Matter of Hattala: Undue Influence Objections Require Specific, Substantial Proof to Defeat Summary Judgment in Probate
Introduction
Matter of Hattala (Appellate Division, Third Department, Dec. 31, 2025) addresses when a will contestant’s undue influence claim can survive summary judgment in a contested probate proceeding under SCPA article 14. The decedent, Melita M. Hattala, executed reciprocal wills with her husband in 1996 naming each other as sole beneficiary and executor and naming their three daughters—Tina Kunkel (the petitioner and executor), Dianna Hattala, and Melita A. Nagerl—as alternate equal beneficiaries. After the husband’s death in 2017, the decedent’s relationships with respondents deteriorated, culminating in two domestic incidents in 2021 (including a felony charge against Nagerl and an order of protection). Two months later, the decedent executed a new will in 2021 expressly disinheriting respondents and naming petitioner as sole beneficiary and executor.
After the decedent died, petitioner sought probate. Respondents objected on execution, capacity, undue influence, and fraud. Following an SCPA 1404 examination, petitioner moved for summary judgment. By the time of the appeal, the only issue remaining was undue influence: whether respondents produced competent, nonconclusory proof that petitioner actually exercised undue influence over the decedent’s testamentary act.
Summary of the Opinion
The Third Department affirmed Surrogate’s Court’s grant of summary judgment dismissing the undue influence objection and admitting the 2021 will to probate. The court held that petitioner established a prima facie case for probate through the will’s executed attestation clause, a self-proving affidavit, and testimony from the drafting attorney and the attorney’s legal assistant. The burden then shifted to respondents, who failed to raise a triable issue of fact because their claims of undue influence were conclusory and speculative and contradicted by the record.
The court emphasized that common assistance (scheduling, transportation, paperwork) and generalized allegations of control or isolation do not demonstrate the “actual exercise” of undue influence. The court further noted that the record contained a reasonable alternative explanation for the testamentary change: documented mistreatment of the decedent by respondents. Finally, the court declined to disturb Surrogate’s Court’s discretionary award of costs and allowances based on a finding that the contest was brought in bad faith (SCPA 2302 [3] [a]) and rejected other contentions, including petitioner’s request for sanctions.
Analysis
Precedents Cited
1) Summary judgment standards in contested probate
- Matter of Minervini, 297 AD2d 423 (3d Dept 2002): Quoted for the proposition that, although summary judgment should be used cautiously, it is proper where the proponent makes a prima facie showing for probate and the objectant fails to raise genuine factual issues. Hattala uses this framework to validate disposing of meritless objections without trial.
- Matter of Ostrander, 237 AD3d 1444 (3d Dept 2025): Cited for application of summary judgment in probate and for what suffices to establish a prima facie case (attestation clause, self-proving affidavit, and supporting proof). Hattala aligns its burden-shifting analysis with Ostrander.
2) Elements and proof requirements for undue influence
- Matter of Linich, 213 AD3d 1 (3d Dept 2023) and Matter of Dralle, 192 AD3d 1239 (3d Dept 2021): Cited for the familiar triad—“motive, opportunity, and the actual exercise” of undue influence. Hattala focuses on the “actual exercise” prong and finds respondents’ proof lacking.
- Matter of Mary, 202 AD3d 1418 (3d Dept 2022) and Matter of Walther, 6 NY2d 49 (1959): Cited for the core principle that undue influence must be so pervasive that the will becomes the influencer’s will, not the testator’s. Hattala uses this as the benchmark and finds no evidence that the decedent’s free agency was overborne.
- Matter of Timer, 221 AD3d 1103 (3d Dept 2023) and Matter of Haley, 189 AD3d 2000 (3d Dept 2020): Cited for the rule that conclusory allegations and speculation—particularly without specificity as to “times, dates and places”—do not raise a triable issue of fact. This becomes decisive in Hattala, where respondents offer generalized narratives rather than concrete acts of coercion tied to the will’s execution.
- Matter of Prevratil, 121 AD3d 137 (3d Dept 2014): Cited for two propositions: (i) undue influence may be proven circumstantially but the proof must be “of a substantial nature”; and (ii) discussion of burden shifting where a confidential relationship is shown. Hattala treats the absence of a confidential-relationship argument (and record support) as foreclosing any shifted burden.
