Opinion Number: 1998-NMSC-013
Filing Date: May 13, 1998
Docket No. 24,214
IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF
FRANK V. GERSBACH, deceased,
MAE GERSBACH,
Petitioner-Respondent,
v.
TOM WARREN,
Respondent-Petitioner.
ORIGINAL PROCEEDING ON CERTIORARI
W. Byron Caton, District Judge
Gerding & O'Loughlin, P.C.
Richard L. Gerding
Farmington, NM
for Petitioner-Respondent
Tucker Law Firm, P.C.
Steven L. Tucker
Santa Fe, NM
for Respondent-Petitioner
MINZNER, J.
{1} Tom Warren appeals from a decision of the Court of
Appeals affirming the trial court's judgment in favor of Mae
Gersbach. The trial court granted Mrs. Gersbach's petition to
declare a portion of her husband's will void as a result of
undue influence. In voiding a portion of the will, the trial
court found that Mr. Gersbach and Warren had a confidential
relationship, and that several suspicious circumstances
surrounded a devise to Warren. The suspicious circumstances
identified by the trial court included secrecy on Mr.
Gersbach's part and the fact that in a prior will Mr. Gersbach
had made a different disposition of the property at issue.
The trial court concluded that "[t]he existence of the confidential relationship, coupled with the suspicious
circumstances gives rise to a presumption that the devise
. . . in the [later] will was a result of the undue influence
of Tom Warren . . . ." We hold that Mrs. Gersbach did not
present sufficient evidence to support the finding of secrecy
and that the remaining findings do not support a presumption
of undue influence. We conclude that Mrs. Gersbach did not
satisfy her burden of proof at trial, and we therefore reverse
and remand.
{3} The trial court found that "[p]rior to and subsequent to
the execution of the will, Frank B. Gersbach had explained to
his wife that the purpose [of the 1985 will] was to see that
the children of [Warren] got the ranch if she did not need it
or want it." [RP 164] The Court of Appeals noted that Mrs.
Gersbach testified that Mr. Gersbach told her that it "would
be alright if [Warren] had the property if he would not sell
it and keep it for [Warren's] kids." Gersbach v. Warren, No.
17,302, slip op. at 5 (N.M. Ct. App. Mar. 6, 1997).
{4} Mr. Gersbach met Warren through Warren's father. Mr.
Gersbach and Warren's father had been friends a long time.
Mr. Gersbach rented the farm to Warren for many years, for a
nominal amount of rent. Warren paid rent once a year and if
he was late, Mr. Gersbach charged no interest; he permitted
Warren to pay the balance due as he was able. Over the course
of their relationship, Warren and his family visited the
Gersbachs once a year, but Warren and Mr. Gersbach talked by
telephone frequently.
{5} The trial court found that Mrs. Gersbach had presented
proof of facts, "of which the Court has an abiding
conviction," that Warren and Mr. Gersbach had a confidential
relationship, and that several suspicious circumstances
surrounded the will. Those circumstances were:
a. No consideration was present
for the gift of approximately one-half
(1/2) of the Decedent's Estate to
Respondent with Decedent receiving
nothing in return and Respondent's wife
of almost fifty years [receiving nothing]
in return.
b. The disposition to a non-family
member was unnatural and contrary to the
natural disposition which occurred in
1979.
c. An element of secrecy existed
in that Decedent communicated to
Petitioner that the purpose of the will
changes was to see that Respondent
received the ranch and would keep it for
his children only if Petitioner did not
want or need the ranch.
d. Decedent, Frank B. Gersbach,
was suffering from a loss of short term
memory giving rise to an issue as to his
competency and further that his vision
had failed as a result of macular
degeneration.
e. No specific evidence exists to
establish that the Petitioner
participated in the making of either
will.
f. No discussion occurred which
communicated to Petitioner the effect of
the change.
g. Subsequent to the execution of
the will, Respondent was able to obtain
substantial loans and gifts without
consideration.
The trial court concluded that the devise to Warren of the
Waterflow farm was "void and of no effect and the Waterflow,
New Mexico ranch passes to Petitioner, Mae Gersbach, pursuant
to the residuary clause of the August 12, 1985 will and
testament." The court subsequently entered judgment in favor
of Mrs. Gersbach.
