where the language of a will is unambiguous, the
court must enforce its terms as written,” and “2) where the language used in a will
is ambiguous, the court must give the language that meaning which will effectuate
the intent of the testator.”4 If the language of a Will is “clear and readily
understandable,” extrinsic evidence is not considered.5 Clear intent, as expressed,
is enforced, unless against legal policy.6 Ambiguity exists “when the terms in
question are reasonable or fairly susceptible of different interpretations or may
have two or more different meanings.”7 And, if a mistake was made in writing a
will, the Court of Chancery does not have the “power to correct a mistake, and it
cannot, by introduction of parol evidence, rewrite the [will].”8
The language in Paragraph 5 of the Will is not ambiguous or vague. It
expresses the decedent’s clear intent and lays out a process by which either Martin,
who has the first option, or Ingrid, with the second option, can keep the house by
4
In re Will of Fleitas, 2010 WL 4925819, at *4 (Del. Ch. Nov. 30, 2010), citing In re Estate of
Skwarlo, 2001 WL 312451, at *1 (Del. Ch. Mar. 12, 2001).
5
See Miller v. Equitable Trust Co., 32 A.2d 431, 434 (Del. 1943)(holding the Court is bound to
follow the clear intent if the expression is “plainly discernible from the language employed, and
in such cases surrounding facts and circumstances can be of no importance”); Bird v. Wilmington
Soc. of Fine Arts, 43 A.2d 476, 480 (Del. 1945)(“[i]t is not the function of the Court to make a
will for the testator or to improve on the will as found,” and “to give to the language of the
testator an intent not discernible from the will itself or from the surrounding circumstances”),
citing Miller, 32 A.2d at 434.
6
IMO Estate of Kenton, 1994 WL 698640, at *1 (Del. Ch. Oct. 21, 1994).
7
Fleitas, 2010 WL 4925819, at *5 (citation omitted).
IMO Theodore J. Brans
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January 23, 2018
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buying out the other. I find the argument that the Will is ambiguous because it
does not address the situation which Martin and Ingrid want to happen – that they
keep the house jointly – unpersuasive. There is no evidence that the decedent
intended for Martin and Ingrid to be able to keep the property jointly through the
probate process. In fact, the opposite is true – the Will lays out a detailed process
which does not include that option. Considering the statement “[if] neither
MARTIN BRANS nor INGRID YERGER wishes to retain the property, [then the
property is sold]” in light of Paragraph 5 as a whole, I interpret that language as
addressing what happens if both Martin and Ingrid decide not to avail themselves
of their individual options. I do not construe the language in Paragraph 5 as
intending to offer a third, unstated option – that Martin and Ingrid can retain the
property together. As the Supreme Court opined in Bird v. Wilmington Soc. of
Fine Arts, it is not the role of the Court “to improve on the will as found.” 9 So, I
cannot rewrite or otherwise impute meaning into the Will to address the
Petitioners’ desired option of jointly possessing the property.
Petitioners further contend that the Will’s residuary clause is void because it
names a “dead instrument, the Revocable Trust, as recipient of the residuary estate
8
Id.
9
43 A.2d at 480.
IMO Theodore J. Brans
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and no alternative taker.”10 They argue that the Revocable Trust is a “nullity”
because it dissolves and is distributed at the decedent’s death, terminating the trust
and “any ‘pour-over’ assets do not escape the Will and remain residual.”11 It is
their view that the residuary clause lapses, rendering Paragraph 5’s provision
related to the sale of the property invalid because there is no place for the sale
proceeds to go.12 Petitioners’ argument fails. The case cited by Petitioners, Matter
of Hobson's Estate, is distinguishable. In that case, the Will contained no residuary
clause and the specific devise in the Will – real and personal property at a certain
location – had been disposed of during the testator’s lifetime.13 The Hobson Court
held that the specific legacy became inoperative when the property was sold prior
to the testator’s death and, without a residuary clause, the estate assets would go to
the heirs or next of kin “as in the case of intestacy.”14 Contrary to Hobson, the
Will in this case contains a residuary clause and the real property designated as a
specific devise remains to be distributed under the Will.
