In re the Estate of Fairbairn
In the Matter of the Estate of Howard J. Fairbairn, Barbara Fairbairn, as of Howard J. Fairbairn, Appellant Carolyn DeSilva
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Appeal from an order of the Surrogateās Court of Delaware County (Becker, S.), entered August 14, 2006, which dismissed petitionerās application to disqualify respondent from taking any part of decedentās estate pursuant to a no contest clause.
In 2002, petitioner, who was decedentās second wife and is executor of his estate, sought to probate decedentās will dated June 1997. Richard Fairbairn, decedentās son from a prior marriage, filed objections to the will, claiming improper execution, lack of testamentary capacity, and undue influence and fraud upon decedent by petitioner. This Court ultimately affirmed a Surrogateās Court order granting petitionerās motion for summary judgment dismissing the objections and admitting the will to probate (Matter of Fairbairn, 9 AD3d 579 [2004], lv denied 3 NY3d 612 [2004]).
Petitioner then commenced this proceeding to invoke the no contest clause against respondent, decedentās daughter. Petitioner asserted that respondent provided two letters to
Surrogateās Court ultimately dismissed petitionerās application herein, concluding that petitioner failed to establish that respondent took any actions opposing probate of the will. Petitioner appeals and we now affirm.
The no contest clause in decedentās will provides: āIf any beneficiary under this Will shall in any manner oppose the probate of this Will or any of its provisions in any manner whatsoever, then in such event any share or interest in my estate given to such beneficiary under this Will shall be hereby revoked and shall be distributed as part of my residuary estateā (emphasis added). It is well settled that such no contest clauses are enforceable, āalthough not favored and [must be] strictly construedā (Matter of Ellis, 252 AD2d 118, 127 [1998], lv denied 93 NY2d 805 [1999]; see EPTL 3-3.5 [b]). While the clause at issue here is broad, it provided for revocation of a beneficiaryās interest only if the beneficiary opposed probate of the will or its provisions. It is undisputed, however, that in August 2002, respondent signed a waiver and consent, admitting the validity of the will and consenting to probate and petitionerās appointment as executor. Moreover, there is no evidence to support petitionerās speculative assertion that respondent cooperated with Fairbairn in filing his objections or that the objections were the product of a conspiracy between petitioner and Fairbairn (cf. Matter of Ellis, 252 AD2d at 127-128; Matter of Pasternack, 52 Misc 2d 413, 415-416 [1966]). In the absence of any evidence of affirmative acts taken by respondent to challenge or oppose the will, we agree with Surrogateās Court that merely sending Fairbairnās attorney two lettersāwhich expressed personal dislike of both petitioner and her motives for marrying decedent but do not address either the validity of the will or petitionerās fitness as executorāwas not sufficient to trigger the no contest clause and bar respondent from taking under the will.
Mugglin, Rose, Lahtinen and Kane, JJ., concur. Ordered that the order is affirmed, with costs.
A more thorough recitation of the facts may be found in our prior decision.