Brescia v. UBS Financial Services Inc.
Filing
32
///ORDER granting 27 Motion for Summary Judgment filed by Glen Brescia; denying 29 Motion for Summary Judgment filed by The Estate of Toni Ann Brescia. The clerk shall enter judgment accordingly and close the case. If no appeal of the judgment is taken within the time allowed by rule, the clerk shall release the interpleader funds, together with interest, to Glen. So Ordered by Chief Judge Joseph N. Laplante.(jb)
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
DISTRICT OF NEW HAMPSHIRE
UBS Financial
Services, Inc.
Civil No. 13-cv-4-JNL
Opinion No. 2014 DNH 031
v.
Glen Brescia and
the Estate of Toni
Ann Brescia
MEMORANDUM ORDER
This is a dispute over whether two individual retirement
accounts (“IRAs”), held by a decedent, Toni Ann Brescia, belong
to her estate or to her ex-husband, Glen Brescia.
Despite their
intervening divorce, Glen was designated as the beneficiary of
the accounts at the time of Toni Ann’s death.
In making a claim
to the IRAs nonetheless, the estate argues that, through their
divorce stipulation and accompanying “Release Agreement,” Toni
Ann and Glen “unambiguously articulate[d] an intent to relinquish
any anticipatory or expectancy interest in each other[s’]
investments or retirement accounts,” or, in any event, that this
court should reform the agreement to provide for such a result.
Glen disagrees as to both the estate’s interpretation of the
agreement and its right to reformation.
This court has diversity jurisdiction over this action, see
28 U.S.C. § 1332(a)(1), which Glen, a citizen of Massachusetts,
commenced by seeking a declaratory judgment of his sole right to
the IRAs against UBS Financial Services, Inc., the custodian of
the account and a citizen of New Jersey.
UBS responded by
bringing a third-party complaint for interpleader, see 28 U.S.C.
§ 1335, against both Glen and the estate, which is a citizen of
New Hampshire, see id. § 1332(c)(2).
The estate, for its part,
then brought a cross-claim against Glen, seeking a declaratory
judgment of its sole right to the IRAs.1
Each party has filed a
motion seeking summary judgment, see Fed. R. Civ. P. 56, on its
own claim, and against the other’s claim, to the IRAs.
The
parties declined the court’s offer of oral argument.
For the reasons explained fully below, the court grants
Glen’s motion for summary judgment, and denies the estate’s,
resulting in an award of the IRAs to Glen.
The New Hampshire
Supreme Court has held that “a divorce decree or stipulation
which merely releases all claims of one party to the property of
the other does not, in the insurance policy context, destroy the
beneficiary status of the first party, because the beneficiary
status is not a vested property right.”
N.H. 50, 59 (1991).
Dubois v. Smith, 135
This rule, which the New Hampshire Supreme
Court has since applied to an IRA as well, Est. of Tremaine ex
1
UBS then deposited the contents of the IRAs into court and
was dismissed from the action upon the parties’ joint motion.
See Order of Feb. 25, 2013.
2
rel. Tremaine v. Tremaine, 146 N.H. 674 (2001), dictates the
outcome here.
Dubois likewise dooms the estate’s reformation
claim, since here (as there) the record contains no evidence that
the parties “agreed to forever forfeit [the ex-spouse’s]
beneficiary interest.”
omitted).
135 N.H. at 60 (quotation formatting
So, despite the estate’s game attempts to distinguish
these cases--and whatever the equitable appeal of its suggestion
that Toni Ann would “want [her] assets to be inherited by family
members or loved ones, instead of [her] ex-spouse[]”--this court
must award the IRAs to Glen.
I.
Applicable legal standard
Summary judgment is appropriate where “the movant shows that
there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the
movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.”
P. 56(a).
Fed. R. Civ.
A dispute is “genuine” if it could reasonably be
resolved in either party's favor at trial, and “material” if it
could sway the outcome under applicable law.
See Estrada v.
Rhode Island, 594 F.3d 56, 62 (1st Cir. 2010).
In analyzing a
summary judgment motion, the court “views all facts and draws all
reasonable inferences in the light most favorable to the
non-moving” parties.
Id.
On cross-motions for summary judgment,
“the court must consider each motion separately, drawing
inferences against each movant in turn.”