{6} Warren appealed to the Court of Appeals, which affirmed
the trial court in a memorandum opinion. The Court of Appeals
reviewed the trial court's findings for substantial evidence
and concluded that, taken as a whole, there was sufficient
evidence to support the trial court's "conclusion of a presumption of undue influence which was not rebutted by
Respondent." Gersbach v. Warren, slip op. at 11. The Court
of Appeals relied on the existence of a confidential
relationship and three suspicious circumstances: an element of
secrecy on the part of Mr. Gersbach, the lack of consideration
for the gift, and the disposition to a non-family member
contrary to the disposition in the 1979 will. The Court of
Appeals rejected Warren's suggestion that a lack of
consideration is not a suspicious circumstance in the case of
a testamentary disposition; "[g]iven the nature of the concept
of undue influence, strict definitions are not necessarily
useful analytical tools." Gersbach v. Warren, slip op. at 7.
The Court of Appeals also rejected Warren's alternative
suggestion that, to the extent an appellate court takes into
account a lack of consideration, the court's analysis is
related to the broader question of whether a disposition may
be characterized as "unjust." Id. at 8. Finally, the Court
of Appeals rejected Warren's suggestion that his friendship
with Mr. Gersbach "constitutes the necessary consideration."
Id.
{7} We granted certiorari in order to consider the relevance
of a lack of consideration in this case as well as the
appropriate analysis of an "unjust" disposition. We now
reverse. We agree that there was sufficient evidence to
support a finding that Warren had a confidential relationship
with Mr. Gersbach, but we do not believe that there is
sufficient support in the record for the conclusion that a
presumption of undue influence arose.
Some circumstances found to be suspicious
in undue influence cases are (1) old age
and weakened physical or mental condition
of testator; (2) lack of consideration for the bequest; (3) unnatural or unjust
disposition of the property; (4)
participation of beneficiary in procuring
the gift; (5) domination or control over
the donor by a beneficiary; and (6)
secrecy, concealment, or failure to
disclose the gift by a beneficiary.
Montoya v. Torres, 113 N.M. 105, 110, 823 P.2d 905, 910
(1991). This is not an exhaustive list, nor is it a list of
circumstances that are always suspicious. Furthermore, the
presence of any of these circumstances is not in itself
dispositive. "In making its determination the court must
answer the question of whether the donor would have made the
gift but for the undue influence exerted over him or her."
Id. "Undue influence exists when 'testator's volition at the
time of testamentary act was controlled by another and . . .
the resulting will was not the result of the free exercise of
judgment and choice.'" 1 William J. Bowe & Douglas H. Parker,
Page on the Law of Wills § 15.2, at 716 (1960).
{9} Mrs. Gersbach had the burden of proof to establish a
prima facie case of undue influence. See NMSA 1978, §
45-3-407 (1975). She had to do so by clear and convincing
evidence. Montoya v. Torres, 113 N.M. at 109, 823 P.2d at
909. If she established facts sufficient to support a
presumption of undue influence, however, Warren was required
to rebut the presumption. See In re Estate of Gonzales, 108
N.M. 583, 584-85, 775 P.2d 1300, 1301-02 (Ct. App. 1988).
{10} Warren argues that the record before the trial court does
not support a presumption of undue influence. We review the
evidence in the light most favorable to the prevailing party,
recognizing that the standard requires sufficient evidence to
permit "the fact finder to reach an abiding conviction as to
the truth of the facts found." Montoya v. Torres, 113 N.M. at
109, 823 P.2d at 909. We conclude that a presumption of undue
influence did not arise. Mrs. Gersbach failed to establish a
prima facie case of undue influence; though a confidential
relationship existed, there is no evidence that Warren exerted
any power that relationship might have given him. The
circumstances on which the Court of Appeals relied to affirm
the trial court do not justify an inference of improperly-exerted influence.
{11} For purposes of undue influence, in New Mexico, "[a]
confidential or fiduciary relationship exists when one person
places trust and confidence in the integrity and fidelity of
another." In re Estate of Keeney, 121 N.M. 58, 61, 908 P.2d
751, 754 (Ct. App. 1995). That definition, and particularly
its application by the Court of Appeals in In re Will of
Ferrill, 97 N.M. 383, 640 P.2d 489 (Ct. App. 1981), has been the subject of criticism. See McCulloch, Comment, 13 N.M. L.
Rev. at 760 (characterizing the Court's analysis as
"eliminating any meaningful inquiry as to the nature of the
confidential relationship"). We note that in Keeney, as well
as in this case, the Court of Appeals relied on Ferrill in
identifying evidence sufficient to support a finding of a
confidential relationship. See Keeney, 121 N.M. at 61-62, 908
P.2d at 754-55; Gersbach v. Warren, slip op. at 3-4. Whether
or not the application of the definition of a confidential
relationship was misapplied in Ferrill, we think Mrs. Gersbach
produced sufficient evidence to support an inference of a
confidential relationship in this case.
