Castruccio v. Estate of Castruccio ( 2016 )


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  •                                                            REPORTED
    IN THE COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS
    OF MARYLAND
    No. 1665
    September Term, 2014
    ______________________________________
    SADIE M. CASTRUCCIO
    v.
    THE ESTATE OF PETER ADALBERT
    CASTRUCCIO, et al.
    ______________________________________
    Kehoe,
    Nazarian,
    Arthur,
    JJ.
    ______________________________________
    Opinion by Arthur, J.
    ______________________________________
    Filed: July 28, 2016
    * The Honorable Timothy E. Meredith did not participate in the conferencing or adoption
    of this opinion.
    A testator put his signature on page 5 of a six-page will that had consecutive
    pagination, consecutive paragraph-numbering, and a single, uniform font and typeface.
    The witnesses signed on page 6. The will’s six pages may or may not have been
    physically attached to one another by a staple at the time of signing.
    Relying on a 1921 case that invalidated a one-page will because the witnesses did
    not sign the will itself, but a separate document that was not physically attached to it,1 the
    testator’s widow challenged the will. The Circuit Court for Anne Arundel entered
    summary judgment against the widow. We affirm.
    BACKGROUND
    A.       The Purported Will
    Dr. Peter Castruccio died on February 19, 2013, at the age of 89. He had run
    various businesses over the decades and, with his wife of 60 years, owned numerous
    pieces of income-producing real estate. The couple had no children.
    John R. Greiber Jr. had been Dr. Castruccio’s attorney for many years. In
    November 2010, Mr. Greiber deposited Dr. Castruccio’s six-page will, dated September
    29, 2010, for safekeeping with the register of wills. The will revoked all prior wills and
    codicils, including a 2008 will that Dr. Castruccio had signed.
    In February 2013, a week after Dr. Castruccio’s death, Mr. Greiber petitioned the
    register of wills to probate the 2010 will and a brief codicil thereto. Soon thereafter,
    those documents were admitted to probate in the orphans’ court.
    1
    Shane v. Wooley, 
    138 Md. 75
    (1921).
    The will, which we reproduce in the appendix to this opinion, leaves cash bequests
    in varying amounts to Darlene Barclay (a longtime employee of Dr. Castruccio) and to
    two other persons. Item 8 of the will leaves the “rest and remainder” of the estate to Mrs.
    Castruccio, provided that she survives Dr. Castruccio and that “she has made and
    executed a will prior to [Dr. Castruccio’s] death.” Item 10, titled “Residuary Clause,”
    states that if Mrs. Castruccio “does not have a valid will filed with the Register of Wills
    of Anne Arundel County dated prior to” Dr. Castruccio’s will, “all the rest and residue
    of” of the estate shall go to Darlene Barclay.2
    The will’s six pages are consecutively numbered as pages 1 of 6, 2 of 6, etc.,
    through 6 of 6. After two brief, introductory paragraphs, the will contains 11,
    consecutively numbered “Items” or paragraphs, several of which contain consecutively
    numbered subparagraphs. The font and type-size are consistent throughout the
    document.
    On page 5 of 6 of the will, Dr. Castruccio signed his name. A few spaces below
    the signature, the following words appear: “SIGNED, SEALED, PUBLISHED AND
    DECLARE [sic], BY PETER ADALBERT CASTRUCCIO.”
    2
    According to Mr. Greiber, Dr. Castruccio was concerned that Mrs. Castruccio
    would leave her estate to certain family members of whom he did not approve. He
    wanted assurances that Mrs. Castruccio would not leave her assets, or at least the assets
    that she received from him, to those family members. Consequently, his will conditioned
    Mrs. Castruccio’s rights on her having made and filed a will that disclosed whether she
    intended to make testamentary gifts to those family members. According to Mrs.
    Castruccio, Dr. Castruccio did not inform her that she would receive the balance of his
    estate only if she had made and filed a will before the date of his death.
    -2-
    Farther down, the last two lines of page 5 of 6 read: “The above named individual,
    does declare for his Last Will and Testament this instrument, have hereunto subscribe[d]
    to have witness[ed] on the date last mentioned above, and at the location, and [. . . .]”
    (Bold in original.) Below that awkward language appears the pagination, which reads “5
    of 6.”
    The next, and last, page appears to be a continuation of the language at the bottom
    of page 5 of 6, because it is not separated from that language by a period, semi-colon, or
    other punctuation mark. It reads: “I do hereby attest that the testator to be [sic] of sound
    mind, fully able to understand this instrument, and the testator voluntarily and freely did
    sign same.” Below these words are the names, printed and signed, of Mr. Greiber; his
    daughter, Samantha Greiber; and Darlene Barclay’s daughter, Kim Barclay. No other
    text appears on that last page other than the pagination, which, in culmination of the
    sequence of pages before it, reads “6 of 6.”
    B.     The Petition to Caveat
    By the time of Dr. Castruccio’s death, Mrs. Castruccio had not filed a valid will
    with the register of wills. Under the terms of Dr. Castruccio’s will, therefore, the residue
    of the estate would pass not to Mrs. Castruccio, but to Darlene Barclay.
    -3-
    Faced with the prospect that she would receive nothing under her late husband’s
    will, Mrs. Castruccio filed a petition to caveat in the orphans’ court. As a defendant, she
    named her late husband’s Estate.3
    Later, Mrs. Castruccio successfully petitioned to transmit seven issues to the
    circuit court for trial. See Md. Code (1974, 2011 Repl. Vol.), § 2-105(b) of the Estates
    and Trusts Article (“ET”). Denominated as Issues A through G, those issues were:
    (A) whether Dr. Castruccio executed the 2010 will;
    (B) whether Dr. Castruccio executed the 2010 will with the intention that it
    should constitute his last will and testament;
    (C) whether all of the pages of the 2010 will are the genuine pages that Dr.
    Castruccio believed to comprise the will that he intended to execute;
    (D) whether the will was procured by undue influence;
    (E) whether the will was procured by fraud;
    (F) whether the will was actually attested and signed by credible witnesses
    in Dr. Castruccio’s presence; and
    (G) whether the contents of the will were read by and known to Dr.
    Castruccio at and before the time of the execution of the will on September
    29, 2010.
    3
    Because an estate is a collection of assets and liabilities rather than a juridical
    entity like a corporation or an LLC, the defendant in the caveat proceeding was,
    technically, Mr. Greiber in his capacity as personal representative. For ease of reference,
    however, we shall refer to the defendant as the “Estate.”
    -4-
    C.     The Motions for Summary Judgment
    The Estate moved for summary judgment. Darlene Barclay, who intervened as a
    co-defendant, submitted a memorandum stating that she adopted the reasoning in the
    Estate’s motion.
    Mrs. Castruccio opposed the motion. In addition, she filed a cross-motion for
    summary judgment as to Issue F, which concerned whether the will was actually attested
    and signed by credible witnesses in the testator’s presence.
    1.     Issue F
    In support of her cross-motion, Mrs. Castruccio argued that the Estate failed in its
    initial burden to present prima facie evidence that the document was validly executed.
    She relied principally on Shane v. Wooley, 
    138 Md. 75
    (1921), which had upheld the
    invalidation of a one-page will because the witnesses’ signatures did not appear on the
    will itself or on a document that was physically attached to it.