3
Merchants Ins. Co. of
N.H., Inc. v. U.S. Fid. & Guar. Co., 143 F.3d 5, 7 (1st Cir.
1998) (quotation marks omitted).
II.
Background
The underlying facts are more or less undisputed.
Toni Ann were married in 1999.
Glen and
During the marriage, Toni Ann
opened two IRA accounts with UBS, executing, for each account, an
“IRA Application and Adoption Agreement” with UBS.2
In relevant
part, each agreement (a) identified Glen as the “First Primary
Beneficiary,” (b) did not identify any “Second Primary
Beneficiary,” or contingent beneficiaries, and (c) acknowledged
that “any interest in this IRA that is not effectively disposed
of by the beneficiary designation I make in this Application or
any subsequent beneficiary designation will be paid to my
surviving spouse and if no surviving spouse to my estate.”
In 2006, Glen and Toni Ann filed for divorce with the
then-Salem Family Division of the Rockingham County Superior
Court.
Their marriage produced no children.
The divorce was
granted when the court approved a “Final Decree on Petition for
Divorce or Legal Separation” executed and submitted by the
parties in August 2006.
While the form provided boxes and blanks
2
The accounts were not part of any employee benefit or
pension plan so as to bring them within the provisions of the
Employee Retirement Income Security Act, 29 U.S.C. § 1001 et seq.
4
to complete for the division of various marital assets, many of
the blanks had been marked “see attached,” an apparent reference
to a “list of the division of property” appended to the form, and
also signed by each of the parties.
In relevant part, this list
stated, “IRA - Each keep their own.”
On the same day they submitted the form divorce decree, the
parties also executed the “Release Agreement” mentioned above.
This document states, in pertinent part, that the parties
are not represented by Counsel, and they have agreed
that they desire and intend to divide their assets
independently and without legal assistance. Husband
and Wife drafted an instrument to make a final and
complete settlement of all matters relating to the
interests of each with respect to current assets and
liabilities . . . .
Heretofore [sic], at this time the Husband and the Wife
hereby waive[], renounce[], and relinquish[] unto each
other, their respective heirs, executors,
administrators and assigns forever, in law or in
equity, all and any interest of any kind or character
which either may have or may hereafter acquire in or to
any real or personal property of the other and whether
now owned or hereafter acquired by either.
Toni Ann died in a car accident nearly six years later, on
May 5, 2012.
Her estate has since come forward with a “Last Will
and Testament,” which she purportedly executed on April 23, 2012,
just 12 days prior to her death.3
3
This instrument leaves (with
While the version of this instrument filed with this court
bears Toni Ann’s purported signature, as well as those of two
witnesses to her attestation, Glen says he “believes it was never
executed by [her] and suspects that her signature was forged
5
one exception not relevant here) “everything I own.
House, cars,
bank accounts, IRAs, investments etc.” to one Joseph Addario,
whom the instrument identifies as Toni Ann’s “Domestic Partner,”
and also names as the executor of the estate.
Toni Ann had no
children at the time of her death.
As noted at the outset, Toni Ann had not changed the
beneficiary designation in favor of Glen on either of the IRAs at
any point.
At the time UBS deposited the contents of the IRAs
into this court, see note 1, supra, they contained a total of
$149,379.32.
III. Analysis
As the New Hampshire Supreme Court has held, a
“beneficiary’s interest in [a life insurance] policy does not
rise to the level of a vested property interest unless the
insured is somehow prohibited from changing the beneficiary
after her decease.” Nevertheless, in ruling on the parties’
motions for summary judgment, the court has simply assumed that
the “Last Will and Testament” is authentic--i.e., it is a
document drafted, if not signed, by Toni Ann, see Fed. R. Evid.
901--without regard to whether it satisfies the requisites of a
valid will under New Hampshire law. As Glen points out, the
court need not decide that question to resolve this dispute
between him and the estate over the IRAs. In any event, this
court almost certainly lacks jurisdiction to determine the
validity of the purported will. See Marshall v. Marshall, 547
U.S. 293, 311 (2006) (“the probate exception reserves to state
probate courts the probate or annulment of a will and the
administration of a decedent’s estate”).
6
designated in the policy.”
Dubois, 135 N.H. at 58.
This is so,
the court explained, because “the insured may change the
designated beneficiary at any time, provided that the insured has
not contracted away this right.”
Id.
