Estate of Vickery v. Vickery

40 So. 3d 616, 2010 Miss. App. LEXIS 41, 2010 WL 432274
CourtCourt of Appeals of Mississippi
DecidedFebruary 9, 2010
Docket2008-CA-02156-COA
StatusPublished

This text of 40 So. 3d 616 (Estate of Vickery v. Vickery) 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
Estate of Vickery v. Vickery, 40 So. 3d 616, 2010 Miss. App. LEXIS 41, 2010 WL 432274 (Mich. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

MYERS, P.J., for The Court.

¶ 1. This case is before the Court on appeal from the Harrison County Chancery Court’s December 16, 2008, entry of final judgment of a will contest following a jury’s unanimous finding that Helen Vick-ery, the will’s testator, lacked testamentary capacity to make a will, and had been subject to undue influence from Glendy Vickery at the time she executed the will. Consequently, the chancery court entered an order striking down the will, holding it for naught, withdrawing all Letters Testamentary from Glendy, and vacating the judgment admitting the will to probate.

¶ 2. Prior to trial, Glendy had filed two separate motions for summary judgment asserting that his brother, George Vickery, the will’s objector, was barred from contesting the will. The first motion asserted the affirmative defense of accord and satisfaction; the second motion raised the defense of estoppel. The chancery court denied each motion in turn.

¶ 3. Glendy appeals from the final judgment entered on the will contest, and reasserts that George was barred from contesting the will under the doctrine of accord and satisfaction and/or the doctrine of estoppel.

¶ 4. Glendy presents the three following issues on appeal:

I.Whether George was barred under the doctrine of accord and satisfaction from maintaining a will contest due to his acceptance of the total $30,000 inheritance under the will which he thereafter challenged;
II. Whether George was barred under the doctrine of estoppel from maintaining a will contest due to his acceptance of his $30,000 inheritance under the will which he thereafter challenged;
III. If the will contest was barred under accord and satisfaction and/or estop-pel, whether Glendy waived his right to assert such affirmative defenses.

¶ 5. Finding no error with the chancery court’s decision, we affirm.

FACTS

¶ 6. Glendy and George are the sons of the late Dr. George Vickery, Sr., who died in the late 1970s. Helen, the deceased testator, was Dr. Vickery’s second wife and the stepmother of the two brothers, Glendy and George. Helen had a series of wills in her lifetime affecting her estate. Two of those wills shape the controversy between the brothers.

¶ 7. The contested will had been executed by Helen on October 22, 2004, and it was petitioned for probate by Glendy on December 11, 2005, following Helen’s death on November 22, 2005. Helen’s previous will was executed on August 16, 2000, and it is currently before the chancery court. According to George, although the 2000 will “more or less” divided the estate 1 equally between the two brothers, the 2004 will only provided a bequest to him for $30,000. 2

*618 ¶ 8. Events pertinent to the matter before us began on November 26, 2005, shortly after Helen’s burial, when the two brothers met at Glendy’s home in Gulfport, Mississippi. There, Glendy showed George the 2004 will, which, up until that point, George did not realize existed. Glendy then handed George a check for $30,000 from a checking account that Glen-dy allegedly had maintained with Helen. 3 Located at the bottom left hand corner on the face of the check were the handwritten words “per HCV Will.” George accepted the check, crossed out the notation, and initialed his mark. According to George, he did so because he intended to contest the 2004 will. He thereafter negotiated the check on the basis that he knew that the $30,000 would be due to him regardless of which will was ultimately accepted.

¶ 9. The letters testamentary was issued on December 13, 2005, and George filed an objection to the petition to probate on January 6, 2006, raising a question of testamentary capacity. 4 Glendy filed his answer and defenses on September 20, 2006, in which he raised the affirmative defense of accord and satisfaction.

¶ 10. For the next two years, the parties engaged in protracted and voluminous discovery. The case eventually was set for trial to begin on February 13, 2008. It was continued from that date to June 25, 2008. But due to a problem seating a jury, it was continued once more to December 8, 2008. Trial began on that date, and concluded on December 12, 2008. A jury consisting of twelve members unanimously found that on October 22, 2004, Helen lacked testamentary capacity to make a will. They also found that Helen was in a confidential relationship with Glendy; thus, Helen was subject to the undue influence of Glendy at the time she executed the will.

¶ 11. Prior to trial, Glendy had filed two motions for summary judgment. The first was filed on June 9, 2008, and asserted the affirmative defense of accord and satisfaction. On June 25, 2008, the chancery court denied the motion on the basis that Glendy had waived the defense by not bringing it for consideration in a timely manner. The chancery court also held that accord and satisfaction was an inappropriate affirmative defense in “this will contest.” Glen-dy’s second motion for summary judgment was filed on November 6, 2008. In the motion, he raised the affirmative defense of estoppel, after having amended his initial answer and affirmative defenses on October 8, 2008, to include the defense. The chancery court denied that motion on December 1, 2008, based on a finding that Glendy had waived the defense by not raising it until almost three years after the beginning of this action.

¶ 12. At the conclusion of trial, and upon receiving the jury’s verdict, Glendy made an ore tenus motion for a judgment notwithstanding the verdict based upon insufficiency of the evidence. That motion was denied from the bench.

¶ 13. Glendy noticed his appeal on December 23, 2008, and then filed an amended notice of appeal on December 29, 2008. The amended notice of appeal reflects that “the matters encompassed in this appeal specifically include (but are not limited to) appeal of the Order Denying Motion for *619 Summary Judgment and Motion for Continuance entered by the Chancery Court ... on June 25, 2008, and appeal of the Order Denying Motion for Summary Judgment and Motion for Continuance entered by the Chancery Court ... on December 1, 2008.”

¶ 14. According to George, Glendy designated the record on appeal and designated only selected items from the clerk’s papers in the way of various motions, orders, and briefs; however, he failed to designate any part of the trial transcript in contravention to Mississippi Rule of Appellate Procedure 10(a). Thus, we are without the trial transcript.

STANDARD OF REVIEW

¶ 15. The appellate court reviews a trial court’s decision to grant or deny a motion for summary judgment de novo. City of Jackson v. Sutton, 797 So.2d 977, 979(¶ 7) (Miss.2001). The moving party has the burden of demonstrating that no genuine issue of material fact exists, and the non-moving party must be given the benefit of the doubt concerning the existence of a material fact. Id.

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Bluebook (online)
40 So. 3d 616, 2010 Miss. App. LEXIS 41, 2010 WL 432274, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-vickery-v-vickery-missctapp-2010.