- Matter of Ruhle, 173 AD3d 1389 (3d Dept 2019), Matter of Nofal, 35 AD3d 1132 (3d Dept 2006), and Matter of Paigo, 53 AD3d 836 (3d Dept 2008): Used to distinguish between permissible assistance and suspicious participation. Hattala aligns with Ruhle and Nofal (no undue influence where the beneficiary is not present for substantive discussions or execution), and contrasts cases like Paigo where facts can support an inference of improper procurement.
- Matter of Greenwald, 47 AD3d 1036 (3d Dept 2008): Cited for the proposition that ordinary, “commonplace” assistance in effectuating estate planning does not itself create a triable issue of undue influence.
- Matter of Malone, 46 AD3d 975 (3d Dept 2007): Cited to rebut “isolation” theories where the record shows ongoing access to the decedent. Hattala uses it to underscore that claimed isolation was contradicted by respondents’ own proof.
- Matter of Johnson, 6 AD3d 859 (3d Dept 2004): Used as a comparator when evaluating inferences and alternative explanations for testamentary changes. Hattala distinguishes scenarios where the record supports undue influence rather than an independent motive for disinheritance.
3) Inference-drawing and alternative explanations
- Matter of Walther, 6 NY2d at 54: Quoted for the limiting principle that an inference of undue influence is not reasonable where circumstances are “not inconsistent with a contrary inference.” Hattala applies this directly: documented mistreatment by respondents supplies a compelling contrary inference—independent motivation for disinheritance—defeating speculative undue influence claims.
- Matter of Timer, 221 AD3d at 1107: Cited for recognizing that evidence explaining a testamentary change (such as family conflict) can undercut undue influence inferences. Hattala uses this to frame the decedent’s change as rationally responsive to respondents’ conduct.
4) Confidential relationship and burden shifting (footnote guidance)
- Matter of Giaquinto, 164 AD3d 1527 (3d Dept 2018), affd 32 NY3d 1180 (2019), and Dwyer v Valachovic, 137 AD3d 1369 (3d Dept 2016): Cited in footnote 1 to emphasize that respondents did not plead or support a confidential relationship that would shift the burden to the proponent to disprove undue influence. The footnote functions as a doctrinal checkpoint: burden shifting is not automatic in family-care contexts.
- Matter of Ostrander, 237 AD3d at 1447: Also cited in the footnote, reinforcing how the Third Department approaches confidential-relationship arguments in probate contests.
5) Evidence that the objectants—rather than the proponent—applied pressure
- Matter of Antoinette, 238 AD2d 762 (3d Dept 1997): Cited in footnote 2 to support the court’s observation that recorded pressure by respondents to extract co-executor status and valuable property is probative of undue influence efforts. While not determinative of the proponent’s conduct, it strengthens the court’s view that the challenged will reflected the decedent’s resistance to coercion, not capitulation to it.
Legal Reasoning
- Prima facie entitlement to probate and burden shifting. Petitioner established a prima facie case by producing the will with an executed attestation clause and a self-proving affidavit, bolstered by SCPA 1404 testimony from both subscribing witnesses (the drafting attorney and the legal assistant). This satisfied the proponent’s initial burden and shifted the burden to respondents to produce admissible evidence raising a genuine factual dispute on undue influence.
- Narrowing to the dispositive element: “actual exercise” of undue influence. Even if motive and opportunity could be hypothesized (family dynamics, access), the court required evidence of actual coercive conduct that overbore the decedent’s free will. The decision treats “actual exercise” as the fulcrum: without it, undue influence remains speculative.
- Distinguishing ordinary assistance from suspicious procurement. The court accepted that petitioner helped in locating counsel after the decedent’s prior attorney failed to return calls, and that petitioner provided logistical help (scheduling, transportation, paperwork). It held such conduct is not inherently probative of undue influence—especially where sworn statements established petitioner was not present during substantive discussions or execution and the witnesses perceived no restraint or influence.