Accordingly, as noted
above, “a divorce decree or stipulation which merely releases all
claims of one party to the property of the other does not, in the
insurance policy context, destroy the beneficiary status of the
first party, because the beneficiary interest is not a vested
property right.”
Id. at 59.
As also noted above, the New
Hampshire Supreme Court has applied these very same principles in
the IRA context, see Tremaine, 146 N.H. at 675, and the parties
agree that these principles apply in this case.
The estate argues that, despite its name, the parties’
“Release Agreement” did more than merely “release all claims of
one party to the property of the other.”
In fact, the estate
maintains, the agreement--together with the contemporaneous
divorce decree--“expressed the parties’ mutual intent to
renounce, extinguish and revoke their existing and anticipatory
interests in either party’s retirement accounts.”
The
interpretation of the agreement and the decree are questions of
law for the court.
See Birch Broad., Inc. v. Capitol Broad.
Corp., 161 N.H. 192, 196 (2010); Tremaine, 146 N.H. at 675.
7
As the New Hampshire Supreme Court held in Tremaine, “a
divorce decree must unambiguously evidence an intent to remove a
beneficiary in order to effectively alter an original designation
under an IRA contract.”
146 N.H. at 675 (quotation marks and
bracketing omitted; emphasis added).
The court ruled there that
the language of the parties’ stipulated divorce decree--“[e]ach
party is awarded any interest in any pension, retirement, 401k,
IRA or other retirement account that each one may have and as
shown on her or his respective Financial Affidavit, free and
clear of any right, title, interest, or claim of the other”--did
not suffice.
Id. at 674-76.
“While it may be that the
stipulation of the parties in the decree was intended to
terminate the [ex-spouse’s] beneficiary interest in the IRA,” the
court allowed, “the language could be interpreted to mean that
[the ex-spouse] was to retain her interest.
Accordingly, the
divorce decree fails to unambiguously change the beneficiary
designation.”
Id. at 676.
The language of the parties’ agreement in this case likewise
fails to unambiguously demonstrate their intent to remove Glen as
a beneficiary of Toni Ann’s IRAs.
Indeed, the relevant
provisions of the agreement here are nearly identical to those in
Tremaine in both the purported allocation and the purported
8
relinquishment of the parties’ rights to the IRAs.
Here, the
“division of property” states, “IRA - Each keep their own,” while
the stipulation in Tremaine stated, “[e]ach party is awarded any
interest in any pension, retirement, 401k, IRA or other
retirement account that each one may have.”
Here, the “Release
Agreement” states that each divorcing spouse “hereby waives,
renounces, and relinquishes . . . all and any interest of any
kind or character which either may have or may hereafter acquire
in or to any real or personal property of the other,” while the
stipulation in Tremaine awarded each spouse “any interest” in his
or her own IRA “free and clear of any right, title, interest, or
claim of the other.”
Tremaine, then, is controlling here.
In arguing to the contrary, the estate relies on what it
calls the “far more encompassing and specific” language of the
agreements between Toni Ann and Glen.
In relevant part, however,
that language is no more “encompassing” or “specific” than the
language in Tremaine, under which, again, “[e]ach party [was]
awarded any interest in any . . . IRA . . . each one may have
. . . , free and clear of any right, title, interest or claim of
the other.” (emphases added).
If--as the New Hampshire Supreme
Court ruled--such language fails to “unambiguously evidence an
intent to remove a beneficiary in order to effectively alter
[the] original designation under [the] IRA contract[s],” 146 N.H.
9
at 675, then the language here fails at that task as well.
Cf.
Dubois, 135 N.H. at 57 (ruling that divorce stipulation requiring
husband to “‘make his children the beneficiaries of his insurance
policies’ . . . contracted away his right to name anyone else
[the] beneficiary” and therefore voided his subsequent
designation of a subsequent wife).
In any event, the estate’s focus on the breadth of the
“Release Agreement”--including its expressed intention “to make a
final and complete settlement of all matters relating to the
interests and obligations of each with respect to current assets
and liabilities”--is misplaced.
Again, “a divorce decree or
stipulation which merely releases all claims of one party to the
property of the other does not . . . destroy the beneficiary
status of the first party, because the beneficiary status is not
a vested property right.”
Id. at 59 (emphasis added).
The
simple designation of a beneficiary--which is all that ever
happened here--“never bestow[s] a vested property interest in the
policy.”
