Carla Muruaga-Atkins; Carol Ann Martin; Laura Martin, Individually; Laura Martin, as Mother and Next Friend of Two Unemancipated Minor Children; Caitlyn Peterson, Individually; Caitlyn Peterson, as Mother and Next Friend of Three Unemancipated Minor Children; And Kathryn Ahlefeld v. Melanie Foster; Forest Roberts; Kathryn Clark; Christie Waggoner; Lillian Van Houten; Sawney Huckabay; And Allen Family Farm, Inc., an Arkansas Non-Profit Corporation

CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedMay 20, 2026
StatusPublished

This text of Carla Muruaga-Atkins; Carol Ann Martin; Laura Martin, Individually; Laura Martin, as Mother and Next Friend of Two Unemancipated Minor Children; Caitlyn Peterson, Individually; Caitlyn Peterson, as Mother and Next Friend of Three Unemancipated Minor Children; And Kathryn Ahlefeld v. Melanie Foster; Forest Roberts; Kathryn Clark; Christie Waggoner; Lillian Van Houten; Sawney Huckabay; And Allen Family Farm, Inc., an Arkansas Non-Profit Corporation (Carla Muruaga-Atkins; Carol Ann Martin; Laura Martin, Individually; Laura Martin, as Mother and Next Friend of Two Unemancipated Minor Children; Caitlyn Peterson, Individually; Caitlyn Peterson, as Mother and Next Friend of Three Unemancipated Minor Children; And Kathryn Ahlefeld v. Melanie Foster; Forest Roberts; Kathryn Clark; Christie Waggoner; Lillian Van Houten; Sawney Huckabay; And Allen Family Farm, Inc., an Arkansas Non-Profit Corporation) 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
Carla Muruaga-Atkins; Carol Ann Martin; Laura Martin, Individually; Laura Martin, as Mother and Next Friend of Two Unemancipated Minor Children; Caitlyn Peterson, Individually; Caitlyn Peterson, as Mother and Next Friend of Three Unemancipated Minor Children; And Kathryn Ahlefeld v. Melanie Foster; Forest Roberts; Kathryn Clark; Christie Waggoner; Lillian Van Houten; Sawney Huckabay; And Allen Family Farm, Inc., an Arkansas Non-Profit Corporation, (Ark. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

Cite as 2026 Ark. App. 336 ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS DIVISION IV No. CV-25-386

CARLA MURUAGA-ATKINS; CAROL Opinion Delivered May 20, 2026

ANN MARTIN; LAURA MARTIN, APPEAL FROM THE BENTON INDIVIDUALLY; LAURA MARTIN, AS COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT MOTHER AND NEXT FRIEND OF [NO. 04CV-21-2909] TWO UNEMANCIPATED MINOR CHILDREN; CAITLYN PETERSON, INDIVIDUALLY; CAITLYN PETERSON, HONORABLE JOHN R. SCOTT, AS MOTHER AND NEXT FRIEND OF JUDGE THREE UNEMANCIPATED MINOR CHILDREN; AND KATHRYN AHLEFELD

APPELLANTS

V.

MELANIE FOSTER; FOREST ROBERTS; KATHRYN CLARK; CHRISTIE WAGGONER; LILLIAN VAN HOUTEN; SAWNEY HUCKABAY; AND ALLEN FAMILY FARM, INC., AN ARKANSAS NON-PROFIT CORPORATION APPELLEES AFFIRMED

CINDY GRACE THYER, Judge

This case involves an action to prevent certain real property owned by Allen Family

Farm, Inc. (AFF), from being listed for sale and to resolve the issue of membership in that

organization. Appellants here, plaintiffs below, are Carla Muruaga-Atkins; Carol Ann Martin; Laura Martin, individually and as next friend of her two minor children; Caitlyn

Peterson, individually and as next friend of her three minor children; and Kathryn Ahlefeld.

Appellees here, defendants below, are Melanie Foster, Forest Roberts, Kathryn Clark,

Christie Waggoner, Lillian Van Houten, Sawney Huckabay, and AFF.

Appellants raise four points on appeal: (1) the circuit court applied the wrong legal

standard when it determined that they were required to demonstrate they had been

defrauded in order to prevail; (2) the circuit court incorrectly found that the membership

restrictions implemented in the bylaws were not in conflict with the articles of incorporation

and were valid; (3) the circuit court erroneously held that AFF could sell all its land and

abandon its corporate purpose in contravention of our supreme court’s opinion in Giss v.

Apple, 239 Ark. 1124, 396 S.W.2d 813 (1965); and (4) the circuit court further erred in its

determination that the election was valid and not void despite allegedly “inaccurate”

information being conveyed.

I. Factual and Procedural History

James R. Allen was the original owner of the property subject to this lawsuit. Allen

was widowed in 1936 and lived until 1944, never remarrying. He and his late wife had ten

children: Allie Belle, Neva, Daniel (Dan), James, Monell, Minnie Lou, Sam, Gilbert, Tom,

and Lois. All ten have passed away.