    Citing Shane, Mrs. Castruccio argued that the witnessing or attestation was
    invalid, (a) because the witnesses did not sign on the same page as Dr. Castruccio, and
    (b) because the page containing the witnesses’ signatures was not “physically connected”
    to the page on which Dr. Castruccio had signed his name. Although the statutory
    provision on attestation requires only that a will be “attested and signed by two or more
    credible witnesses in the presence of the testator,”4 Mrs. Castruccio argued, in substance,
    4
    ET § 4-102. The witnesses must attest and sign the will in the testator’s
    presence, but the testator may sign the will out of the witnesses’ presence “if he
    acknowledges his signature or declares the document to be his will.” See Casson v.
    Swogell, 
    304 Md. 641
    , 655 (1985).
    -5-
    that Shane adds a kind of judicial gloss, under which the pages must be affixed to one
    another if the witnesses and testator do not sign on the same page.
    Mrs. Castruccio presented the affidavit of her attorney, who declared that one
    month after the document (and its codicil) were admitted to probate, he inspected it at the
    register of wills, where it had been on file since November 2010. He said the document
    was comprised of “six separate, unattached pages,” without any staples, “staple holes or
    other evidence of having ever been physically connected together[.]” The register made a
    scanned copy of the original document, which Mrs. Castruccio appended to her motion.
    Mrs. Castruccio also presented the affidavit of the register of wills, who stated that her
    office’s scanner was accurate enough to capture and depict the image of staple holes.
    In response, the Estate disputed Mrs. Castruccio’s assertion that page 6 of 6
    (containing the witnesses’ signatures) was not affixed to page 5 of 6 (containing Dr.
    Castruccio’s signature) at the time when it was signed. In addition, the Estate argued
    that, even assuming that the pages were not affixed to each other at that time, mechanical
    attachment was not required under Maryland law. It contended that the two pages could
    be sufficiently connected where they appear to be internally connected as a single
    instrument.
    2.     The Estate’s Motion on the Remaining Issues
    As to the remaining issues, the Estate argued that the document was indisputably
    valid, because Dr. Castruccio signed it in the witnesses’ presence, and because the
    witnesses, aware of the document’s contents, each signed their names in his presence.
    The Estate pointed to the affidavits of Mr. Greiber, Ms. Greiber, and Kim Barclay. Each
    -6-
    of those affiants averred that Dr. Castruccio signed the document in their presence and
    announced that it was his last will and testament. Each of the affiants also averred that
    Dr. Castruccio “was of sound mind, fully able to understand the paper he was signing,
    and [that] he did voluntarily and freely sign his name to it.”
    The Estate argued that the document carried a presumption of due execution,
    based on the presence, spanning pages 5 of 6 and 6 of 6 of the document, of an
    “attestation clause” reciting that the required elements of a validly executed will were
    satisfied. This clause, the Estate argued, was itself prima facie evidence of the will’s
    presumed validity, which shifted the burden to Mrs. Castruccio to demonstrate, by clear
    and convincing evidence, that the facts recited in that attestation clause were not true.
    See, e.g., Van Meter v. Van Meter, 
    183 Md. 614
    , 618 (1944); see also McIntyre v.
    Saltysiak, 
    205 Md. 415
    , 420-21 (1954).
    Mrs. Castruccio responded that the document contained “multiple additional
    irregularities” that raised questions about its validity. She questioned the witnesses’
    credibility and “the role that Darlene [Barclay] and Mr. Greiber played” in the
    preparation of the will. She also questioned whether Dr. Castruccio understood what he
    signed and whether that document and the document submitted for probate were the
    same. She pointed out that the will recited that Dr. Castruccio had initialed each page,
    but that his initials do not appear on the document (including the page that states that he
    had initialed each page).
    Finally, Mrs. Castruccio pointed out that Darlene Barclay had destroyed a flash
    drive, which “might” have contained a file related to the will. Mrs. Castruccio argued
    -7-
    that Ms. Barclay’s actions warranted an adverse inference sufficient for the denial of the
    Estate’s summary judgment motion. In addition, she moved for sanctions against Ms.
    Barclay.
    D.     The Circuit Court’s Rulings
    On September 23, 2014, the circuit court granted the Estate’s motion for summary
    judgment on all issues and denied Mrs. Castruccio’s cross-motion for summary judgment
    as to Issue F, concerning attestation.
    In denying Mrs. Castruccio’s cross-motion, the court assumed for the sake of
    argument that the pages of the will were not physically attached to one another at the time
    of signing. Nonetheless, the court rejected Mrs. Castruccio’s argument that because the
    witnesses had not signed on the same page as Dr. Castruccio or on a page physically
    connected to it, the will was invalid under Shane v. Wooley. The court explained that
    “the focus should be on a more holistic inquiry” into whether the document had been
    properly attested, rather than whether “at a certain point some or all of the pages were
    mechanically affixed to each other.” It characterized Mrs. Castruccio’s position as
    “exalt[ing] a rather mechanistic function over an inquiry that should focus on a testator’s
    intent[.]” It declined to read Shane v. Wooley to “creat[e] an engine of destruction” for a
    “clearly unified document” that fully meets the explicit requirements of the Estates and
    Trusts Article, but lacks a staple.5
    5
    In reaching its decision, the circuit court noted Mrs. Castruccio’s inability to say
    whether the physical-connection rule would be satisfied by a paperclip or other temporary
    binder that left no visible mark on the document.
    -8-
    In granting the Estate’s motion for summary judgment on the remaining issues, the
    court concluded that the Estate had established a prima facie case that the document was
    validly executed. The court went on to conclude that Mrs. Castruccio failed to produce
    the requisite clear and convincing evidence to the contrary. The court specifically
    rejected Mrs. Castruccio’s contention that Ms. Barclay’s destruction of the flash drive
    supplied a clear and convincing basis upon which the trier of fact could overturn the
    will’s presumed validity.
    In an order entered on October 2, 2014, the court granted the Estate’s summary
    judgment motion as to all seven issues and denied Mrs. Castruccio’s cross-motion on
    Issue F.6
    6
    In the Order the circuit court concluded that:
    A.       The six page paper writing dated September 29, 2010, captioned
    “Peter Adalbert Castruccio” (the “Will”) was executed by Peter
    Adalbert Castruccio (the “Testator”);
    B.       The Testator executed his Will with the intention that it constituted
    his last will and testament;
    C.       All of the pages of the Will are the genuine pages the Testator
    believed comprised the Will he intended to execute;
    D.       The Will was not procured by undue influence;
    E.       The Will was not procured by fraud;
    F.       The Will was actually attested and signed by credible witnesses in
    the presence of the Testator; and
    -9-
    QUESTIONS PRESENTED
    On appeal, Mrs. Castruccio presents several questions, which we have
    consolidated and rephrased as follows:
    I.        Did the circuit court err in denying Mrs. Castruccio’s cross-motion
    for summary judgment and concluding that the document was
    validly attested, where the testator and witnesses signed on separate
    pages that were not “physically connected” to each other?
    II.       Did the circuit court err when it determined that the will was entitled
    to a presumption of due execution?
    III.      Did the circuit court err in granting summary judgment in favor of
    the Estate without having specifically ruled on whether sanctions
    should be imposed against Darlene Barclay for alleged spoliation of
    electronic files?7
    G.        The contents of the Will were read by the Testator and known to him
    at and before the time of the execution of the Will on September 29,
    2010.