Id.
It follows that Glen’s “[b]eing a beneficiary was
not a ‘property right,’ the result of an ‘obligation . . . ,’ a
‘right,’ or a ‘claim’ which was waived and relinquished by the
property settlement agreement,” id. (quotation formatting
altered), whatever the breadth of its waiver language.
10
The estate argues that “[w]hile the Dubois decision
distinguishes a beneficiary’s expectancy interests from a vested
property right, [Glen] and Toni Ann did not.”
This is so, the
estate argues, “given the identification of the couples’ [sic]
IRA[s] as ‘property’” in the “division of property” attachment to
their stipulated divorce decree.
But this argument--that a
divorce decree should be read to incorporate the parties’
misunderstanding of a legal term so as to embrace their
beneficiary interests when the term, properly understood, does
not--has been squarely rejected by the New Hampshire Supreme
Court.
See Est. of Frederick v. Frederick, 141 N.H. 530, 532-33
(1996).
There, the estate of the decedent ex-spouse argued that
a provision in the parties’ divorce decree to “‘release each
other from any and all obligations incurred during the marriage’
. . . when viewed in light of the context of the entire
agreement, revealed the decedent’s intent to change her
beneficiary designation.”
omitted).
Id. at 532 (ellipse by the court
Rejecting this argument, the court stated that it
“fail[ed] to see how the word ‘obligations’ can be read to
include the designation of a beneficiary, as there was no
requirement, legal or otherwise, that the decedent name or
continue the [ex-spouse] as beneficiary.”
11
Id.
Likewise, as just discussed, the designation of a
beneficiary does not convey any property right, so the term
“property” cannot be read to include each party’s status as a
beneficiary of the other’s IRAs.
This conclusion holds,
moreover, despite the fact that the parties here included “IRAs”
(without specifying further) on the “division of property”--after
all, the divorce stipulation in Tremaine specifically awarded
each spouse “any interest in any . . . IRA . . . that each one
may have,” but the court nevertheless found this inadequate to
unambiguously effect the ex-spouses’ removal as each other’s
beneficiaries, as already discussed.
The estate’s claim, once
again, runs headlong into Tremaine.
As the New Hampshire Supreme Court instructed in Dubois,
removing an ex-spouse as a beneficiary requires the “effort to
change [the] beneficiary on a policy after the divorce or include
an explicit waiver or relinquishment of the beneficiary interest
in the divorce decree.”
altered).
Id. at 60
(quotation formatting
Here, Toni Ann never changed the beneficiary of either
of her IRAs in the nearly six years that passed between her
divorce from Glen and her death, and, as just discussed at
length, nothing in the divorce stipulation, nor the
contemporaneous “Release Agreement,” amounts to the “explicit
12
waiver or relinquishment of [Glen’s] beneficiary interest”
contemplated by the controlling case law.
Indeed, “a divorce decree may only change a beneficiary
designation when it expressly states that the parties intend such
a result.”
Frederick, 141 N.H. at 532 (emphasis added).
The
stipulated decree, and the contemporaneous release agreement,
contain no such express statement--and the provisions that award
each divorcing spouse his or her own IRAs, and release each
divorcing spouse’s claim to the other’s property, are simply not
an effective substitute, as the New Hampshire Supreme Court has
held.
See Tremaine, 146 N.H. at 676.
Finally, controlling New Hampshire case law also dooms the
estate’s claim for reformation of the divorce stipulation and
release agreement “to correct a mistake to express the parties’
true intent.”
Under New Hampshire law, “reformation will only be
granted where the evidence is clear and convincing that (1) there
was an actual agreement between the parties, (2) there was an
agreement to put the agreement in writing and (3) there is a
variance between the prior agreement and the writing.”
Dubois,
135 N.H. at 60 (quoting Erin Foods Servs., Inc. v. 688 Props.,
119 N.H. 232 (1979) (formatting altered)).
Here, for the reasons just discussed at length, the
stipulation and release do not show the requisite “actual
13
agreement,” i.e., that Glen and Toni Ann “agreed to forever
forfeit [Glen’s] beneficiary interest” in Toni Ann’s IRAs.
Id.
While the estate points to the provision in Toni Ann’s purported
will that lists her IRAs among the property she wanted left to
Addario,4 this fails to support the reformation claim, for at
least two reasons.