If a trust, by its terms, terminates at the decedent’s death, it does not mean
that there is no trust capable of receiving the residuary estate. The duties and
10
Pet. for Instructions, ¶ 24.
11
Id., ¶ 27.
12
Id., ¶ 24.
13
Matter of Hobson's Estate, 456 A.2d 800, 802 (Del. Ch. 1982).
14
Id. at 803.
IMO Theodore J. Brans
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powers of trustees do not immediately cease at the termination of the trust because
the trustees must take the necessary steps to wind up the trust, which include
collecting and distributing the trust assets.15 In this case, the Revocable Trust
provides that, at the death of the decedent, the trust principal was to be distributed
to Martin and Ingrid in equal shares. Martin and Ingrid, as alternate successor
trustees, have the responsibility of winding up the trust affairs and their duties
include collecting and distributing the trust assets according to the terms of the
trust document. And, given that the Revocable Trust was in place and not
modified subsequent to the execution of the Will, it is clear that the decedent
intended to dispose of his residuary estate through the Revocable Trust. So, the
winding up of the Revocable Trust requires collecting and distributing all trust
assets, including any assets remaining in the residuary estate. Accordingly, I find
Petitioners’ argument that the Revocable Trust’s change in status at the decedent’s
death invalidates Paragraph 5 unconvincing.
Petitioners also argue that the property was transferred into the Revocable
Trust prior to the decedent’s death because they assert the trust property includes
“any other property Trustee may hereafter at any time hold or acquire.”16 In fact,
the Revocable Trust provides that additional property may be transferred to the
15
E.g., In re Klosinski, 746 N.Y.S.2d 350, 358 (N.Y. Sur. 2002); Matter of Estate of Herrig, 471
IMO Theodore J. Brans
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trust, including any property that the trustee “may hereafter at any time hold or
acquire hereunder, in trust . . . .”17 To become trust property prior to the transfer
through the Will’s residuary clause, the property would need to be deeded to the
Revocable Trust. In the absence of any evidence that the property was deeded this
way, I conclude that the property remained in the decedent’s estate at the time of
his death.
Petitioners also contend that the Court should interpret the Will to allow the
property to pass to them jointly outside of probate because they were “equal
takers” of the trust and are the first class of heirs, who “would take equally outside
of probate under all other statutory and common law mechanisms.”18 The property
passes under the Will, not through any other means, so the Will controls. Although
Petitioners generally receive equal financial benefits under the Will, Paragraph 5
does not give them “equal” options to keep the property as evidenced by Martin’s
first priority to keep the property.
Petitioners claim an impossibility of performance under the Will because
they assert Paragraph 5 commands that “the property be sold” within eight months
of the decedent’s death, but the heirs cannot validly exercise their options to retain
N.Y.S.2d 809 (N.Y. Sur. 1984).
16
Pet. for Instructions, ¶ 29.
17
Id., Exh. H, § 1 (Trust Estate).
18
Id., ¶ 30.
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the property until after the closing of the eight-month period following the
decedent’s death for creditors to submit their claims. First, the Will does not
mandate the sale of the property under Paragraph 5 within eight months of the
decedent’s death. It does provide that if either Martin or Ingrid decides to retain
the property that they have to pay the other for their share within eight months. If
the conditions in Paragraph 5 related to passing the property to either Martin or
Ingrid are not met, then the property is sold. But there is no time frame specified
for that sale to occur. Second, Delaware law provides that if legacies are paid out
before one year following the personal representative’s appointment or if, at the
time they are paid out, there are not sufficient assets in the estate to cover its
outstanding or potential obligations, then the person receiving the legacy may be
required to provide security.19 In this case, any concerns about sufficient funding
in the estate for claims filed after the delivery of the property and the pay-off to
either Martin or Ingrid under the Will could have been addressed by requiring them
to provide security as a condition of receiving the property or the pay-off. And, if
the property had been sold prior to the completion of the eight-month claim period,
the funds from that sale would remain in the estate to use for the estate’s debts
prior to distribution under the residuary clause.
