A mother’s intention to provide additional life insurance benefits for her three daughters and not her son, who was to inherit a valuable business, failed when the additional insurance was purchased through an existing trust for the benefit of the four children and then later transferred to a new trust for the benefit of the three daughters because the trustees of the existing trust violated their fiduciary duties to the four beneficiaries of that trust when they transferred the new life insurance policies to a new trust. A constructive trust for the benefit of the son was therefore imposed on one fourth of the life insurance payable to the new trust that would have been distributed to the son if the policy had been kept in the existing trust. In re: Irrevocable Life Insurance Trust of Ruth M. Grant, 805 WDA 2024 (Pa. Super. 5/23/2025) (non-precedential).