Ed Peters, as Personal Representative of the Estate of Zoran Peters v. Lisa Woods, Individually and in Her Capacity as Trustee of the Edward Grimes Trust, the Esther Grimes Trust, and the Peters Family Living Trust

2024 Ark. App. 499
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedOctober 23, 2024
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2024 Ark. App. 499 (Ed Peters, as Personal Representative of the Estate of Zoran Peters v. Lisa Woods, Individually and in Her Capacity as Trustee of the Edward Grimes Trust, the Esther Grimes Trust, and the Peters Family Living Trust) 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
Ed Peters, as Personal Representative of the Estate of Zoran Peters v. Lisa Woods, Individually and in Her Capacity as Trustee of the Edward Grimes Trust, the Esther Grimes Trust, and the Peters Family Living Trust, 2024 Ark. App. 499 (Ark. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

Circ. 10/10/2024

Cite as 2024 Ark. App. 499 ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS DIVISION I No. CV-22-46

ED PETERS, AS PERSONAL Opinion Delivered October 23, 2024 REPRESENTATIVE OF THE ESTATE OF ZORAN PETERS, DECEASED APPEAL FROM THE BENTON APPELLANT COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT [NO. 04PR-19-356]

V. HONORABLE DOUG SCHRANTZ, JUDGE LISA WOODS, INDIVIDUALLY AND IN HER CAPACITY AS TRUSTEE OF THE EDWARD GRIMES TRUST, THE ESTHER GRIMES TRUST, AND THE PETERS FAMILY LIVING TRUST APPELLEE APPEAL DISMISSED; AFFIRMED

BRANDON J. HARRISON, Chief Judge

We decide two appeals today from two-stage proceedings in the same probate

docket, case number 04PR-19-356 in the Benton County Circuit Court. This is an appeal

from a May 2021 order that struck Zoran Peters’s pleadings as a sanction for contempt and

noncompliance with discovery orders, ending the first stage. It might (or might not) also

be an appeal from a preliminary-injunction order entered in July 2021; we don’t need to

decide. The other appeal, number CV-23-332, Peters v. Woods, 2024 Ark. App. 500, ___

S.W.3d ___ , involves a judgment for Lisa Woods in her capacity as trustee of the Peters

Family Living Trust (or “Peters Trust”) on the third-party complaint she filed to start the

second stage of the proceedings. On these facts, litigation was as predictable as sunrise. Zoran and his wife, Sally

Peters (formerly Grimes), parents of Lisa Woods and Ed Peters, created the Peters Trust in

January 2014. They were aging and sitting on quite a few eggs. By March 2018, Zoran

was seventy-eight. Sally was seventy nine and on the precipice of incapacity, if not on the

other side.1 On March 20, she resigned as Zoran’s co-trustee. The Peters Trust had always

provided that Lisa would succeed her parents as trustee, and Lisa would get everything, and

Ed nothing, once both parents had died. Within six weeks of Sally’s resignation, three trust

amendments were made or attempted—first appointing, then removing Lisa as Zoran’s co-

trustee; then, on May 7, making two changes to the main terms:

1. Ed, not Lisa, would be the successor trustee.

2. Instead of Lisa getting everything and Ed nothing when the last parent died, Ed would get everything and Lisa nothing.

Because this appeal is from a sanctions order, not a judgment on the merits, it’s

enough to know that the trust could be construed to invalidate the later amendments and

acts Zoran took as trustee without Lisa’s agreement (probably all of them since her

appointment) if Zoran or Sally lacked capacity at relevant times beginning in 2018. Further,

the trust provided that they would be considered incapacitated either if (1) a doctor or

mental health professional opined that he or she was unable to effectively manage his

property or financial affairs; (2) he or she refused to submit to provide information or submit

to examination to verify capacity; or (3) a court declared him or her disabled, incompetent,

1 Sally died under guardianship 4 May 2019, one day after Zoran filed this proceeding. The record includes a sworn certification from a clinical neuropsychiatrist who examined her 4 April 2018 that her intellectual functioning was “significantly limited by cognitive decline secondary to dementia.”

2 or legally incapacitated. Zoran and Sally had lived in Arkansas for years. Recently, they

had lived in Rogers, near Lisa, a vice president at Walmart.

At an unknown point, Zoran either moved to Florida with Ed, or Ed took Zoran to

Florida. Through counsel, Zoran commenced this proceeding in May 2019 to compel Lisa,

who was trustee of two Grimes family trusts, to transfer some $750,000 from those trusts

(under which Lisa and Ed would split the funds that remained at Sally’s death) to the Peters

Trust (under which, as then stated, Ed would get it all). In February 2020, Lisa filed a

counterpetition seeking, among other things, to remove Zoran as trustee and nullify the

unfavorable trust amendments as products of Zoran’s incapacity and Ed’s coercion and

undue influence.

The counterpetition came amid Lisa’s unsuccessful years-long campaign to secure

such basic information as Ed’s and Zoran’s physical addresses. Her first interrogatory asked

Zoran to provide “the complete present or last known physical address and mailing addresses

. . . of all persons known to [Zoran], [his] attorneys, or other representatives” who had

knowledge of the subject matter. Zoran did not object and named Ed and himself (among

others) in the response. But he did not provide a physical address for either person.

Although the failure to object waived any objection to that part of the request, Ark. R. Civ.

P. 33(b)(4), and the court ordered Zoran to answer it, the only address Zoran would ever

give for Ed—the same address given later for all third-party defendants—was a post-office

box in a UPS store.

3 In this instance, and others, Zoran’s refusal to comply with discovery sowed the seeds

for later claims of procedural advantage, first by Zoran, then the third-party defendants.2

For example, after Zoran’s counsel withdrew from representation, and Zoran continued to

be in noncompliance after the discovery deadline had passed, the circuit court first entered

discovery sanctions 15 December 2020. It vacated that order on Zoran’s motion, through

new counsel, representing that he had not received either Lisa’s motion to show cause and

for sanctions or the court’s notice setting the most recent hearing. (Zoran still did not

comply.) The shenanigans from Zoran’s side prevented any independent verification of his

condition, mental capacity, or free intentions in the proceeding. It appears he was never

deposed. He has since died.3

Finally, after at least five hearings, and ten months after the court had first ordered

Zoran to comply with a few discovery requests and provide an accounting of transfers

involving the Peters Trust in the disputed period, the court again struck his petition and

response to Lisa’s counterpetition, leaving no dispute that Lisa was the sole trustee of the

Peters Trust. That order (the “sanctions order”), the first one Zoran has appealed, started

the timeline of jurisdictionally relevant events:

2 The record suggests, shall we say, that Ed was controlling Zoran’s litigation. In July 2020, Zoran’s counsel moved to withdraw because, among other things, “the [c]lient’s agent insists upon taking action with which counsel has a fundamental disagreement.” The motion represents they had “discussed the matter with [Zoran’s] agent, [and had] attempted multiple times to contact [Zoran.]” At a hearing on the motion, counsel acknowledged, “Certainly, Mr. Edward Peters is Zoran Peters’ agent.” No power-of-attorney instrument for Zoran was introduced. 3 Lisa alerted this court in her brief that Zoran had died as early as 24 August 2021. Ed acknowledged the death, but not any date, in a motion to be substituted for Zoran on appeal.

4 25 May 2021 Court enters sanctions order.

3 June 2021 Lisa moves for leave to file a third-party complaint, individually and as sole trustee of the Peters Trust, against Ed, Jennifer, and JASP Real Estate LLC.

4 June 2021 Lisa files third-party complaint.

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