- Rejecting “control” and “isolation” narratives as contradicted by objectants’ own proof. Respondents claimed petitioner controlled medical care and isolated the decedent. The court found these assertions refuted by sworn statements showing shared caregiving responsibilities and daily written updates, plus continued access: Hattala lived with the decedent; Nagerl visited every weekend; neither recalled being denied access or information.
- Applying the “contrary inference” principle to defeat speculative claims. The court treated the documented mistreatment of the decedent by respondents—including audio/video evidence and police body camera footage—as providing a strong alternative explanation for disinheritance. Under Matter of Walther, where circumstances support a contrary inference consistent with the will’s validity, an undue influence inference is not reasonable.
- Costs and allowances for bad-faith contest. The court upheld Surrogate’s Court’s discretionary determination that the contest was brought in bad faith under SCPA 2302 (3) (a), citing the “direct evidence” of respondents’ mistreatment as contextual support for the finding.
Impact
1) Reinforced viability of summary judgment against weak undue influence objections. The decision reaffirms that, after an SCPA 1404 hearing, proponents can successfully obtain summary judgment where they marshal execution formalities plus witness testimony, and where objectants cannot identify specific coercive acts tied to the testamentary decision.
2) Clear warning against “generalized suspicion” pleading. Hattala underscores that undue influence litigation requires factual granularity—times, dates, places, and concrete acts—especially to show “actual exercise.” This channels future litigants toward evidentiary rigor rather than narrative inference.
3) Practical guidance for proponents: insulate the planning process. The opinion implicitly validates best practices that reduce undue influence exposure: independent attorney-client communications, beneficiary absence from substantive meetings and execution, and contemporaneous witness observations. These features were central to why the proponent’s showing held.
4) Alternative explanations matter—and can be dispositive. The court’s emphasis on a “contrary inference” (here, respondents’ mistreatment providing a rational reason for disinheritance) signals that evidence explaining a testamentary departure from prior plans can powerfully defeat undue influence claims, even where family caregiving creates opportunity.
5) Exposure to cost-shifting for bad-faith contests. By affirming costs and allowances under SCPA 2302 (3) (a), the decision highlights financial risk for contestants who proceed on speculative grounds in the face of strong countervailing proof.
Complex Concepts Simplified
- SCPA 1404 hearing
- A pre-objection (or early objection) examination in probate proceedings allowing parties to question the drafting attorney and subscribing witnesses and obtain document discovery relevant to probate issues. It often clarifies whether objections have evidentiary support.
- Prima facie case for probate
- The proponent’s initial showing that the will appears duly executed and valid on its face—commonly established through the will, attestation clause, self-proving affidavit, and witness testimony—sufficient to shift the burden to the objectant.
- Undue influence (motive, opportunity, actual exercise)
- “Motive” is a reason to influence; “opportunity” is access to do so; “actual exercise” is proof of coercive conduct that overcame the testator’s free will. Courts require evidence of the third element; motive and opportunity alone are not enough.
- Circumstantial evidence must be “substantial”
- Indirect proof can establish undue influence, but it must be strong and concrete (not merely suspicious or consistent with multiple explanations). Courts look for a pattern of coercion connected to the will’s making.
- Confidential relationship and burden shifting
- In some situations—typically involving dependency and trust coupled with dominance—proof of a confidential relationship may shift the burden to the proponent to show the will was not the product of undue influence. Hattala emphasizes that this shift is not automatic in family caregiving and must be both asserted and supported by the record.
- Costs and allowances for bad faith (SCPA 2302 [3] [a])
- A Surrogate’s Court may award certain litigation-related costs/allowances where a will contest is pursued in bad faith. The determination is discretionary and fact-sensitive; appellate courts often defer absent abuse of discretion.
Conclusion
Matter of Hattala solidifies a pragmatic rule in probate litigation: once a will proponent establishes execution and presents credible witness testimony, an undue influence objection will not survive summary judgment absent specific, substantial evidence of the actual exercise of coercion. The Third Department’s reliance on the “contrary inference” principle—here, that documented mistreatment by disinherited heirs reasonably explains disinheritance—demonstrates how courts evaluate competing narratives and refuse to send speculative claims to trial. The decision also underscores that bad-faith contests can carry financial consequences, reinforcing evidentiary discipline in Surrogate’s Court practice.
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