    7
    Mrs. Castruccio phrased her questions in the following manner:
    I.        Did the circuit court err by denying appellant’s cross-motion for
    summary judgment and granting the estate’s motion for summary
    judgment by finding that the will was properly witnessed and
    attested when the witnesses did not sign on the same page as the
    testator or on a page physically connected to it?
    II.       Did the circuit court err in granting the estates’s motion for summary
    judgment when it determined there were no disputes as to any
    material facts supporting the motion?
    III.      Did the circuit court err when it determined the will was entitled to a
    presumption of due execution and appellant had the burden of proof
    by clear and convincing evidence?
    IV.       Did the circuit court err in granting summary judgment without
    acting on appellant’s motion for sanctions for destruction of
    -10-
    DISCUSSION
    I.     Standard of Review
    When a party moves for summary judgment, the court “shall enter judgment in
    favor of or against the moving party if the motion and response show that there is no
    genuine dispute as to any material fact and that the party in whose favor judgment
    entered is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Md. Rule 2-501(f).
    The issue of whether a trial court properly granted summary judgment is a
    question of law. Butler v. S & S P’ship, 
    435 Md. 635
    , 665 (2013) (citation omitted). In
    an appeal from the grant of summary judgment, this Court conducts a de novo review to
    determine whether the circuit court’s conclusions were legally correct. See D’Aoust v.
    Diamond, 
    424 Md. 549
    , 574 (2012). The relevant inquiry is well known:
    When reviewing a grant of summary judgment, we determine whether the
    parties properly generated a dispute of material fact and, if not, whether the
    moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. This Court
    considers the record in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party and
    construe[s] any reasonable inferences that may be drawn from the facts
    against the moving party.
    Blackburn Ltd. P’ship v. Paul, 
    438 Md. 100
    , 107-08 (2014) (citations and quotation
    marks omitted).
    Ordinarily, to defeat summary judgment, “[a] plaintiff’s claim must be supported
    by more than a scintilla of evidence[,] as there must be evidence upon which [a] jury
    could reasonably find for the plaintiff.” 
    Id. at 108
    (citation and quotation marks omitted).
    evidence against defendant Darlene Barclay, concluding, without
    hearing the evidence, that her actions would not supply clear and
    convincing evidence to overcome the presumption of due execution?
    -11-
    However, when the plaintiff faces the added burden of producing clear and convincing
    evidence, as Mrs. Castruccio does in countering the presumption of due execution, the
    plaintiff cannot survive summary judgment on that issue unless the judge determines that
    the evidence meets that higher burden. See Darcars Motorcars of Silver Spring, Inc. v.
    Borzym, 
    379 Md. 249
    , 267-70 (2004).
    II.    Validly Executed Wills
    In Maryland, a testamentary document, to be validly executed, must be “(1) in
    writing, (2) signed by the testator, or by some other person for him, in his presence and
    by his express direction, and (3) attested and signed by two or more credible witnesses in
    the presence of the testator.” ET § 4-102.8 The burden of proving, by a preponderance of
    the evidence, that the statute’s required elements have been met rests with the document’s
    proponent. Groat v. Sundberg, 
    213 Md. App. 144
    , 152-53 (2013) (citations omitted).
    One tested method for meeting this prima facie burden is to show the presence of a
    valid “attestation clause.” A “presumption of due execution” attaches to a will that
    contains the testator’s signature as well as an “attestation clause” signed by the witnesses.
    8
    Section 4-102 provides two exceptions from these statutory requirements, both
    inapplicable here: where the will is “holographic,” i.e., where it is “entirely in the
    handwriting of a testator who is serving in the armed services of the United States” and
    was “signed by the testator outside of a state of the United States, the District of
    Columbia, or a territory of the United States” (ET § 4-103); and where the will was
    executed outside the United States. ET § 4-104.
    -12-
    
    Slack, 368 Md. at 7-8
    (citing McIntyre v. 
    Saltysiak, 205 Md. at 420-22
    ); see also O’Neal
    v. Jennings, 
    53 Md. App. 604
    , 608 (1983).9
    A valid attestation clause, however, is not required to demonstrate a will’s
    validity. See Slack v. Truitt, 
    368 Md. 2
    , 12 (2002). For example, in Slack the Court of
    Appeals held that, even without an attestation clause, a will was entitled to the
    presumption of due execution when it was in the testator’s handwriting and bore the
    signatures of the testator and the witnesses, who signed their names in the testator’s
    presence beneath the words “Witnessed By[.]” 
    Id. “Attestation,” as
    required by section 4-102, is at issue in this case. Attestation is
    “‘the act of witnesses in seeing that those things exist and are done which the statute
    requires.’” 
    Slack, 368 Md. at 12
    (quoting Van 
    Meter, 183 Md. at 619
    ). It begins with the
    testator asking the witnesses, either by words or deeds, to sign the will. Greenhawk v.
    Quimby, 
    170 Md. 280
    , 287-88 (1936). Witnesses need not know the document is a will
    as long as they see the testator sign it (Casson v. Swogell, 
    304 Md. 641
    , 654 (1985)), nor
    must they observe the testator signing it as long as he or she acknowledges the signature
    or informs the witnesses that the document is a will. Van 
    Meter, 183 Md. at 617
    . The
    9
    “An attestation clause is a ‘provision at the end of an instrument (esp. a will) that
    is signed by the instrument’s witnesses and that recites the formalities required by the
    jurisdiction in which the instrument might take effect (such as where the will might be
    probated).’” 
    Slack, 368 Md. at 8
    n.5 (citation omitted). “A formal attestation clause is . .
    . ‘itself prima facie evidence of the facts therein recited.’” 
    Id. (citations omitted);
    see Van
    
    Meter, 183 Md. at 617
    (“[t]he advantage of an attestation clause is found in its evidential
    weight in showing that the will was properly executed”).
    -13-
    witnesses must, however, sign the will in the testator’s presence, i.e., within the testator’s
    unobstructed range of vision. 
    Groat, 213 Md. App. at 161-62
    .
    III.   Must the Attestation be “Physically Connected” to the Will?
    Mrs. Castruccio argues that the Estate failed to make a prima facie case of a valid
    attestation, as the witnesses’ signatures appear neither on the same page as Dr.
    Castruccio’s nor on a page that is “physically connected” to it.
    The Estate agrees that the witnesses’ signatures and Dr. Castruccio’s signature
    appear on separate pages, but it insists that Maryland law does not mandate that the
    separate pages must be “physically connected” by mechanical attachment. Even where
    the pages are unaffixed to each other, the Estate argues, it suffices if they are connected
    by some internal sense.
    A.     Shane v. Wooley
    In Shane v. 
    Wooley, 138 Md. at 79-80
    , the testatrix “signed her name at the foot of
    the alleged will, which was contained on one sheet of paper[.]” After folding the will,
    testator “placed it in an envelope and sealed it.” 
    Id. at 80.
    “The attestation clause and the
    signature of the witnesses were then written across the sealed portion of the envelope, on
    the outside thereof.” 
    Id. The signed
    paper inside the envelope “was not dated nor
    witnessed on the paper itself[.]” 
    Id. at 76.