In 1940, Allen deeded 372.95 acres of his farm to his eldest child, Allie Belle Root,

reserving to himself ten acres around the house, barn, and associated structures. When he

2 died in 1944, each of the ten children received an equal undivided one-tenth interest in the

ten acres around the house.

In 1967, Allie Belle deeded the 372.95 acres to her siblings Sam, Tom, Gilbert, and

Monell. Monell passed away in 1983, leaving appellee Melanie Foster, formerly Melanie

Sawka, as her heir. Those four grantees each then owned by deed an undivided one-fourth

interest in 372.95 acres, along with their inherited undivided one-tenth interests in the ten

acres that James R. Allen had held solely in his name when he died in 1944.

In 1984, forty years after James R. Allen died, two of his children—Sam (father of

appellee Christie Waggoner) and Gilbert (father of appellee Lillian Van Houten)—along with

his grandchild, Melanie Foster, formed AFF as an Arkansas nonprofit corporation pursuant

to the 1963 Arkansas Nonprofit Corporation Act, codified at Arkansas Code Annotated

sections 4-28-201 et seq. (Repl. 2016 & Supp. 2023) (the 1963 Act).1 Formation was finalized

after the Sebastian County Circuit Court found that the articles of incorporation conformed

to law and that the corporation had been formed for a lawful purpose.

The articles of incorporation reflect that AFF was formed for the following purpose:

[T]o promote the preservation of the Allen Family Farm and the cabins and buildings thereon and to provide for membership in said organization for the various members of the Allen family who are direct descendants of James Robert Allen, for use as a recreation area, and to provide for the restoration of the old farm, to be enjoyed by the family and used and preserved by the members of this association, and for such other purposes which will promote the pleasure and welfare of the membership.

1 The articles of incorporation were never amended to allow AFF to be governed by the 1993 Act.

3 The articles further reflect that “provision for the regulation of the internal affairs of this

corporation are vested in the Board of Directors and the By-Laws of the corporation.”

Once incorporation was approved, AFF began asking all the owners (including the

incorporators) to deed to AFF all the remaining outstanding interests in the family farm.

This appears to have occurred.

The record contains what the parties have identified as AFF’s initial bylaws, which

provide:

Those persons who are direct descendants of James Robert Allen who are interested in the establishment and preservation and reservation of the old Allen family farm . . . as a recreation area, preservation and reservation of the old farm life and natural lands of the Allen family farm, as well as the historical landmarks thereon, and those who are willing to expend their efforts and money toward that purpose, are eligible for membership in this association. In order to become a member, each person qualified as above set out shall make application on an application form supplied by the corporation. Each applicant shall pay One Dollar ($1.00) with the application which shall constitute the dues for the first year. Annual dues for each member shall then be set by the Board of Directors and shall be payable at the annual meeting on a basis of a calendar year. However, special assessments may be asked by the members of the Board of Directors herein created. Membership in this corporation may be terminated by any member wishing to leave the association or termination may be made by the membership committee when the member in question is no longer qualified under the terms of the Articles.

The bylaws, which are undated and unsigned, do not appear to have ever been formally voted

on within a meeting and passed—at least not as reflected in any minutes.

The Internal Revenue Service subsequently granted AFF 501(c)(7) status as a

nonprofit social club.

4 AFF held its first meeting on October 20, 1984. The minutes of that meeting reflect

that those attending conferred at length about membership enrollment. The attendees

agreed that any direct descendant of James R. Allen would be eligible for membership, but

to become a member, the descendent must be twenty-one years old and apply. The initial

first-year dues were set at one dollar plus an equal share of that year’s assessment. Dues

thereafter were to be set by the board of directors (the Board).

At the next meeting in June 1985 (as reflected by the minutes), members agreed that

a direct descendant of James R. Allen could become a member after he or she turned twenty-

one, so long as he or she became a member before the end of their twenty-fifth year. To

become a member, such persons would pay one dollar in initial dues and any assessments

that were ordered between their twenty-first birthday and their application date.

By 2011, all but one of James R. Allen’s children had died. Some enrolled members

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Carla Muruaga-Atkins; Carol Ann Martin; Laura Martin, Individually; Laura Martin, as Mother and Next Friend of Two Unemancipated Minor Children; Caitlyn Peterson, Individually; Caitlyn Peterson, as Mother and Next Friend of Three Unemancipated Minor Children; And Kathryn Ahlefeld v. Melanie Foster; Forest Roberts; Kathryn Clark; Christie Waggoner; Lillian Van Houten; Sawney Huckabay; And Allen Family Farm, Inc., an Arkansas Non-Profit Corporation, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carla-muruaga-atkins-carol-ann-martin-laura-martin-individually-laura-arkctapp-2026.