19
12 Del. C. § 2312.
IMO Theodore J. Brans
C.A. No. 2017-0851-PWG
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Petitioners also assert that the estate’s former counsel failed to advise them
concerning the proper application of the 15-day time frame in Paragraph 5, that
they could take the property through other legal mechanisms, including disclaimer,
or that either could elect to accept a one-half interest in the whole of the real estate
as alternative compensation to a specific cash devise of one-half of the appraised
value of the realty. Although the advice given by the estate’s former counsel may
have affected the Petitioners’ actions with regard to the conditions in Paragraph 5
of the Will, I do not find that the attorney’s actions in this case demonstrate a
scrivener’s error or mistake in the language of the Will, contrary to the testator’s
intent, that would support reformation of the Will.
The real issue is whether the property can pass outside of probate to avoid
the probate tax on the value of the property. The decedent created a testamentary
approach which allowed one of his heirs to take possession of the property if they
followed the specific conditions set forth in Paragraph 5 of the Will, thereby
avoiding the probate tax. I have found that there is no ambiguity in the terms of
the Will as to the conditions that must be met. The triggering event in Paragraph 5
is the obtaining of an appraisal by a mutually agreed upon appraiser. Once they
received the appraisal then the remaining conditions commenced – either Martin,
or Ingrid (if Martin didn’t), had the option to keep the property if they adhered to
IMO Theodore J. Brans
C.A. No. 2017-0851-PWG
January 23, 2018
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the time frames in the Will to make that decision and then paid one-half of the
property value to the other sibling within eight months from the decedent’s death.
Under these provisions in Paragraph 5, the property would pass to one of them, and
the other would receive their share of the value, without the need to pay probate
fees on the property.20 Martin and Ingrid wish to jointly take possession of the
property, which was not an option provided for under Paragraph 5. They failed to
meet the conditions set out in Paragraph 5 and, if that occurred, the Will directs
that the property be sold and the assets pass through the residuary estate, which
would result in the assessment of probate taxes on the sale proceeds.21
Petitioners, who serve as co-executors of the Will, the only beneficiaries
under the Will, and co-trustees of the Revocable Trust, agree concerning how they
would like the decedent’s estate plan to be effectively rewritten. It may appear, at
first glance, harmless to allow the reformation or modification of a will or trust if
all of the beneficiaries are in accord. However, in Delaware, the dead settlor’s
20
I make no comment on whether, following that approach, there may have been other tax
implications not related to probate taxes.
21
Paragraph 5 of the Will does not specify any requirements as to the sale process – or
limitations concerning who could purchase the property.
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intent prevails over the wishes of the living beneficiaries.22 In this case, the
decedent’s intent is clearly expressed in the language of his Will and controls,
preventing the Petitioners’ requested instruction.
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, I recommend that the Court deny the petition for
instruction requesting that the Court enter an order that the decedent’s property
passes to his heirs, Martin and Ingrid, as non-probate property for purposes of
accounting.
Sincerely,
/s/ Patricia W. Griffin
Patricia W. Griffin
Master in Chancery
PWG/kekz
22
See In re Tr. Under Will of Flint for the Benefit of Shadek, 118 A.3d 182, 194 (Del. Ch.
2015)(it is “the policy of the State of Delaware ‘to give maximum effect to the principle of
freedom of disposition and to the enforceability of governing instruments.’ 12 Del. C. § 3303(a).
It would undercut this policy, and might well be described as duplicitous, for our State to
represent to a settlor that our law will respect his dispositions and enforce his governing
instrument, only to enable his beneficiaries to rewrite that instrument after his death.”)