    The orphans’ court, upon petition, held that the caveators were entitled to a decree
    revoking the order that had admitted the will to probate. On appeal from that decision,
    the Court of Appeals affirmed. The Court stated:
    -14-
    While there is no provision of the statute of this state, which requires, in
    terms, that the attestation clause and the signatures of the witnesses shall be
    at the end of the will, or at any particular place of the will, . . . the weight of
    authority, however, appears to be that witnesses must sign, either upon the
    same sheet as the signature of the testator, or on some sheet physically
    connected with it, to constitute a valid will.
    
    Id. at 78
    (emphasis added).
    Because the witnesses had signed the envelope that contained the will and not the
    will itself, “the attestation or subscription by the witnesses was not on the same sheet of
    paper as the testatrix’s own signature, nor was it upon a paper physically connected with
    that sheet.” 
    Id. at 79.
    In those circumstances, the Court held that “the formalities
    prescribed by law in the execution of wills ha[d] not been complied with to constitute a
    valid will[.]” 
    Id. at 80.
    B.      Attestation on a Page Separate from the Will Itself Versus Attestation
    on One Page of a Multi-Page Will
    Mrs. Castruccio advances a broad reading of Shane, under which a will is invalid
    if the testator and the witnesses sign on different pages of the will and those pages are
    not, in some way, physically connected to each other at the time of signing. We reject
    her reading.
    In our view, Shane concerns cases in which a witness signs a document other than
    the will itself. In those circumstances, Shane holds that the will is invalid unless the
    separate document was, in some way, physically connected to the will at the time of
    signing. Shane’s physical-connection rule does not apply when the witnesses and the
    testator sign different pages of an internally-cohesive, multi-page will.
    -15-
    In explaining why the “weight of authority” supported its conclusion, the Shane
    Court relied prominently on In re Baldwin’s Will, 
    146 N.C. 25
    , 
    59 S.E. 163
    (1907). In
    that case, a witness signed the testator’s will, but later transcribed it onto a better sheet of
    paper, which he signed outside the testator’s presence. 
    Id. at 26-27,
    59 S.E. at 164. The
    witness sent the new document to the testator, who signed it and had it witnessed in his
    presence by a second witness. 
    Id. at 27,
    59 S.E. at 164. After the testator’s death, his
    wife burned the original document and offered the new document for probate. 
    Id. at 28,
    59 S.E. at 165.
    The North Carolina Supreme Court held that the new document was invalid
    because the statute required two witnesses, but the first had signed before the testator
    signed the new document and had not signed it in the testator’s presence. 
    Id. at 29,
    59
    S.E. at 165. It made no difference that the witness had properly attested a different
    document that had since been destroyed. 
    Id. at 30,
    59 S.E. at 165. “[A]lthough the
    contents of the papers may have been identical,” the court explained, “there was no
    physical connection between the two.” 
    Id. The court
    concluded: “the attestation or
    subscription by witnesses must be on the same sheet of paper as that which contains the
    testator’s signature, or else upon some paper physically connected with that sheet.” 
    Id. In short,
    Baldwin’s Will was addressing whether a will was valid when a necessary
    witness had properly attested the testator’s signature only on a separate sheet, which was
    not in any way part of or “physically connected” to the probated document. In quoting
    Baldwin’s Will for the proposition that an attestation “‘must be on the same sheet of
    paper as that which contains the testator’s signature, or else upon some paper physically
    -16-
    connected with that sheet[]’” 
    (Shane, 138 Md. at 78
    (citation omitted)), Shane was
    reinforcing its holding that, when a witness signs a document that is not part of the will
    itself, that document must be “physically connected” to the will for the will to be declared
    valid. Neither Shane nor Baldwin discussed whether an internally-cohesive, multi-page
    will was invalid if the testator and the witnesses signed different pages that were not
    “physically connected” to one another.
    Shane cited a number of other, out-of-state cases, which confirm that the Court
    was concerned only with the problem of witnesses signing a document other than the will
    itself. In In re Perrine’s Will, 
    109 Misc. 459
    (N.Y. Surr. Ct. 1919), the Surrogate’s Court
    for Montgomery County, New York, declined to admit a will to probate because the
    witnesses had signed an envelope that contained the will and had not signed the will
    itself. By contrast, in Bolton v. Bolton, 
    107 Miss. 84
    , 90, 
    64 So. 967
    , 967 (1914), a
    Mississippi court upheld a will where one of the witnesses had signed his name on a
    separate acknowledgement form, which the testator folded up with the will and handed to
    the person who drafted it. The court found an adequate physical connection between the
    will and the acknowledgment form because “the testator himself, knowing what [the
    witness’s] signature was intended to be, handed the two papers to [the drafter], folded
    together, as his completed will.” 
    Id. at 91,
    64 So. at 967. Like Baldwin’s Will and Shane,
    both of these cases concern the problem of witnesses signing a document other than the
    -17-
    will itself; they do not concern internally-cohesive, multi-page wills on which the testator
    and the witnesses sign different pages.10
    In addition to the out-of-state cases, Shane looked to § 336 of James Schouler’s
    treatise, The Law of Wills, Executors, and Administrators (5th ed. 1915). Section 336 is
    titled “Attestation on a Different Paper.” It states:
    [T]he attestation or subscription by witnesses must be on the same
    sheet of paper as that which contains the testator’s own signature, or else
    upon some paper physically connected with that sheet. No particular mode
    of connection is prescribed by law; and hence the fastening by tape, by
    eyelets, by mucilage, or even by a pin, seems unobjectionable. Where
    papers are thus connected, the testator may sign on one paper and the
    witnesses on another, provided their intent corresponded.
    But attestation . . . by witnesses on a piece of paper, detached and
    separated from the will and the testator’s signature, nor affixed in his
    presence to the paper at the time of execution, fails of compliance with the
    policy of our law; we may assume it to be void, as otherwise a door would
    open to much fraud and perjury.
    Schouler, The Law of Wills, Executors, and Administrators, supra, § 336, at 414-15.
    Read in isolation, this language might appear to invalidate a multi-page will if the
    testator and the witnesses signed on separate pages that were not physically connected to
    each other at the time of execution. If one reads no farther than the following section,
    10
    Shane also cited Soward v. Soward, 
    62 Ky. 126
    , 
    1 Duv. 126
    (1863), in which
    the witnesses signed the exterior of the will after the testator had folded it and sealed it
    with wax. The court invalidated that will because the witnesses did not “subscribe” it by
    signing at the foot of the document, as the Kentucky statute required. 
    Id. at 132,
    1 Duv.
    at 132. Although the Maryland statute in force at the time of Shane required the witnesses
    to subscribe the will (see 
    Shane, 138 Md. at 77
    ), ET § 4-102 has no similar requirement:
    it merely requires the witnesses to “sign” the will in the testator’s presence.
    -18-
    however, it becomes clear that § 336 applies when the witnesses sign “a [d]ifferent
    [p]aper” from the will itself and that an entirely different rule governs multi-page wills.
    Section 337 of the Schouler treatise is titled “Attestation where a Will is written on
    Several Sheets.” Citing a number of authorities, including Lord Mansfield’s decision in
    Bond v. Seawell, 3 Burr. 1773 (1765), Schouler stated that “if the will be written on
    several sheets, whether fastened together or not, and the last sheet alone is attested in
    form, the whole will is well executed, provided all the sheets were in the room.”
    Schouler, The Law of Wills, Executors, and Administrators, supra, § 337, at 415
    (emphasis added). He added: “if the several pieces of paper are connected in their
    provisions and form a connected series, and are brought in this shape before the attesting
    witnesses at the time of their subscription, a single attestation will suffice for the whole.”