First, in evaluating such a claim, “[t]he intent of the
parties is generally examined as of the time of contracting.”
Id.
Yet the purported will was not drafted until nearly 6 years
after the divorce stipulation and release agreement.
Second,
whatever the purported will says about Toni Ann’s intent at any
point, it says little if anything about the intent she and Glen
shared in coming up with the stipulation and decree.
And shared,
rather than unilateral, intent is what determines the existence
of an enforceable agreement (which, of course, requires a meeting
of the minds as to the relevant terms).
4
See, e.g., In re Sanborn
The estate also relies on the purported will as “extrinsic
evidence” supporting its interpretation of the release agreement.
This argument stumbles out of the gate. A court may consider
extrinsic evidence in interpreting an agreement only if the
agreement is ambiguous or incomplete. See, e.g., Richey v.
Leighton, 137 N.H. 661, 663 (1993). If, however, the “Release
Agreement” is indeed ambiguous or silent as to whether it changes
the beneficiary designation then, a fortiori, it fails to
“unambiguously change the beneficiary designation” as required by
New Hampshire law. Tremaine, 146 N.H. at 676. In any event, for
the reasons discussed infra, a document that Toni Ann drafted in
2012 says next to nothing about the intent she and Glen shared in
coming up with the divorce stipulation and release in 2006.
14
Reg’l Sch. Dist., 133 N.H. 513, 518 (1990).
Indeed, in Dubois,
the New Hampshire Supreme Court rejected a claim to reform the
divorce decree so that it divested the ex-spouse of her status as
a beneficiary of the decedent’s life insurance policy, ruling
that the proffered evidence to that effect--a letter written by
the decedent four years after the entry of the decree that
referenced the policy but “stated that he felt no need to provide
for [the ex-spouse] in his will”--failed to “support a conclusion
that the [ex-spouse’s] beneficiary interest was forfeited by
mutual agreement.”
135 N.H. at 60.
Here, likewise, no rational
finder of fact could accept the purported will as clear and
convincing evidence that Glen and Toni Ann agreed to forever
forfeit his interest as a beneficiary in her IRAs at the time
they signed the stipulation and release agreement.5
So Glen remains the beneficiary of the IRAs.
While, as the
estate suggests, this result may be contrary to what Toni Ann
5
In support of its reformation argument, the estate also
relies on a New Hampshire statute (and similar statutes in many
other states) providing that a “divorce or annulment revokes any
disposition of property made by [a] trust to the former spouse”
of a grantor who has reserved the power to alter, amend, revoke,
or terminate the provisions of the trust. N.H. Rev. Stat. Ann.
§ 551:13, III. But Toni Ann’s IRAs were not held in a trust for
Glen’s benefit, so this statute does not apply (as the estate
seems to acknowledge in invoking the “policy interest” allegedly
embodied in the statute rather than its actual effect). To the
contrary, New Hampshire follows the common-law rule that “divorce
alone does not revoke an individual’s status as a contractually
designated beneficiary.” Tremaine, 146 N.H. at 675.
15
intended prior to her death--at least insofar as that intent is
accurately reflected by her purported will--one of the reasons
the New Hampshire Supreme Court has given for its rule demanding
the unambiguous removal of a beneficiary is to “avoid[]
speculating about what the parties may have intended” in the
guise of attempting to construe “an ambiguity in [a] divorce
decree.”
Dubois, 135 N.H. at 60 (quotation formatting altered).
This court, sitting in diversity, is bound to apply that rule as
fashioned by the New Hampshire Supreme Court, regardless of the
strength of the reasons behind it or, for that matter, the
arguably unjust result it might produce in any particular case.
See, e.g., Braga v. Genlyte Group, Inc., 420 F.3d 35, 42 (1st
Cir. 2005).
IV.
Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, Glen’s motion for summary
judgment6 is GRANTED and the estate’s motion for summary
judgment7 is DENIED.
The clerk shall enter judgment accordingly
and close the case.
If no appeal of the judgment is taken within
the time allowed by rule, the clerk shall release the
interpleaded funds, together with interest, to Glen.
6
Document no. 27.
7
Document no. 29.
16
SO ORDERED.
____________________________
Joseph N. Laplante
United States District Judge
Dated:
cc:
February 12, 2014
David E. Buckley, Esq.
Patrick E. Donovan, Esq.
17
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