Charles E. Brooks by Elderserve, Inc., Legal Guardians v. Hon Tara Hagerty, Jefferson Circuit Court Judge, Family Division 5

CourtKentucky Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 20, 2021
Docket2020 SC 0065
StatusUnknown

This text of Charles E. Brooks by Elderserve, Inc., Legal Guardians v. Hon Tara Hagerty, Jefferson Circuit Court Judge, Family Division 5 (Charles E. Brooks by Elderserve, Inc., Legal Guardians v. Hon Tara Hagerty, Jefferson Circuit Court Judge, Family Division 5) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Kentucky Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Charles E. Brooks by Elderserve, Inc., Legal Guardians v. Hon Tara Hagerty, Jefferson Circuit Court Judge, Family Division 5, (Ky. 2021).

Opinion

RENDERED: JANUARY 21, 2021 TO BE PUBLISHED

Supreme Court of Kentucky 2020-SC-0065-MR

CHARLES E. BROOKS BY ELDERSERVE, APPELLANT INC., LEGAL GUARDIANS

ON APPEAL FROM COURT OF APPEALS V. NO. 2019-CA-1589 JEFFERSON CIRCUIT COURT NO. 19-CI-501173

HONORABLE TARA HAGERTY, APPELLEE JEFFERSON CIRCUIT COURT JUDGE, FAMILY DIVISION 5

AND

TAYLOR TONEY REAL PARTY IN INTEREST

OPINION OF THE COURT BY JUSTICE KELLER

AFFIRMING

Pending in Jefferson Family Court is an annulment action in the

marriage of Charles E. Brooks and Taylor Toney. Elderserve, Inc. brought the

action as Brooks’ guardian. Elderserve, Inc., on Brooks’ behalf, then sought to

amend the annulment petition to include a petition for a dissolution of Brooks

and Toney’s marriage in order to confer upon the family court jurisdiction over

contested property. The family court denied the motion to amend, citing Johnson v. Johnson’s1 prohibition against guardians initiating an action for

divorce on behalf of their wards.

Elderserve then sought a writ of mandamus from the Court of Appeals

directing the Jefferson Family Court to grant its motion to amend the

annulment petition to include a petition for dissolution of marriage on behalf of

Brooks. The Court of Appeals denied the writ petition also relying on our

holding in Johnson. We note that both the Jefferson Family Court and the

Court of Appeals, while citing Johnson as authority, requested that we

reevaluate the value of Johnson as a controlling precedent.

Elderserve, for Brooks, appeals to this Court from the Court of Appeals’

denial of its petition for a writ, seeking this Court’s reexamination of Johnson.

We conclude that the trial court’s denial of the motion to amend the annulment

petition was not in error as Johnson was good precedent at the time the court

entertained Elderserve’s petition. However, we reevaluate Johnson and set forth

the procedure heretofore for this matter and others like it. After a thorough

review of the case law and statutes, we hold that changes to the Kentucky

guardianship statutes since Johnson’s rendering no longer justify its complete

prohibition of guardian-initiated divorces. Realizing the significant change this

presents, we take this opportunity to describe the legal steps which must be

followed by a guardian before he or she can petition for a divorce for his or her

ward. Because this procedure was not followed prior to Elderserve’s motion to

1 170 S.W.2d 889 (Ky. 1943).

2 amend was filed, we hold that the trial court did not err in denying the motion

to amend. Accordingly, we affirm the decision of the Court of Appeals.

I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

The underlying action in this case is an annulment of marriage. Charles

E. Brooks and Taylor Toney were married in February 2017. At the time of

their marriage, Brooks was seventy-six years old and blind; Toney was twenty-

nine years old. Toney had been a caretaker for Brooks’ wife until her death.