    
    Id. It is
    telling that the Shane Court cited § 336 of Schouler, but did not cite § 337.
    The Court’s selection of authorities confirms that Shane was concerned with the problem
    discussed in § 336 – attestation on a document separate from the will itself, such as the
    envelope in Shane. The Court was not concerned with the problem discussed in § 337
    (and in this case) – attestation of a multi-page will.
    C.     Attestation of a Multi-Page Will
    In the case of multi-page wills, a considerable body of authority comports with
    Schouler’s assertion that the pages need not be affixed to each other, so long as there is
    an indication, internally or otherwise, that the pages belong together and that the testator
    intended as much. Most notably, in In re Kaiser’s Estate, 
    150 Neb. 295
    , 299-300, 34
    -19-
    N.W.2d 366, 370 (1948), the testator signed the first page of a two-page will, and the
    witnesses attested his signature on the second. The Nebraska court upheld the will,
    reasoning that “[t]here is no statutory provision in this state designating just where a will
    shall be attested and subscribed by the witnesses, or forbidding the use of separate sheets
    in making a will, or directing how or that they shall be physically attached to each other
    in order to make a valid will.” 
    Id. at 305,
    34 N.W.2d at 373. The court stressed that a
    will “‘may be written on several sheets,’” that “‘physical connection by mechanical,
    chemical, or other means is not required,’” that “‘connection by the meaning and
    coherence of the subject matter is sufficient,”’ and that in the absence of a physical
    connection, “‘papers must be identified as one will by their internal sense.’” 
    Id. at 306,
    34 N.W.2d at 373 (quoting 68 C.J., Wills § 267, at 639).
    Many courts and other authorities have reached a like conclusion. See, e.g., In re
    Covington’s Estate, 
    348 Pa. 1
    , 15, 
    33 A.2d 235
    , 241 (1943) (upholding a holographic will
    consisting of three separate pages on the ground that “[f]or us to say that a will cannot be
    admitted to probate . . . unless the several papers of which it consists are physically
    fastened together . . . would be an act of legislation and a most unwise one for it would
    prevent the probate of papers which . . . are beyond all doubt the last will of the person . .
    . who signed them[]”); In re Estate of Beale, 
    15 Wis. 2d 546
    , 555, 
    113 N.W.2d 380
    , 384
    (1962) (upholding a 14-page will whose pages were not physically connected on the
    ground that “[t]here is nothing legally invalid in the execution of a will because the
    separate pages of the will have not been fastened together”); accord Page on the Law of
    Wills, § 19.15 (Rev. ed. 2003) (stating that “[i]f it is established by proper testimony that
    -20-
    [all sheets of a will] were present when the will was executed, it is by the weight of
    authority sufficient, although they are not connected physically or by the meaning of the
    words”); W.W. Allen, Annotation, Validity of will written on disconnected sheets, 
    38 A.L.R. 2d 477
    (upon review of about 100 cases, stating: “With one exception only, the
    cases have either held, declared, implied, or assumed that a will may be validly executed
    notwithstanding its having been written on two or more sheets which were not in any
    manner held or attached together at the time of execution”).11
    In fact, even before Shane was decided, the North Carolina court, whose decision
    figured prominently in the Court of Appeals’ decision, had upheld the validity of a two-
    page will whose pages were detached from one another. In In re Swaim’s Will, 
    162 N.C. 213
    , 215, 
    78 S.E. 72
    , 73 (1913), the court rejected the proposition that physical
    attachment is required. Instead, the court looked to whether the pages are “connected by
    their internal sense, by coherence or adaptation.” 
    Id. at 216,
    78 S.E. at 73. Because “the
    papers, while separate, b[ore] intrinsic evidence that they were tacked together in the
    mind of the testator,” the court upheld the validity of the will. 
    Id. In summary,
    Shane concerns cases in which a witness’s attestation is on a
    document that is not part of the will itself: in those cases, Shane held that physical
    connection is required. Shane, however, did not hold that a multi-page will is valid only
    if the testator and witnesses sign on the same page of the will itself or, if they do not, if
    11
    The single exception cited in the A.L.R. annotation is an English probate case
    from 1908, in which “the court, without citation of authority on the point, said that the
    sheets must have been ‘held or fastened’ together at the time of execution,” but that “a
    temporary holding together by thumb and finger was sufficient.” 
    Id. n.3. -21-
    the pages are in some way physically connected to one another. Consequently, we see no
    reason not to follow the great weight of authority nationwide, that such a will is valid as
    long the pages are connected by “‘the meaning and coherence of the subject matter’” or
    they may “identified as one will by their internal sense.’” In re Kaiser’s Estate, 150
    Neb.at 
    306, 34 N.W.2d at 373
    (quoting 68 C.J., Wills § 267, at 639).
    D.     The Alleged “Reaffirmation” of Shane
    Mrs. Castruccio responds that Maryland courts have “reaffirmed” her expansive
    reading of Shane. She cites Casson v. Swogell, 
    304 Md. 641
    (1985), and Goroum v.
    Rynarzewski, 
    89 Md. App. 676
    (1991). Both cases mention Shane, but neither can
    legitimately be said to affirm, much less to “reaffirm,” Mrs. Castruccio’s reading of it.
    Casson concerns the concept of “publication” of a will – the disclosure, by a
    testator, to the witnesses, that the document that they are signing is a will. Casson holds
    that “publication is not required for the valid execution and attestation of a will” when the
    testator signs in the witnesses’ presence. See 
    Casson, 304 Md. at 643
    ; see also 
    id. at 654
    (“it is not necessary that the witness know [a document] is a will”); 
    id. at 656
    (“attestation may properly be made without the witness knowing the nature of the
    instrument”). According to Casson, a testator must acknowledge his or her signature or
    declare the document to be a will “only when the testator has signed the instrument out of
    the presence of the witnesses.” See 
    id. at 656
    .
    After deciding those issues, the Casson Court addressed two additional issues “for
    the guidance of the trial court” on remand. 
    Id. at 657.
    One of those issues involved a
    contention that the two-page will was “invalid because the signatures of both witnesses
    -22-
    d[id] not appear at the end of the will, and d[id] not appear in close proximity to one
    another at any particular place on the document.” 
    Id. The Court
    said that Shane “dealt
    with a similar issue.” 
    Id. The Court
    went on to quote Shane’s statements that the
    Maryland statute does not require the witnesses to sign “‘at the end of the will or at any
    particular place of the will,’” but that “‘the weight of authority’” “‘appears to be that the
    witnesses must sign, either upon the same sheet as the signature of the testator, or on
    some sheet physically connected to it.’” 
    Id. (quoting Shane,
    138 Md. at 78). In
    concluding its “guidance” to the trial court, the Court stated that “[w]hile the fact that the
    two witnesses did not sign in the same place may bear on the jury question of whether the
    will is a fraud, it does not constitute a fatal variance from the required procedure for
    lawful execution.” 
    Id. Because the
    Court’s “guidance” concerned whether a will is invalid if the
    witnesses do not sign in close proximity to one another, we do not interpret Casson to
    hold that an internally-cohesive, multi-page will is invalid unless the witnesses sign on
    the same page as the testator or on a page that is physically connected to it. In this
    regard, we note that as support for its holding that a testator need not declare the
    instrument to be a will if he or she signs it in the witnesses’ presence, Casson cited Bond
    v. Seawell, 3 Burr. 1775 (1773), the leading English authority for the proposition that the
    pages of a multi-page will need not be fastened together. 
