Alexis McAllister v. Terry McAllister

2025 Ark. App. 215
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedApril 9, 2025
StatusPublished

This text of 2025 Ark. App. 215 (Alexis McAllister v. Terry McAllister) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alexis McAllister v. Terry McAllister, 2025 Ark. App. 215 (Ark. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Cite as 2025 Ark. App. 215 ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS DIVISION IV No. CV-24-42

ALEXIS MCALLISTER Opinion Delivered: April 9, 2025

APPELLANT APPEAL FROM THE BENTON COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT V. [NO. 04PR-22-1059]

TERRY MCALLISTER HONORABLE DOUG SCHRANTZ, APPELLEE JUDGE

DISMISSED

WENDY SCHOLTENS WOOD, Judge

Alexis McAllister appeals the Benton County Circuit Court’s order denying her

request for an injunction preventing her stepmother, appellee Terry McAllister, from selling

the home of her father, Michael McAllister. Alexis is the executor of Michael’s estate. Terry

is Michael’s widow. The dispute concerns the ownership of the home in which Michael lived

when he died. Because we have no jurisdiction over an appeal from the final order denying

the injunction, and an appeal from the court’s order vacating the temporary restraining order

is moot, we dismiss the appeal.

Michael died in a hotel room on August 28, 2022, while on vacation with Alexis and

her boyfriend in Indianapolis. Michael was survived by two adult children: Alexis and Mason

McAllister. Michael was married to Terry, but they were separated and in the process of

divorce when he died. At the time of his death, Michael lived in a home located at 10890 Gates Lane, Pea Ridge, Arkansas (the “home”). Terry, who was not living in the home at the

time, moved back into the home immediately after Michael died.

On September 28, 2022, Alexis filed a petition for administration of the estate and

appointment of executor. In the petition, Alexis alleged that Michael died intestate,

requested that she be appointed executor, and asked the court to enter a temporary

restraining order (“TRO”) preventing the sale of the home. Alexis alleged that the home was

an asset of the estate and that Terry had listed the home for sale. Although the Benton

County real estate records indicate that Michael had quitclaimed the home to himself and

Terry as tenants by the entirety, Alexis alleged that there were questions regarding whether

Terry caused Michael’s death, whether Michael was intoxicated when he signed the deed

transferring title to him and Terry, and whether the legal description in the deed was valid.

Alexis also filed a lis pendens in the county real-estate records providing notice of the court

action. The court entered a TRO that day prohibiting Terry from selling the property.

On October 11, Terry filed a response to the petition along with a motion to lift the

TRO and a petition to remove the lis pendens. She denied the allegations against her,

claiming that she had nothing to do with Michael’s death; stated that she owned the home

with Michael as tenants by the entirety and attached a quitclaim deed granting the property

to her and Michael filed of record on July 26, 2021; said that Michael was sober when he

signed the deed and had full knowledge of what he was signing; and claimed that the home

was lawfully hers and was not part of Michael’s estate. She argued that Alexis had failed to

allege specific facts showing that immediate and irreparable injury or loss would result but

2 had merely made “wild and unfounded accusations.” She asked the court to lift the TRO

and order that the lis pendens be removed.

The court held a hearing on Alexis’s petition on November 10 and 21. Several of

Michael’s friends testified that he was an alcoholic and that he signed the deed because Terry

was going to divorce him if he did not. Sandra Fletcher and Norman James Keene, friends

of Michael and Terry, testified that Michael asked them to meet at Gusano’s Pizza to act as

witnesses to the signing of the quitclaim deed. They said that Michael understood what he

was signing and that they witnessed both Michael and Terry sign the deed. Both also testified

that they had seen Michael intoxicated before and that he was not intoxicated when he

signed the deed. Keene’s wife, Brenda Flanagan, was also present and notarized the

signatures on the deed. Flanagan testified that she was a loan officer at a bank, that she had

been friends with Michael for over thirty years, and that Michael told her he wanted to deed

the property to himself and Terry. Flanagan obtained a form quitclaim deed, filled in the

names and property description, and notarized Michael’s and Terry’s signatures after they

executed the deed. She said that neither Michael nor Terry drank alcohol before signing the

deed, that she had seen Michel intoxicated many times, and that Michael was not intoxicated

when he signed the deed. She confirmed that she explained the consequences of execution

of the deed and said that Michael understood what he was signing, had no hesitation, and

signed of his own free will.

The court entered an order on December 1 vacating the TRO and ordering that the

lis pendens be removed. Also on December 1, Alexis filed a notice of appeal from the court’s

3 order and a motion to stay the order pending appeal, which the court granted. Rather than

filing the record with the appellate court to perfect an appeal from the court’s order, Alexis

filed a “Petition for Permission to Appeal” on December 15 with the Arkansas Supreme

Court, alleging that the supreme court had jurisdiction to hear the appeal pursuant to Rule

1-2(a)(8) of the Rules of the Arkansas Supreme Court and Court of Appeals and Rule 2(a)(6)

of the Arkansas Rules of Appellate Procedure–Civil. On February 6, 2023, the supreme court

denied Alexis’s petition, and Alexis did not pursue this appeal any further.

On June 20, the circuit court held what it called a “final hearing” in the case. Counsel

for the parties detailed the evidence presented at the November 2022 hearing, and Alexis

put on three additional witnesses. The first was Michael’s sister, who testified that Michael

had been an alcoholic since he was eighteen years old, that Michael and Terry were never

sober when they were together, that Michael regretted signing the deed and wanted to

dissolve it, and that Terry was stalking him in the months before his death. The second

witness was Michael’s best friend. Alexis proffered his testimony, which the court did not

consider because he was not on the original list of witnesses. Finally, she called Terry in order

to proffer testimony regarding certain texts between her and Michael, but the court did not

consider the proffered testimony. In closing, Alexis asked the court to find that the home is

an asset of Michael’s estate.

Terry argued that the witnesses had no personal knowledge regarding the events

surrounding execution of the deed, there was no evidence to support the argument that

Michael was intoxicated when he signed it or that he did not intend to transfer an interest

4 in the property to Terry at the time of execution, and there was no evidence that Terry had

anything to do with Michael’s death. Terry claimed that nothing additional had been

presented since the November 2022 hearing, there was no evidence demonstrating that the

home was an asset of the estate, and thus the court’s conclusions in its prior order vacating

the TRO and releasing the lis pendens should remain the same.

On June 21, the court entered another order vacating the TRO and ordering that the

lis pendens be removed.1 On June 21, Alexis filed a notice of appeal from the order, a motion

to stay the order pending appeal, and a motion for certification of final judgment. On July

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