Ex Parte Batchelor

803 So. 2d 515, 2001 WL 527847
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedMay 18, 2001
Docket1991507
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 803 So. 2d 515 (Ex Parte Batchelor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ex Parte Batchelor, 803 So. 2d 515, 2001 WL 527847 (Ala. 2001).

Opinion

803 So.2d 515 (2001)

Ex parte Betty BATCHELOR and J.D. Brown.
(Re Betty BATCHELOR and J.D. Brown
v.
Orwood YATES, as personal representative of the estate of David Yates, deceased; and Travis Yates, as personal representative of the estate of David Yates, deceased).

1991507.

Supreme Court of Alabama.

May 18, 2001.

B. Scott Shipman of Sherrill, Batts & Shipman, L.L.C., Athens, for petitioners.

Alan Courtney Crowder of Phelps, Jenkins, Gibson & Fowler, L.L.P., Tuscaloosa, for respondent.

On Application for Rehearing

PER CURIAM.

The application for rehearing is granted; the opinion released on January 5, 2001 is withdrawn; and the writ is quashed as improvidently granted.

APPLICATION FOR REHEARING GRANTED; OPINION OF JANUARY 5, 2001, WITHDRAWN; WRIT QUASHED.

SEE, LYONS, BROWN, JOHNSTONE, WOODALL, and STUART, JJ., concur.

MOORE, C.J., and HOUSTON and HARWOOD, JJ., dissent.

HARWOOD, Justice (dissenting).

I dissent from the order quashing the writ of certiorari. Betty Batchelor and J.D. Brown were the niece and nephew, respectively, of Christine Belcher and Leland Belcher. The Belchers, who were married for approximately 40 years, had no children. Mr. Belcher predeceased Mrs. Belcher; she then married David Yates, before 1995. Pertinent to this case are the subsequent developments, described in paragraphs 4 through 10 of the plaintiffs' complaint:

"4. On or about October 3, 1995, Christine Belcher Yates retained the Honorable Thomas A. Nettles, IV, an attorney, to draft a Last Will and Testament. Christine Belcher Yates and Mr. Nettles met several times over the course of many months in order to discuss the contents of her Will.
"5. On or about July 28, 1997, Christine Belcher Yates was in the hospital for a heart condition. Mr. Nettles and Davis S. Burton, Jr., the accountant for Christine Belcher Yates, took a draft of the Will prepared by Mr. Nettles to the hospital for execution.
"6. At said time and place, Christine Belcher Yates was alert and competent and told Mr. Nettles to make certain changes to the Will, which included donations to certain charitable organizations and the designation of the recipients of the remaining principal of a `Family Trust' created by said Will. She directed that the remaining principal of said trust should be distributed to her `heirs' as determined by state law of intestate succession.
"7. After the above-described meeting, Mr. Nettles made the changes to the Will as requested by Christine Belcher Yates, which resulted in the `Last Will and Testament of Christine Belcher Yates' attached hereto as Exhibit `A.'
*516 "8. On or about the following day, July 29, 1997, Mr. Nettles had a telephone conversation with David Yates. Mr. Yates told Mr. Nettles in a loud and angry voice that he did not appreciate Mr. Nettles and Mr. Burton going to the hospital in order to get Christine Belcher Yates to sign her Will and otherwise objected to their efforts in having said Will executed. After Mr. Yates had finished speaking, he ended the telephone conversation without waiting for a reply from Mr. Nettles.
"9. As a direct and proximate result of said telephone conversation, Mr. Nettles did not attempt to contact Christine Belcher Yates in order for her to execute the revised Will as she had requested.
"10. Christine Belcher Yates died intestate on September 2, 1997. Her second spouse, David Yates, inherited the entire estate of Christine Belcher Yates."

Betty Batchelor and J.D. Brown sued the estate of David Yates (David Yates himself having died by the time the complaint was filed). They subsequently amended their complaint to add as defendants Orwood Yates and Travis Yates, as personal representatives of the estate of David Yates. The defendants filed a motion to dismiss, which the trial court granted. Batchelor and Brown appealed the judgment of dismissal; this Court transferred the appeal to the Court of Civil Appeals, which, on March 10, 2000, affirmed the judgment of the trial court, without an opinion. Batchelor v. Yates (No. 2990308), 795 So.2d 852 (Ala.Civ.App. 2000) (table). In its unpublished memorandum of affirmance (see Rule 53, Ala. R.App. P.), the Court of Civil Appeals cited, among other authorities, Rule 12(b)(6), Ala.R.Civ.P., and Holt v. First National Bank of Mobile, 418 So.2d 77 (Ala.1982). This Court granted the plaintiffs' petition for certiorari review.

The plaintiffs attempted in their complaint to state a cause of action for "tortious interference with an expectancy in an inheritance or bequest." The pivotal issue is whether the plaintiffs' attempt was so deficient as to warrant a disposition of the case at the pleadings stage. In 1982 this Court decided Holt, supra, wherein it noted that a number of other jurisdictions had recognized such a cause of action, but had required as an element of the cause of action that the defendant must have used independently tortious means to interfere with the testator's intent. Holt cited as "[t]he most glaring example of such a wrongful act" the circumstances of Pope v. Garrett, 204 S.W.2d 867 (Tex.Civ.App. 1947), wherein two of the defendants "prevented the testatrix from signing her will in the presence of witnesses, by force or by creating a disturbance." Accordingly, in that case, just as in the present case, the proposed will was not actually executed. In Holt, the plaintiffs were the two daughters of a man who had remarried less than three years before his death on April 9, 1959. The daughters alleged that he had expressed an intention to leave certain property to them, but that the new wife "by false and fraudulent representations and by the exercise of duress and undue influence, intentionally and maliciously prevailed upon [him] to leave his existing will unchanged." The reading of the will, and the sale of the family house that the daughters alleged the father had intended to go to one of the daughters, occurred within 12 months of his death, but the daughters took no action within that time to contest the testamentary disposition. More than 15 years after the alleged promise would have been made, and after the death of the stepmother, the daughters sued, alleging that they had not discovered the fraudulent and deceitful *517 conduct on the part of the stepmother until after her death. The daughters sued the bank serving as executor of the stepmother's estate; the bank moved for a dismissal of the action for failure to state a claim. The circuit court granted that motion and dismissed the action.

The daughters appealed to this Court, which affirmed the dismissal. Part of the rationale this Court used was that plaintiffs who had succeeded in persuading the courts of other jurisdictions to recognize their claims for tortious interference with an expectancy in an inheritance or bequest had "presented much stronger cases than these plaintiffs have alleged," in that "[e]ither the alleged bequest to the plaintiff was in writing, or written evidence of the fraudulent representation existed." 418 So.2d at 80. (Citations omitted.) This Court held "that with no writing alleged and with [the stepmother], the alleged defrauder, deceased, the plaintiffs herein have not alleged facts which would bring them within the proposed cause of action." 418 So.2d at 80.

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Bluebook (online)
803 So. 2d 515, 2001 WL 527847, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ex-parte-batchelor-ala-2001.