    Casson, 304 Md. at 650
    .12
    12
    Mrs. Castruccio points out that in Casson the two-page will was “secured by
    staples at the top.” 
    Casson, 304 Md. at 644
    . The opinion, however, contains nothing to
    suggest that the staples were affixed at the time of execution, as Mrs. Castruccio would
    require, rather than at some other, later time.
    -23-
    Goroum affirmed the entry of summary judgment against a caveator who appears
    to have contended that the attestation page was not attached to the rest of the will when
    the testator signed it at a law office. See 
    Goroum, 89 Md. App. at 679-81
    . “No one
    testified,” however, “that the attestation page of this will was at any time unaffixed.” 
    Id. at 681.
    Instead, the caveator argued that the law firm’s general practice was to have the
    documents signed before the pages were affixed to one another. In response, this Court
    held that the “general practice” did not give rise to the “clear and convincing evidence,”
    required under the presumption of due execution, “that it was done that way in a specific
    instance.” 
    Id. The Goroum
    Court distinguished Shane, observing that the attestation in that case
    “was written on the outside of an envelope in which the will was contained,” while the
    attestation page in Goroum “was affixed” when the will was discovered in the register’s
    office and when presented to the orphans’ court. 
    Id. at 682.
    This Court had no reason to
    consider whether Shane actually applied to an internally-cohesive, multi-page will,
    because no one raised the question of whether it did. For that reason, we do not interpret
    Goroum to hold that such a will is invalid unless the witnesses sign on the same page as
    the testator or on a page that is physically connected to it.
    E.     The Policy of Preventing Fraud
    Mrs. Castruccio stresses that a requirement of physical connection will effectuate a
    statutory purpose of preventing fraud in the preparation of wills. She does not, however,
    contend that a multi-page will is invalid unless all of its pages are in some way physically
    attached to one another. Instead, in her view, the only pages that must be physically
    -24-
    attached to one another are the pages on which the testator and the witnesses signed (if
    they sign on separate pages).
    Yet if the purpose of the affixation requirement is to prevent fraud, it is difficult to
    understand why we would adopt a rule that requires only the signature pages of multi-
    page will to be attached to each other. Such a rule might prevent a witness from attesting
    a signature that he or she did not actually see the testator make, but it would not prevent a
    malefactor from switching out the substantive pages of a properly attested, multi-page
    will and replacing them with other, different pages that the testator never saw. As the
    Supreme Court of Pennsylvania observed:
    In these days when most wills are typewritten the fact that a sentence or a
    paragraph is partly on one page and partly on another would not obviate all
    possibility of fraud. For example, the last word on page one of such a
    ‘looseleaf’ will might read: ‘I bequeath to my brother John Smith’, and the
    words on the top of page two might read ‘five thousand dollars’. No one
    could be certain that page two of the will as originally written had not been
    taken out and a new page two inserted, substituting the words five thousand
    for five hundred.
    In re Covington’s 
    Estate, 348 Pa. at 11
    , 33 A.2d at 239.
    Worse yet, Mrs. Castruccio’s rule would lead to inconsistent and arbitrary results.
    Under her view, a document containing as many as 20 unconnected sheets, with a
    separate attestation page attached by a paper clip solely to the page before it, might pass
    muster. (We say “might” because Mrs. Castruccio was unable to tell the circuit court
    whether a paperclip would satisfy the “physical connection” rule.) On the other hand, in
    Mrs. Castruccio’s view, a will of the same length, internally connected by staples, would
    be invalid if the drafter neglected to affix the attestation page to the others. Such a
    -25-
    formalistic imposition would run the risk of creating “needless trap[s] for the unwary
    testator[.]” McGarvey v. McGarvey, 
    286 Md. 19
    , 28 (1979).13
    Finally, the physical-connection rule is fraught with vagueness and uncertainty.
    Would a paperclip or binder clip suffice? What if someone pinched the pages between
    her thumb and index finger while the witnesses signed? What if the pages were pressed
    together under a paperweight?
    It is undoubtedly important to prevent fraud, but it is equally important to facilitate
    a person’s right to dispose of property at death by removing uncertainty in the making of
    wills. See Slack v. 
    Truitt, 368 Md. at 17
    . Mrs. Castruccio’s proposed rule would do little
    to prevent fraud, but would greatly inhibit the right to dispose of one’s property as one
    wishes.
    F.     Pages Tacked Together in the Testator’s Mind
    Here, in contrast to Shane and the authorities on which it depends, Dr.
    Castruccio’s will did not involve witness signatures that were “detached and separated
    from the will and the testator’s signature.” The signatures were not, for example, written
    across a sealed envelope that contained the entirety of the will, including the testator’s
    signature. They were not in any way apart from the document itself.
    13
    One need not strain to consider the unfortunate results that could occur when a
    will is drafted on word-processing software, as most undoubtedly are these days. Even if
    the places for the witnesses’ signatures are initially adjacent to the testator’s, the slightest
    revisions or additions to the body of the will may send them to a new page, presumably in
    violation of the strict rule that Mrs. Castruccio advances. The results may attend changes
    to the font, font size, or margins. Facing such potentially ruinous results, the testator
    might have to compose the document on a scroll.
    -26-
    Rather, the witnesses’ signatures appear on the last of six consecutively-numbered
    pages in a document that, based on its pagination, was unmistakably intended to contain
    six and only six pages. The font and typeface of the document appear wholly consistent
    from one page to the next. The document contains 11 consecutively-numbered “Items”
    or paragraphs, two of which have consecutively-numbered subparagraphs. Page 1 of 6
    concludes with Item 1, paragraph 3, and the following page begins with Item 1,
    paragraph 4. Page 2 of 6 concludes with Item 1, paragraph 11, and the following page
    begins with Item 11, paragraph 12. Page 3 of 6 ends during a clause that continues,
    without interruption, on page 4 of 6 (“I do direct that my Personal ¦¦ Representative
    deduct from the Estate . . . .”). Page 4 of 6 ends with Item 8, and the following page
    begins with Item 9.
    Admittedly, page 5 of 6 ends with what appears to be an inarticulate sentence
    fragment (“The above named individual, does declare for his last Will and Testament this
    instrument, have here hereunto subscribed to have witness [sic] on the date last
    mentioned above, and at the location, and”), which does not connect grammatically to
    the language on the top of page 6 of 6 (”I do hereby attest that the testator to be of sound
    mind [sic], fully able to understand this instrument, and the testator voluntarily and freely
    did sign same”). (Emphasis in original.) The record, however, reflects that this same
    -27-
    language appears in Dr. Castruccio’s previous will, which Mrs. Castruccio does not
    challenge (because it gives her the residue of the estate if she survives her husband).14
    In these circumstances, we conclude that the will, though inarticulate at times, is
    an internally-cohesive document whose pages were “tacked together in the mind of the
    testator.” In re Swaim’s Will, 162 N.C. at 
    216, 78 S.E. at 73
    . The will, therefore, was not
    invalid merely because its last two pages may not have been physically connected to one
    another at the time of signing, as the circuit court assumed to be the case. Accordingly,
    the circuit court did not err in denying Mrs. Castruccio’s cross-motion for summary
    judgment and entering summary judgment against her on Issue F.15
    IV.    Mrs. Castruccio’s Challenge to the Summary Judgment on All Other Issues
    We now address Mrs. Castruccio’s separate challenge to the trial court’s grant of
    the Estate’s summary judgment on all other issues. The court directed the entry of
    14
    The will contains a number of other solecisms. Item 1, paragraph 6, refers to
    property “real, personal or mix,” rather than “mixed.” Item 9 refers to gifts of
    “personality” rather than of “personalty.” Just above his signature, Dr. Castruccio recites
    that the “instrument is intendant,” rather than “intended,” to be his last will and
    testament. In the same clause, Dr. Castruccio states that he has “initial,” rather than
    “initialed,” each page. Each of these errors appears in the prior will as well.