{12} The record indicates Mr. Gersbach and Warren were close
friends. The two often spent time together alone and talked
on the phone frequently, conversations to which Mrs. Gersbach
was not a party. The record also indicates that Mr. Gersbach
trusted Warren. Warren was permitted to pay a minimal rent on
the farm, to do so as he was able, and to run the farm without
a written lease. The trial court found that Mr. Gersbach "had
disclosed to Respondent the location of substantial amounts of
cash located in and around his home in San Miguel County," and
that Mr. Gersbach "loaned money to Respondent without setting
any particular terms for the repayment of those debts." [RP
163] These facts support the district court's finding that a
confidential relationship existed.
{14} We have held that the failure to disclose a gift or
secrecy by a beneficiary is a suspicious circumstance.
Montoya v. Torres, 113 N.M. at 110, 823 P.2d at 910; see also
Doughty v. Morris, 117 N.M. 284, 289, 871 P.2d 380, 385 (Ct.
App. 1994). Under this principle, Mrs. Gersbach was required
to show that Warren had knowledge of the devise and kept it a
secret. There is no such evidence in this case.
{15} Mrs. Gersbach argues that her husband kept the devise to
Warren secret. We have never held that a testator's secrecy
constitutes a suspicious circumstance.
{16} Further, it does not appear from the record that Mr.
Gersbach intended to deceive his wife. In 1985, Mrs. Gersbach
went with her husband to the attorney who had prepared the 1979 wills, and both Mr. and Mrs. Gersbach changed their
wills. Her 1985 will devised to Warren any interest that she
had in the Waterflow farm and stated that the farm was her
husband's separate property by inheritance. In discussing the
wills' contents with Mrs. Gersbach later, Mr. Gersbach may
have described the devise to Warren inaccurately. However,
the evidence indicates that Mr. Gersbach had every intention
of informing his wife of the devise to Warren. Had he not
intended to do so, he would not have involved her as he did in
the 1985 will changes. Because the Waterflow farm was his
separate property, there was no apparent need for her will to
mention the Waterflow farm. Their subsequent discussion
appears to have stemmed from her own question or questions
about the devise, indicating she knew what the wills said.
{17} We conclude that the evidence does not support a finding
that anything other than an outright gift was intended or that
Mr. Gersbach misrepresented his intent. We therefore hold
that the evidence is insufficient to show the element of
secrecy to which our cases have referred. Therefore, the
trial court erred in identifying secrecy as a suspicious
circumstance relevant to a presumption of undue influence in
this case.
{18} Mrs. Gersbach also points to the lack of consideration
for the bequest as a suspicious circumstance. In Ferrill, the
Court of Appeals stated that "[s]ome of the circumstances
which courts have found suspicious in cases where a will was
contested on the grounds of undue influence are:
. . . 2) there is a lack of consideration for the bequest."
In re Will of Ferrill, 97 N.M. at 387, 640 P.2d at 493.See footnote 1 The
Nebraska Supreme Court also listed lack of consideration as a
suspicious circumstance in Estate of Novak, 458 N.W.2d 221,
226 (Neb. 1990). However, Novak's listing ultimately relied
on Ferrill, which Warren correctly notes relied on cases that
did not involve wills. Warren argues that this Court has not
held that a lack of consideration for a testamentary gift
constitutes a suspicious circumstance.
{19} Nevertheless, this Court recently again listed a lack of
consideration as a "suspicious circumstance." Montoya v.
Torres, 113 N.M. at 110, 823 P.2d at 910. We also said that
"[a]lone, the lack of consideration may not be a suspicious
circumstance." Id. at 111, 823 P.2d at 911. In addition, we said that "the principles involved in the application of the
presumption of undue influence are identical with regard to
both wills and deeds." Id., n.1.
{20} In light of Ferrill and Montoya, it is not surprising
that the trial court and the Court of Appeals relied on a lack
of consideration as a suspicious circumstance in this case.
Given the essential nature of a testamentary gift, however, we
think we now must hold that lack of consideration for a
testamentary gift ordinarily is not a suspicious circumstance.
Ordinarily, a testator intends to confer a benefit.
{21} We agree with the Court of Appeals that "strict
definitions are not necessarily useful analytical tools."
