Cnealexis Gray v. Melissa Ann Bailey Johnson

CourtCourt of Appeals of Mississippi
DecidedMarch 19, 2024
Docket2023-CA-00339-COA
StatusPublished

This text of Cnealexis Gray v. Melissa Ann Bailey Johnson (Cnealexis Gray v. Melissa Ann Bailey Johnson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cnealexis Gray v. Melissa Ann Bailey Johnson, (Mich. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI

NO. 2023-CA-00339-COA

CNEALEXIS GRAY APPELLANT

v.

MELISSA ANN BAILEY JOHNSON APPELLEE

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 02/17/2023 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. E. VINCENT DAVIS COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: ADAMS COUNTY CHANCERY COURT ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT: T. JACKSON LYONS ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE: LISA JORDAN DALE NATURE OF THE CASE: CIVIL - WILLS, TRUSTS, AND ESTATES DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED - 03/19/2024 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED:

BEFORE WILSON, P.J., GREENLEE AND McDONALD, JJ.

McDONALD, J., FOR THE COURT:

¶1. Cnealexis Gray appeals from the chancery court’s judgment finding that her father,

Donald Davis, intended to name Melissa Johnson as the sole pay-on-death beneficiary of a

certificate of deposit at United Mississippi Bank. Gray argues that the chancellor’s finding

was not supported by substantial credible evidence. Finding no reversible error, we affirm.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

¶2. Gray and Melissa are half-sisters born to different mothers but the same father:

Donald Davis. Davis is deceased, having passed away at sixty years old in August 2020.

Prior to his death, Davis opened an account in the form of a certificate of deposit (CD) with

United Mississippi Bank (UMB) on January 11, 2019. Attached to the CD were “Additional

Terms and Disclosures” and an “Account Agreement.” On the front of the page with the additional terms and disclosures, there is a box labeled “Account Ownership,” which also

includes a section where the owner of the account can designate the pay-on-death

beneficiary. Notably, this section calls for the “Beneficiaries’ name and address.” In this

box, the following appears on a single line “Melissa Ann Bailey [Gray’s social security

number] [Melissa’s date of birth].”1

¶3. Meanwhile, on the page labeled “Account Agreement,” there is a box labeled

“Beneficiary Designation” wherein the option “Pay-On-Death (POD)” is selected. Below

this box is another box labeled “Beneficiary Name(s), Address(es), and SSN(s).” Within this

box is typed, on a single line, “Melissa Ann Bailey [Gray’s social security number]

[Melissa’s date of birth].”2

¶4. The terms of the CD stated that if multiple beneficiaries are listed, then the funds of

the account will be split equally between all listed beneficiaries. The CD was initiated in

early 2019, and as of August 2020, there was $127,000 in the CD.

¶5. Following Davis’s death, Melissa filed a Petition for Letters of Administration,

requesting that she be named the administratrix of Davis’s estate. After Melissa was

appointed the administratrix, she filed a petition for adjudication of heirs, joining Gray as an

interested party based on Gray’s statements to Melissa that Davis was Gray’s father. Melissa

filed these petitions despite the fact that Gray filed an affidavit, which is mentioned but not

1 Both parties stipulated that Melissa Ann Bailey is Melissa Johnson’s maiden name and that the birth date is hers. They also agreed that the social security number listed between Melissa’s maiden name and her birth date is Gray’s social security number. 2 The information appears exactly as it does on the Additional Terms and Disclosures page under “Account Ownership.”

2 contained in the record, stating, “I C’Nealexis Gray do not make a claim to the Estate of

Donald Davis as an heir.” According to the record, the court entered a decree naming

Melissa as Davis’s sole heir at law.

¶6. In September 2020, UMB noticed that Melissa’s name was listed but that Gray’s

social security number was also listed. Seeing the possibility of confusion that this presented,

UMB filed a petition for an interpleader, see M.R.C.P. 22(b), with the Chancery Court of

Adams County, requesting that it be dismissed as a party and that Davis’s daughters be

allowed to contest the ownership of the CD. The court granted the petition and released

UMB from all liability, further ordering Gray and Melissa to assert any claims to the funds

of the account.

¶7. Gray, a resident of Mississippi acting pro se, filed an “Intestate Successor Claim”

requesting the full $127,000 be disbursed to her, alleging she had a witness3 who could attest

to the fact that Davis intended to “[leave] me money in a CD in the amount of approximately

$100,000.00 and funds were left for Melissa Ann Bailey.” Gray also stated that although she

originally agreed to accept half the funds, she claimed she said so because she thought there

had been a bank error and that she now was only interested in receiving the full amount of

the CD.

¶8. Melissa, a resident of Texas, then filed a motion for summary judgment, arguing that

she is the sole named beneficiary under the pay-on-death provision of the CD and that the

addition of Gray’s social security number is of no consequence in determining the rightful

3 Despite Gray making this claim in her initial filing, Gray never produced any affidavits or witness testimony in support.

3 named beneficiary. Because there were no genuine issues of material fact, Melissa requested

Gray’s claim be dismissed as a matter of law. Along with the motion, Melissa also submitted

her own notarized affidavit alleging that Davis had informed her during his lifetime that he

had purchased several CDs and had listed her as the pay-on-death beneficiary. She also

stated she had received funds from several other CDs and accounts wherein she was

identified as the pay-on-death beneficiary.

¶9. The chancery court found that the beneficiary designation form allowed for multiple

beneficiaries to be designated and that Davis may have intended multiple beneficiaries based

on the fact that he included Gray’s social security number. Because the question of Davis’s

intent was a material issue of fact, the court denied the motion for summary judgment. The

court then set a hearing for parties to present testimony on the question of who Davis

intended to designate as his beneficiary or beneficiaries.

¶10. Prior to the hearing, the parties stipulated to the following facts: (1) Melissa claims

the CD as the person whose name and date of birth are listed under the designation of

beneficiaries; (2) Gray claims the CD as the person whose social security number is listed

under the designation of beneficiaries; (3) neither Melissa nor Gray were present when Davis

purchased the CD or filled out the beneficiary designation form at UMB; (4) Melissa’s

maiden name “Melissa Ann Bailey” is the only name on the designation of beneficiaries; (5)

Melissa’s date of birth is the only one listed on the designation of beneficiaries; (6) Gray’s

social security number is the only social security number on the designation of beneficiaries;

and (7) there is no address entered in the designation of beneficiaries.

4 ¶11. At the hearing, Melissa called Earline Kinnie, an eighteen-year employee of UMB and

the bank officer who assisted Davis in his purchase of the CD and filled out the beneficiary

designation form. Kinnie stated she knew Davis as he would occasionally visit the bank.

Kinnie identified the CD and the account agreement, which included the beneficiary

designation form. Kinnie stated that Davis provided her with all of the information for the

CD and the beneficiary designation form, and she typed it into a computer. Kinnie testified

that pursuant to Davis’s oral instructions, she marked the pay-on-death beneficiary

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Bluebook (online)
Cnealexis Gray v. Melissa Ann Bailey Johnson, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cnealexis-gray-v-melissa-ann-bailey-johnson-missctapp-2024.