    15
    In the second issue in her brief, Mrs. Castruccio argues that the court erred in
    directing the entry of summary judgment in the Estate’s favor because of genuine
    disputes of material fact. According to her brief, those disputes pertain solely to whether
    the pages of the will were stapled together at the time of signing: at her deposition, Kim
    Greiber testified that they were, while Mrs. Castruccio’s attorney submitted an affidavit
    stating that the document on file with the register of wills had no staple holes. Those
    disputes are immaterial because both we and the circuit court have assumed that the
    pages of the will were not stapled together or otherwise physically connected to one
    another at the time of signing. See Appiah v. Hall, 
    416 Md. 535
    , 551, 554 (2010)
    (holding that disputes of fact were immaterial when plaintiff could not prevail even on
    assumption that disputes were resolved in her favor).
    -28-
    summary judgment after concluding that the presumption of due execution attached to the
    will and that Mrs. Castruccio had not discharged her burden of adducing clear and
    convincing evidence to overcome that presumption. Here, too, we see no error.
    A.     The Presumption of Due Execution in General
    “[A] presumption of due execution attaches to a will that contains the testator’s
    signature and an attestation clause signed by the witnesses.” Slack v. 
    Truitt, 368 Md. at 7-8
    (collecting authorities) (footnote omitted). “[O]nce the presumption attaches, the
    burden of proof is on the caveator to show by clear and convincing evidence that the facts
    stated in the attestation clause are untrue.” 
    Id. at 8
    (collecting authorities) (footnote
    omitted).
    “[A]n attestation clause with a recital of the formalities required by law is
    desirable for the purpose of furnishing presumptive evidence when the subscribing
    witnesses are deceased or beyond the reach of process, and serving as a safeguard against
    the danger of imperfect recollection or deliberate misrepresentation of facts.” Van 
    Meter, 183 Md. at 618
    . In cases involving wills with adequate attestation clauses, Maryland
    courts have held that the presumption of due execution prevails, as a matter law, over a
    witness’s testimony that he did not actually sign the will in the testator’s presence (id. at
    619), over a witness’s testimony that he could not recall anything about a will whose
    signing he had witnessed 17 years earlier (see McIntyre v. Saltysiak, 
    205 Md. 415
    , 420-
    21), and over a witness’s testimony that she did not know that she was witnessing the
    signing of a will. O’Neal v. Jennings, 
    53 Md. App. 604
    , 608-09 (1983). In none of those
    cases did the witness’s subsequent testimony rise to the level of the clear and convincing
    -29-
    evidence needed to overcome the presumption of due execution that arose from the
    presence of the attestation clause.
    But while a proper attestation clause is sufficient to invoke the formidable
    presumption of due execution, “an attestation clause is not the sine qua non of the
    presumption of due execution.” Slack v. 
    Truitt, 368 Md. at 12
    . For example,
    notwithstanding the absence of a formal attestation clause, the Court of Appeals has held
    that the presumption of due execution applied to a one-page will, “written entirely in the
    testator’s handwriting, and bearing the signature of the testator and two witnesses” whose
    signatures were “nearly adjacent” to the testator’s and “beneath the words ‘Witnessed
    By.’” 
    Id. at 12.
    In reaching its decision, the Court cited and relied on out-of-state cases,
    such as Mead v. Trustees of the Presbyterian Church, 
    229 Ill. 526
    , 531-32, 
    82 N.E. 371
    ,
    373 (1907), in which the court held that an attestation clause was not necessary to invoke
    the presumption of due execution where the witnesses had affirmatively indicated that
    they were signing as witnesses. On the other hand, in Groat v. 
    Sundberg, 213 Md. App. at 157
    , this Court distinguished Slack and held that the presumption of due execution did
    not apply when “the words ‘witness,’ ‘witnessed by,’ or some other variation d[id] not
    appear anywhere on the Document, much less next to the signatures of” the two
    witnesses.
    B.     The Presumption of Due Execution in this Case
    In this case, it is debatable whether the will contains an adequate attestation clause
    that would trigger the presumption of due execution. The attestation clause arguably
    begins on page 5 of 6, with the confusing sentence fragment that does not connect
    -30-
    grammatically to the language on the top of page 6 of 6. Furthermore, even if we were to
    disregard the sentence fragment, the language on page 6 of 6 (“I do hereby attest that the
    testator to be of sound mind [sic], fully able to understand this instrument, and the
    testator voluntarily and freely did sign same”) arguably fails to qualify as a proper
    attestation clause: although the witnesses do attest to the signing of the will and to Dr.
    Castruccio’s testamentary capacity, they do not expressly recount the satisfaction of the
    statutory requirement that they themselves signed “in the presence of the testator.” ET §
    4-102. See McIntyre v. 
    Saltysiak, 205 Md. at 421
    (“[t]he attestation of the will is the act
    of the witnesses in seeing that those things exist and are done which the attestation clause
    declares were done and which the statute requires”) (emphasis added); accord Slack v.
    
    Truitt, 368 Md. at 12
    .16
    Nonetheless, the circuit court correctly held that the presumption of due execution
    attached. As with the will in Slack v. Truitt, each of the three witnesses to this will
    16
    By contrast, the valid attestation clause in Van Meter read: “Signed, sealed,
    published and declared by Annie M. Van Meter, the above named testatrix, as and for her
    last will and testament, in the presence of us, who, at her request, in her presence, and in
    the presence of each other have hereunto subscribed our names as witnesses.” Van
    
    Meter, 183 Md. at 616
    (emphasis added). The attestation clause in McIntyre v. Saltysiak
    read: “Signed, published and declared by the above named testatrix Marie C. McIntyre as
    and for her last will and testament, in the presence of us, who, at her request, and in her
    presence, and in the presence of each other have hereunto subscribed our names as
    witnesses.” McIntyre v. 
    Saltysiak, 205 Md. at 419
    (emphasis added). In O’Neal v.
    Jennings, the attestation clause read, in pertinent part: “The above Instrument was
    declared by the said Testatrix to be her last Will and Testament, and each of us, at the
    request of said Testatrix and in her presence and in the presence of each other, signed our
    names as witnesses thereto, at the end of the Will.” O’Neal v. 
    Jennings, 53 Md. App. at 605
    (emphasis added).
    -31-
    signed their names under the word “WITNESS.” Although the witnesses’ signatures are
    not “nearly adjacent” to the testator’s, as they were in Slack v. Truitt, they appear on the
    next, consecutively-numbered page. In addition, the witnesses’ signatures follow a
    recitation in which they “attest” to the satisfaction of some relevant conditions, including
    Dr. Castruccio’s signing of the document and his testamentary capacity. Like the will in
    Slack v. Truitt, therefore, “[t]he will in the case sub judice bears on its face every indicia
    of due execution.” Slack v. 