Gersbach v. Warren, slip op. at 7. Yet some relationship
among the various circumstances listed as suspicious must be
identified. Otherwise, trial courts cannot be expected to
know when it is appropriate to recognize the existence of a
presumption. We believe that Warren correctly suggests the
lack of consideration may be relevant in analyzing the broader
question of whether the disposition may be characterized as
"unjust." For example, the existence of consideration may
help rebut a presumption of undue influence. Cf. In re
Estate of Strozzi, 120 N.M. 541, 545, 903 P.2d 852, 856 (Ct.
App. 1995) (discussing evidence sufficient to create a prima
facie case of undue influence and remarking that "[a] $1
million ranch estate is an extraordinary amount of
consideration for the work [the donees] performed over only
the last few years of Strozzi's life, or so the jury could
have concluded in light of the evidence"). Because a testator
ordinarily intends to confer a benefit, however, a friendship
of long standing may help prevent a presumption of undue
influence from arising.
{22} Given these principles, we believe that the lack of
consideration is not, independently, a suspicious circumstance
in this case. Therefore, we next consider whether or not the
trial court's finding of an "unnatural" disposition is
supported by the record and, then, whether or not on this
record a presumption of undue influence arose.
{23} The trial court included in its list of suspicious
circumstances the following: "[t]he disposition to a non-family member was unnatural and contrary to the natural
disposition which occurred in 1979." Warren argued to the
Court of Appeals that the district court "may have confused
the concept of the unnatural disposition with the concept of
'the natural object of the testator's bounty.'" See generally
Estate of Strozzi, 120 N.M. at 546, 903 P.2d at 857
(discussing an instruction on "natural objects of [a
testator's] bounty" in connection with the issue of
testamentary capacity). The Court of Appeals rejected this argument, believing that the trial court had taken into
account the "provisions and intent of the 1979 will with the
testimony of both Respondent and Petitioner about the business
and personal relationship between Respondent and Decedent."
Gersbach v. Warren, slip op. at 10. Based on Ferrill, the
Court of Appeals concluded that the trial court was entitled
to rely on the disposition of a prior will to determine
whether the disposition of a subsequent will is "unnatural or
unjust." Id. at 9 (citing Ferrill, 97 N.M. at 388, 640 P.2d
at 494).
{24} As a statement of law, the trial court's characterization
of the prior gift as "natural" and the later gift as
"unnatural" is unremarkable. It has been suggested that an
"unnatural" devise is one in which the testator leaves a
portion of his or her estate to someone not the natural object
of one's bounty, someone to whom the testator would not have
been expected to devise his property. See In re Nelson's
Estate, 266 P.2d 238, 244-45 (Wyo. 1954). A "natural
disposition" has been defined as one "which provides for a
testator's heirs at law. As one court succinctly put it:
'[T]he natural object of a will maker's bounty is one related
to him/her by consanguinity.'" Roy D. Madoff, Unmasking Undue
Influence, 81 Minn. L. Rev. 571, 590 (1997). We must conclude
the gift to Warren is "unnatural" because he would not inherit
under the laws of intestacy and that the prior gift to Mrs.
Gersbach was "natural" because she would have been an
intestate heir.
{25} "Courts sometimes look to a prior will, if one exists, as
evidence of the naturalness of the disposition." Madoff,
Unmasking Undue Influence, 81 Minn. L. Rev. at 591. However,
evidence of what a prior will provided is of limited utility
in evaluating the validity of provisions in a subsequent will.
[I]f a testator provided for his family
in an earlier will and then provided for
a person with whom he had a confidential
relationship, then the former will
frequently serves as evidence of the
unnaturalness of the subsequent
disposition. However, if instead the
prior will provided for a disposition to
someone other than a family member (i.e.,
a disposition which is perceived by the
court as "unnatural"), then rather than
being taken as evidence of the
naturalness of the subsequent
disposition, courts tend instead to view
the prior will as evidence of a
testator's susceptibility to undue
influence.
Id. at 592 (footnotes omitted).
{26} No one has suggested that Warren's option to purchase the
Waterflow farm at seventy-five percent of appraised value was
evidence of a susceptibility to undue influence. If the 1979
will was not the result of undue influence, the 1985 will
might be viewed as expanding a prior gift and thus as not
"unnatural" in the sense of "unanticipated," and thus
"suspicious." Further, the subsequent will provides for both
a family member and a non-family member and provides as a gift
to the non-family member property he otherwise would have had
an option to purchase at a favorable price had the family
member retained the farm until her death. The later will
reduced the expectancy interest of a spouse and enlarged that
of a friend, treating them roughly as equals. We think this
change is of limited utility in evaluating the validity of the
later devise. Cf. Ferrill, 97 N.M. at 388, 640 P.2d at 494
(holding jury might have concluded that the later disposition
was unnatural or unjust when decedent's prior will left most
of her estate to her grandson).
