Anita J. Woodson v. Rhonda Randall as Personal Representative of the estate of Joanne F. Roache

CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 27, 2026
Docket25A-PL-00779
StatusPublished
AuthorJudge DeBoer

This text of Anita J. Woodson v. Rhonda Randall as Personal Representative of the estate of Joanne F. Roache (Anita J. Woodson v. Rhonda Randall as Personal Representative of the estate of Joanne F. Roache) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Anita J. Woodson v. Rhonda Randall as Personal Representative of the estate of Joanne F. Roache, (Ind. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

FILED Jan 27 2026, 9:03 am

CLERK Indiana Supreme Court Court of Appeals and Tax Court

IN THE

Court of Appeals of Indiana Anita J. Woodson, Appellant-Defendant

v.

Ronda Randall, as Personal Representative of the Estate of Julian M. Roache, Appellee-Plaintiff

January 27, 2026 Court of Appeals Case No. 25A-PL-779 Appeal from the Marion Superior Court The Honorable Gary L. Miller, Judge Trial Court Cause No. 49D03-1901-PL-2839

Opinion by Judge DeBoer Judges Bradford and Weissmann concur.

Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 25A-PL-779 | January 27, 2026 Page 1 of 22 DeBoer, Judge.

Case Summary [1] For several years, Anita Woodson managed the finances of her elderly

stepfather, Julian Roache (the Decedent). After the Decedent died, his Estate 1

sued Woodson, alleging that she had wrongfully transferred a significant

amount of his money into her personal bank account. After dismissing claims

related to Woodson’s alleged mismanagement of assets belonging to a trust set

up by the Decedent and misuse of his social security benefits,2 the trial court

held a bench trial on the remaining claims and entered a judgment against

Woodson. Woodson raises several issues on appeal, which we consolidate and

restate as:

1) Whether the Estate’s claims were barred by the statute of limitations.

2) Whether the court erred in applying the common law presumption of

undue influence to Woodson’s deposits of the Decedent’s funds into her

account.

3) Whether the court made certain erroneous evidentiary rulings at trial.

Finding no error, we affirm.

1 We refer to the Decedent’s Estate throughout this opinion as “the Estate” or “the Decedent’s Estate.” 2 In a prior interlocutory appeal, this Court affirmed the dismissal of these claims and remanded for further proceedings related to Woodson’s alleged misuse of the Decedent’s funds other than his social security benefits or assets belonging to the trust. Randall v. Woodson, 212 N.E.3d 691, 696-97 (Ind. Ct. App. 2023), clarified on reh’g, trans. denied.

Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 25A-PL-779 | January 27, 2026 Page 2 of 22 Facts and Procedural History [2] Woodson’s mother married the Decedent in 2007 when he was in his mid-

eighties. By 2013, the Decedent had been diagnosed with dementia and needed

assistance managing his finances and making medical decisions. He appointed

Woodson as his attorney in fact under a general power of attorney (the POA),

named her as his healthcare representative, and made her the trustee of a

revocable living trust he had created to manage assets for his and his wife’s

benefit. Moreover, the Social Security Administration (SSA) began paying the

Decedent’s social security benefits to Woodson as his representative payee. 3

[3] At some point, the Decedent opened a joint bank account in his and

Woodson’s names, which he intended Woodson to use to manage his money

and pay his expenses. It is undisputed that all the funds in that account

belonged to the Decedent. However, Woodson eventually began to deposit the

Decedent’s social security benefits, pension payments, and other funds

(including proceeds from the sale of trust assets) into her personal bank

accounts, and frequently transferred money from the joint account into her

personal checking account.

[4] In February 2016, one of Woodson’s sisters filed a petition seeking to be

appointed as the Decedent’s guardian and alleging that his advanced dementia

3 The SSA will pay benefits to a recipient’s representative payee if the recipient is “(1) [l]egally incompetent or mentally incapable of managing benefit payments; or (2) [p]hysically incapable of managing or directing the management of his or her benefit payments.” 20 C.F.R. § 404.2010(a).

Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 25A-PL-779 | January 27, 2026 Page 3 of 22 rendered him incapable of managing his own affairs. 4 On the same day,

another of Woodson’s sisters, Ronda Randall, filed a sperate petition seeking to

be named their mother’s guardian. 5 Woodson contested both guardianship

petitions, and the Decedent died in January 2017 while they were pending.

Thereafter, in June, Woodson consented to the appointment of Randall as their

mother’s guardian. Around that same time, Randall was also appointed

personal representative of the Decedent’s Estate. 6

[5] In January 2019, on the two-year anniversary of the Decedent’s death, Randall

filed this lawsuit in her capacities as the Estate’s personal representative and her

mother’s guardian. 7 The complaint alleged that Woodson had breached her

fiduciary duties to the Decedent by commingling his funds with her own and

had refused to provide an accounting for her use of his and the trust’s assets.8

4 At the bench trial in this action, the trial court took judicial notice of the documents filed in the Decedent’s guardianship proceedings under Cause No. 49D08-1602-GU-7081, but Woodson failed to include any of the relevant filings from that case in her appendix on appeal. We have accessed them using our Odyssey Case Management System. 5 It is unclear from the record whether the trial court took judicial notice of the guardianship proceedings regarding the parties’ mother. Pursuant to Indiana Evidence Rule 201, we take judicial notice of the court records in that case, which were filed under Cause No. 49D08-1602-GU-7078. See Ind. Evidence Rule 201(b)(5) (“A court may judicially notice a law, which includes[] . . . records of a court of this state[.]”). 6 We also take judicial notice of the documents filed in the Decedent’s Estate under Cause No. 49D08-1706- ES-22389. 7 After the parties’ mother died, her estate was substituted as a party. 8 In violation of Appellate Rule 50, Woodson failed to include a copy of the complaint or any other relevant filings (other than the appealed order) in her appendix on appeal. See Ind. Appellate Rule 50(A)(2)(f) (“The appellant’s Appendix shall contain . . . copies of . . . pleadings and other documents from the Clerk’s Record in chronological order that are necessary for resolution of the issues raised on appeal[.]”). We have accessed those documents using our Odyssey Case Management System.

Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 25A-PL-779 | January 27, 2026 Page 4 of 22 Woodson filed an answer denying those allegations and asserted a claim against

Randall alleging that she had wrongfully taken assets belonging to the Estate.

After unsuccessfully moving to dismiss Woodson’s claim, Randall filed an

answer denying any liability to Woodson or the Estate.

[6] Over two years after the complaint was filed, Woodson filed a motion to

dismiss it. She argued that (1) neither the Decedent’s Estate nor that of the

parties’ mother could prove they had an interest in the trust’s assets and (2) the

trial court lacked subject matter jurisdiction over any claim relating to

Woodson’s misuse of the Decedent’s social security benefits. The court granted

that motion and, on Randall’s request, certified its order for interlocutory

appeal.

[7] On interlocutory appeal, Randall did not challenge the dismissal of claims

relating to Woodson’s alleged misuse of trust assets. See Randall v. Woodson,

212 N.E.3d 691, 692 n.1 (Ind. Ct. App. 2023) [hereinafter, “Randall I”]

(“Randall does not appeal the dismissal of [claims pertaining to the trust, so] we

address only those claims brought by Randall in her capacity as the personal

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Anita J. Woodson v. Rhonda Randall as Personal Representative of the estate of Joanne F. Roache, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anita-j-woodson-v-rhonda-randall-as-personal-representative-of-the-estate-indctapp-2026.