In late 2018, the Cabinet for Health and Family Services’ Adult Protective

Services (APS) was alerted to facts indicating Brooks was the victim of elder

abuse and initiated an investigation. APS found Brooks to be neglected and in

poor physical condition, and in November 2018, APS initiated an emergency

action for guardianship. The subsequent APS investigation substantiated the

allegation of exploitation and identified Toney as the agent responsible for

Brooks’ exploitation and neglect. On January 25, 2019, the Jefferson District

Court found Brooks to be wholly disabled in managing his personal and

financial affairs and appointed APS as an emergency guardian with the powers

and duties of both a guardian and conservator under KRS Chapter 387. On

April 1, 2019, the court made the emergency guardianship permanent,

appointing Elderserve, Inc. as Brooks’ third-party guardian. Elderserve found

evidence indicating Brooks was not competent to enter into marriage at the

time of the marriage and, on behalf of Brooks, filed a petition for annulment on

April 15, 2019.

3 Prior to APS’s intervention and Elderserve’s appointment, Toney

obtained powers of attorney from Brooks which enabled her to liquidate and

transfer the preponderance of Brooks’ real and personal property to herself.

These transfers included Brooks’ non-marital home, which Toney used the

power of attorney to sell. She deposited the proceeds of the sale into a joint

account and then transferred those proceeds into accounts solely in her name.

Toney used these proceeds to purchase real estate titled solely in her name.

These transfers conveyed to Toney the bulk of Brooks’ financial resources,

resources that Elderserve identified as necessary for Brooks’ continued care.2

Elderserve moved to recover Brooks’ assets, but the family court correctly

questioned whether it had jurisdiction over the real property as part of the

annulment action.3 In response, Elderserve sought, and received, from the

district court permission to file a lis pendens notice against the property Toney

acquired with Brooks’ assets.4 Elderserve then moved to amend the annulment

action to add a petition for dissolution of marriage, an amendment to which

Toney objected. The family court denied Elderserve’s motion to amend, citing

2 Additionally, Toney is alleged to have continued to misappropriate Brooks’ pension checks after Elderserve had been appointed guardian and her powers of attorney invalidated. She is under felony indictment in Jefferson County for multiple counts of theft and forgery in connection with these actions (19-CR-002867). 3 We note that this question was not presented to us, and we decline to address it today. 4 While not in the record before us, we take judicial notice of the Jefferson Family Court’s issuance of a status quo order in connection with this case on June 17, 2019. Both the district and family courts used the tools at their disposal to protect Charles Brooks to the extent available, given the facts before them and the state of the law.

4 Johnson’s firm prohibition of guardian-initiated divorces. In the denial order,

the family court indicated it found the concurrence from Riehle v. Riehle5

persuasive and agreed that Johnson should be reexamined; despite this, it felt

precluded from disregarding Johnson’s direct prohibition of guardian-initiated

dissolutions.

Elderserve then sought a writ of mandamus from the Court of Appeals

instructing the family court to permit Elderserve, on Brooks’ behalf, to amend

the annulment action to include a petition for dissolution. The Court of Appeals

held that Brooks had an adequate remedy by appeal. Specifically, the Court of

Appeals held that, unlike a dissolution of marriage, annulments may be

appealed, and such an action was open to Brooks. Additionally, Brooks could

appeal the denial of the motion to amend. It stated Brooks failed to show the

family court erred in applying Johnson and stated that any amendment would

be futile due to Johnson’s prohibition. While it denied Brooks’ request for a

writ, the court stated that “the time has come to reconsider the wisdom of

Johnson’s prohibition of guardians maintaining dissolution actions on behalf of

an incompetent person.” Brooks, through Elderserve, urges this Court to

reevaluate Johnson and reverse the Court of Appeals’ denial of his petition for a

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Charles E. Brooks by Elderserve, Inc., Legal Guardians v. Hon Tara Hagerty, Jefferson Circuit Court Judge, Family Division 5, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/charles-e-brooks-by-elderserve-inc-legal-guardians-v-hon-tara-hagerty-ky-2021.