{27} The trial court may have believed the change in wills was
unfair and thus unjust. If so, the court's determination must
be analyzed as a statement of fact. As a statement of fact,
however, the trial court's determination requires additional
evidence or findings of fact, or further inferences from the
evidence or findings, to support a determination that the
disposition was unjust.
{28} The trial court may have questioned why Mr. Gersbach left
his "natural" heir only part of his estate. The trial court
may have questioned why Mr. Gersbach changed his will. Unless
the evidence presented by Mrs. Gersbach justified an inference
that the gift was the result of improperly exerted influence,
such questions do not require an answer; Mr. Gersbach's
motive or reasons need not be identified and proved. See
generally Margaret B. Alcock, Comment, Estates and Trusts, 13
N.M. L. Rev. 395, 401 (1983) (characterizing the result in
Ferrill as making it "virtually impossible for a testator who
is old and infirm to dispose of his property in a manner that
a judge or jury might interpret as unnatural or unjust.")
Finally, then, we turn to the ultimate issue of whether Mrs.
Gersbach produced sufficient evidence to give rise to a
presumption of undue influence.
{29} To give rise to a presumption of undue influence, and the
need for the beneficiary to rebut the presumption, the
evidence must justify an inference of misconduct, which
produced a desired or foreseeable result. That is what this
Court meant in Montoya when we said that "the court must
answer the question of whether the donor would have made the
gift but for the undue influence exerted over him or her."
Montoya, 113 N.M. at 110, 823 P.2d at 910. The trial court's
findings establish a very generous testamentary gift to a close friend rather than to the testator's spouse or another
relative. The gift is larger than that made in a prior will
but the same property is at issue. There is no evidence that
Warren abused the relationship or dominated Mr. Gersbach.
There is no evidence Warren's confidential relationship,
rather than his friendship, led to the gift. There is no
evidence that Mr. Gersbach acted other than of his own
volition. We have, finally, only the gift itself. That is
not enough to support an inference of improperly exerted
influence.
{30} The trial court may have believed that the gift of the
Waterflow farm was so large that Warren must have exerted
undue influence on Mr. Gersbach. The court listed first among
"suspicious circumstances" the lack of consideration. That
circumstance, in this case, does not justify a presumption of
undue influence. Montoya v. Torres, 113 N.M. at 111, 823 P.2d
at 911. Warren's longstanding friendship with Mr. Gersbach,
Warren's lengthy occupation of the farm as lessee, and the
1979 will's provision of an option for him to purchase at a
favorable price all are consistent with a donative transfer.
We cannot recognize a presumption of undue influence on these
facts without speculating about Mr. Gersbach's motive or
reasons. We cannot speculate about motive or reasons on these
facts without jeopardizing the principle of testamentary
freedom. See generally NMSA 1978, § 45-1-102(B)(2) (1975)
("The underlying purposes and policies of the Probate Code
are: . . . (2) to discover and make effective the intent of a
decedent in distribution of his property"). Otherwise, any
significant testamentary gift outside the class of intestate
takers would be vulnerable to a contest on the basis of undue
influence. Cf. § 45-1-102(B)(4) ("The underlying purposes and
policies of the Probate Code are: . . . (3) to promote a
speedy and efficient system for the settlement of the estate
of the decedent").
{31} In order to uphold the Court of Appeals' memorandum
opinion and the trial court's judgment, we would need to
conclude that, viewing the evidence in the light most
favorable to Mrs. Gersbach, a reasonable fact finder could
find clear and convincing evidence that the testator made a
gift he would not have made absent improper influence. We
hold that the evidence Mrs. Gersbach put forward did not
satisfy her burden. We reverse the Court of Appeals and
remand this cause to district court for entry of a judgment
upholding Mr. Gersbach's disposition of the Waterflow farm to
Warren. Warren shall recover his appellate costs.
{32} IT IS SO ORDERED.
____________________________
PAMELA B. MINZNER, Justice
WE CONCUR:
__________________________________
GENE E. FRANCHINI, Chief Justice
__________________________________
JOSEPH F. BACA, Justice
__________________________________
PATRICIO M. SERNA, Justice
__________________________________
DAN A. McKINNON, III, Justice