ESTATE OF JONES v. MILLER

2025 OK CIV APP 29
CourtCourt of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedDecember 20, 2024
Docket122590
StatusPublished

This text of 2025 OK CIV APP 29 (ESTATE OF JONES v. MILLER) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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ESTATE OF JONES v. MILLER, 2025 OK CIV APP 29 (Okla. Ct. App. 2024).

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ESTATE OF JONES v. MILLER
2025 OK CIV APP 29
Case Number: 122590
Decided: 12/20/2024
Mandate Issued: 07/24/2025
THE COURT OF CIVIL APPEALS OF THE STATE OF OKLAHOMA, DIVISION I


Cite as: 2025 OK CIV APP 29, __ P.3d __


TERESA L. DAVIS, Special Administrator of the Estate of LORENE JONES, Deceased, Plaintiff/Appellee
vs.
JEANNIE MILLER, Defendant/Appellant

APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF
CLEVELAND COUNTY, OKLAHOMA

HONORABLE BETHANY STANLEY, TRIAL JUDGE

AFFIRMED

Hal William Ezzell, EZZELL & PATEL, PLLC, Norman, Oklahoma, For Defendant/Appellant,

Greg T. Tontz, TONTZ LAW, PLLC, Norman, Oklahoma, For Plaintiff/Appellee.

THOMAS E. PRINCE, JUDGE:

¶ 1 Jeannie Miller ("Miller" or "Appellant") has appealed the trial court's award of summary judgment in favor of Teresa L. Davis ("Davis" or "Appellee"), arguing that the trial court erred in its conclusion that the real property at issue ("the Property") had not been properly conveyed from the decedent, Lorene Jones, to Miller. Davis utilized a Transfer on Death Deed to effectuate the conveyance. The issue in this case arose because the TODD had not been signed by Jones, but only by Miller who had been acting as an agent of Jones' under a Power of Attorney. The trial court ruled in favor of Davis, holding that the Property was an asset of Jones' estate after determining Jones had not expressly provided Miller with the authority to execute a TODD, as required by 58 O.S. § 302458 O.S. § 125258 O.S. § 3024

BACKGROUND

¶ 2 Teresa Davis initiated the underlying probate action on April 29, 2024, following the death (on April 14, 2024) of her mother, Lorene Jones. On the same day, Davis also filed an Ancillary Petition to Quiet Title alleging the Property was an asset of Jones' estate. Jones alleged that Miller, her sister, had recorded an Affidavit for Beneficiary Death Deed on April 19, 2024, whereby Miller asserted her interest in the Property had vested upon Jones' death by virtue of a TODD that had previously been executed on March 13, 2023. The TODD58 O.S. § 1252"perform any act . . . in connection with . . . property, real or personal". Miller argued that this language (from Section 1.1 of the POA) authorized her to sign the TODD.

¶ 3 Davis filed a Motion for Summary Judgment on June 20, 2024, arguing the TODD was legally deficient on two primary grounds. First, Davis argued that the language of 58 O.S. § 1252never be signed by an agent operating under POA. Davis also argued that, even if an agent operating under a POA could sign a TODD on behalf of a principal, the POA at issue here did not "expressly grant [Miller] the authority to sign the TODD, thereby violating § 3024 of the Uniform Power of Attorney Act. Although Miller previously admitted in her Answer to Davis' Ancillary Petition to Quiet Title that the POA at issue "did not specifically address estate planning documents or gifts," Miller later argued before the trial court that the general grant of authority in Section 1.1 of the POA was sufficient to grant Miller the power to gift real property on Jones' behalf.

¶ 4 After considering both Davis' and Miller's briefs and corresponding oral arguments on June 20, 2024, the trial court concluded that the POA document did not include an "express grant of authority" under 58 O.S. § 302458 O.S. § 1252

STANDARD OF REVIEW

¶ 5 This appeal requires our review of the trial court's grant of summary judgment and the trial court's interpretation of various statutes, both of which present questions of law. See Carmichael v. Beller, 1996 OK 48914 P.2d 1051see also Hubbard v. Kaiser-Francis Oil Co., 2011 OK 50256 P.3d 69 Questions of law mandate application of the de novo standard of review, affording this Court with plenary, independent, and non-deferential authority to examine the issues presented. Harmon v. Cradduck, 2012 OK 80286 P.3d 643

ANALYSIS

¶ 6 Miller presented three (3) allegations of error in her Petition in Error, from which we garnered a singular issue necessitating our review: whether a property owner's general grant of authority to an agent under a power of attorney to "perform any act . . . in connection with . . . property, real or personal" enabled the agent to execute a TODD. Based upon our review of the record, applicable statutes, and relevant case law, we conclude that the plain and unambiguous meaning of 58 O.S. § 1252

¶ 7 The Nontestamentary Transfer on Property Act, 58 O.S. § 1251et. seq., adopted in 2008, governs the transfer of an "interest in real estate" where the grantor's death is the catalyst for the transfer to the designated grantee (i.e. a "Beneficiary Deed", "Transfer-on-death Deed" or "TODD"). In 2016, the Supreme Court described TODD's, in part, as follows:

¶ 14 The TODDs at issue in this cause are nontestamentary instruments, authorized by the Nontestamentary Transfer of Property Act (NTPA), 58 O.S. §§ 1251
* * *
¶ 21 The NTPA is a comparatively new piece of legislation, and there is therefore little precedent concerning TODDs.

In re Est. of Carlson, 2016 OK 6367 P.3d 486Matter of Est. of Stites, 2020 OK CIV APP 51476 P.3d 934

The mechanism of a transfer-on-death deed (TODD) is a relatively recent addition to Oklahoma law and serves as an alternative to traditional testate succession for the posthumous transfer of real property.
[T]he nature of TODDs is such that nothing is transferred to the beneficiary upon execution, but instead the transfer of interest occurs only upon the grantee's death with final disposition upon the beneficiary's acceptance. See Joyce Palomar, 2 PATTON AND PALOMAR ON LAND TITLES § 333 (3d ed. 2018 update). No final property interest transfers to the beneficiary of a TODD prior to death and acceptance.


Id., at ¶'s 6 & 13 (emphasis added).

¶ 8 The NTPA demands that a TODD must be "signed by the record owner of interest" in order to transfer real estate:

A. An interest in real estate may be titled in transfer-on-death form by recording a deed, signed by the record owner of the interest, designating a grantee beneficiary or beneficiaries of the interest. The deed shall transfer ownership of the interest upon the death of the owner. A transfer-on-death deed need not be supported by consideration.

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Related

Carmichael v. Beller
1996 OK 48 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1996)
In Re the Estate of Rolater
542 P.2d 219 (Court of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma, 1975)
Hubbard v. Kaiser-Francis Oil Co.
2011 OK 50 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 2011)
Phillips v. Hedges
2005 OK 77 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 2005)
Broadway Clinic v. Liberty Mutual Insurance Co.
2006 OK 29 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 2006)
Fulsom v. Fulsom
2003 OK 96 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 2003)
Arrow Tool & Gauge v. Mead
2000 OK 86 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 2000)
IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF CARLSON
2016 OK 6 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 2016)
Tensfield v. Magnolia Petroleum Co.
1928 OK 462 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1928)
HALL v. GALMOR
2018 OK 59 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 2018)
Harmon v. Cradduck
2012 OK 80 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 2012)
Glover v. Cornish
2016 OK 6 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 2016)
Compsource Mut. Ins. Co. v. Oklahoma Tax Commission
435 P.3d 90 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 2018)

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Bluebook (online)
2025 OK CIV APP 29, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-jones-v-miller-oklacivapp-2024.