    Truitt, 368 Md. at 12
    .17
    In her brief, Mrs. Castruccio argues, at some length, that the presumption of due
    execution did not attach. She does not, however, argue in the alternative that, if the
    presumption did attach, she adduced the requisite clear and convincing evidence to
    overcome it. Because we agree with the circuit court that the presumption of due
    execution did attach to this will, and because Mrs. Castruccio does not claim to have
    overcome the presumption, we conclude that the circuit court acted correctly in directing
    the entry of summary judgment against her on all other issues. See Broadcast Equities,
    Inc. v. Montgomery County, 
    123 Md. App. 363
    , 390 (1998) (noting that arguments not
    presented in a brief or not presented with particularity will not be considered on appeal).
    17
    Although the will itself was sufficient to give rise to the presumption of due
    execution, it is worth noting that the three witnesses to Dr. Castruccio’s will each
    testified, without contradiction, to the satisfaction of the statutory formalities. “The
    validity of the execution of a will depends, not upon an attestation clause, but upon
    conformity with the requirements of the statute, and also the testimony of the subscribing
    witnesses if they are produced and examined.” Van 
    Meter, 183 Md. at 617
    .
    -32-
    V.     Spoliation
    During the course of these proceedings, Mrs. Castruccio discovered that Darlene
    Barclay had destroyed a flash drive in March or April of 2013, shortly after Dr.
    Castruccio’s death and the filing of the petition to caveat. The flash drive contained
    copies of documents that Ms. Barclay had typed while working in the Castruccios’
    business office. Ms. Barclay asserted that some of those documents contained
    confidential information concerning her volunteer work with cancer survivors. Other
    documents concerned Dr. Castruccio and his businesses. Ms. Barclay testified that,
    before destroying the flash drive, she transferred the files that concerned Dr. Castruccio
    onto another storage device.18
    Ms. Barclay produced printed copies of files that concerned Dr. Castruccio. She
    did not, however, produce the device onto which she had copied those files. Nor did she
    produce her personal laptop, which, she said, had been stolen after she had lent it to one
    of her daughters.19
    Mrs. Castruccio engaged a computer forensic expert. The expert examined the
    computer that Ms. Barclay used at the Castruccio office. On the basis of that
    18
    Ms. Barclay disclosed the destruction of the flash drive during her deposition in
    a related case, in which Mrs. Castruccio challenged the inter vivos transfer of several
    properties from the Castruccios as tenants by the entireties to Ms. Barclay. The trial
    court ruled against Mrs. Castruccio in that case, and this Court affirmed in an unreported
    opinion. Sadie Castruccio v. Estate of Peter Adalbert Castruccio, No. 622, Sept. Term
    2014 (filed Feb. 3, 2016).
    19
    The daughter died unexpectedly just after Ms. Barclay lent her the computer.
    Ms. Barclay claimed that the daughter’s husband had taken the computer. The daughter
    who died was not the daughter who witnessed the will.
    -33-
    examination, the expert opined that a file called “will” was present on the flash drive as
    of the date of Dr. Castruccio’s death, but was not among the files produced by Ms.
    Barclay.
    Claiming spoliation, Mrs. Castruccio moved for sanctions against Ms. Barclay and
    the Estate. Mrs. Castruccio argued that the missing file “might” reveal whether the will
    had been modified between September 29, 2010, when Dr. Castruccio appears to have
    signed it, and November 10, 2010, when Mr. Greiber filed it with the register of wills. At
    a minimum, Mrs. Castruccio asked the court to draw an adverse inference from the
    apparent destruction of the file.
    The court scheduled a hearing on the motion for sanctions, and on other motions
    in a related case, for May 13, 2014. At that hearing, the Estate argued that the court
    should not entertain testimony from Mrs. Castruccio’s expert until the Estate had had an
    opportunity to depose him. Although the record reflects that the court was already quite
    familiar with the expert’s opinion and the substance of the motion, it agreed with the
    Estate and deferred a decision.
    The court never formally ruled on the motion for sanctions as such, but in
    directing the entry of summary judgment against Mrs. Castruccio, the court denied the
    motion in substance and effect. Frase v. Barnhart, 
    379 Md. 100
    , 116 (2003) (“[i]t has
    long been recognized, in Maryland and elsewhere, that motions may be denied by
    implication”). Discussing the alleged destruction of evidence, the court stated: “There is
    no doubt that Ms. Barclay’s ill-considered actions have made the discovery process more
    difficult.” “However,” given the witnesses’ “undisputed testimony” concerning the
    -34-
    execution and attestation of the will, as well as “the totality of the record,” the court could
    “not conclude that her actions would supply the clear and convincing basis upon which a
    trier of fact would be able to overturn the presumed Will.” In other words, the court
    either declined to draw an adverse inference or concluded that any such inference could
    not give rise to the clear and convincing evidence necessary to defeat the presumption of
    due execution.
    Mrs. Castruccio contends that the court erred in granting summary judgment
    without conducting an evidentiary hearing on her motion for sanctions. We disagree.
    Under Rule 2-311(f), the court had no obligation to conduct a hearing on the
    motion for sanctions unless it rendered a decision that was dispositive of a claim or
    defense. The court, for example, would have had an obligation to conduct a hearing if it
    sanctioned Ms. Barclay or the Estate by directing the entry of judgment against them or,
    perhaps, by striking out one or more their defenses. At the hearing on May 13, 2014,
    however, the circuit court made it very clear that it had no intention of imposing a drastic
    sanction of that nature.
    A trial court has broad discretion to fashion a remedy for spoliation. See Klupt v.
    Krongard, 
    126 Md. App. 179
    , 193 (1999). Appellate courts are reluctant to second-guess
    a trial judge’s decision to impose, or not to impose, sanctions. See 
    id. While Ms.
    Barclay’s actions certainly were ill-considered, the court had discretion
    to decide that an adverse inference, if any, could not overcome the presumption of due
    execution. Because Ms. Barclay candidly admitted that she had destroyed the flash drive
    (albeit in a misguided attempt to protect confidential information), the court had little
    -35-
    basis to conclude that she intentionally set out to destroy information relevant to Dr.
    Castruccio’s estate planning. More important, Mrs. Castruccio could offer nothing more
    than conjecture about what the missing file “might” reveal. Conjecture cannot rise to the
    level of the clear and convincing evidence that is necessary to defeat the presumption of
    due execution.
    In any event, “[e]ven in evidence spoliation cases, the fact finder is not permitted
    to find the destruction of evidence to be substantive proof that the evidence was
    unfavorable.” Bereano v. State Ethics Comm’n, 
    403 Md. 716
    , 747 (2008). An adverse
    inference might impair the value of the Estate’s evidence or give greater credence to Mrs.
    Castruccio’s, but it would not, in itself, constitute affirmative evidence to refute the
    presumption of due execution. See 
    id. The circuit
    court, therefore, did not err in granting
    summary judgment against Mrs. Castruccio.
    JUDGMENTS OF THE CIRCUIT COURT
    FOR ANNE ARUNDEL COUNTY
    AFFIRMED. COSTS TO BE PAID BY
    APPELLANT.
    -36-
    APPENDIX