Hankins v. Austin

425 S.W.3d 8, 2012 Ark. App. 641, 2012 WL 5423899, 2012 Ark. App. LEXIS 743
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 7, 2012
DocketNo. CA 11-1200
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 425 S.W.3d 8 (Hankins v. Austin) 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
Hankins v. Austin, 425 S.W.3d 8, 2012 Ark. App. 641, 2012 WL 5423899, 2012 Ark. App. LEXIS 743 (Ark. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

DOUG MARTIN, Judge.

| lAppellant Paul Dean Hankins, as administrator of the estate of Willis N. Han-kins and as administrator of the estate of John Paul Hankins, Sr. (the estate),1 appeals from the Izard County Circuit Court’s determination that the estate failed to prove that Willis was incompetent, lacked sufficient mental capacity, or was unduly influenced by appellee Sally Austin at the time he signed a special warranty deed conveying property described as “the Hankins farm” to Sally. The trial court further found that the estate failed to prove that Sally and appel-lees Jay Knight and Bancorp South lacked authority to complete a personal check 12signed by Willis in the amount of $47,800. The estate argues that the trial court clearly erred in its determinations. We affirm.

Zelma Hankins, mother of Willis and John Paul Hankins, Sr. (John Sr.), died in 1993 and left the Hankins farm in Calico Rock to Willis, who had lived with and cared for Zelma until she entered a nursing home. Willis and Sally began a relationship in 1991 and lived together as companions for approximately fifteen years but never married. In fact, Willis had never been married and had no children. John Sr. was married and had two sons, John Paul Hankins, Jr. (John Jr.), and Paul. John Sr. and John Jr. had a falling out; however, John Jr. remained close to Willis and helped him on the Hankins farm. On February 28, 2007, Willis was diagnosed with terminal cancer and was told to “get his affairs in order.” Willis died on March 16, 2007. At issue in this appeal are a deed signed on March 14, 2007, and filed on March 15, 2007, and a check signed on March 13, 2007, and deposited on March 16,2007.

I. Trial — November and December 2010

Paul, Willis’s nephew, testified that he did not know that Willis was ill until John Jr. called him on the day that Willis died. Paul testified that, between 5:30 p.m. and 8:00 p.m. on Friday, ‘March 16, Willis was not conscious. With regard to the deed at issue, Paul testified that he believed bank manager Jay Knight falsified the acknowledgment on the deed because Knight was a land developer who hoped to obtain Willis’s land. Paul denied instructing his lawyers to offer to drop Knight from the lawsuit if Knight would “come clean” and admit that he did not see Willis sign the deed. Paul stated that he did not believe that Zelma’s action of deeding the Hankins farm to Willis caused his father John Sr. “any heartache” because John |sSr. already owned a farm, adjoining the Hankins farm. According to Paul, it was understood that, if something ever happened to Willis, the farm would stay in the family.

Thomas Vastrick, a forensic-document examiner, testified that, after comparing known writing specimens containing Willis’s signature, he had concluded that it was “highly probable” that Willis signed a check in the amount of $47,800 but that Willis did not sign the deed. Vastrick testified that “highly probable” meant “virtually certain.” Vastrick testified, however, that various factors can affect a person’s signature, including the position of the person in relation to the document, age and illness, and effects of medication. Vastrick testified that there was no way to scientifically quantify how loss of muscle strength, as is common with cancer patients, would alter a person’s ability to sign his name and that this would differ from person to person.

Jay Knight, branch manager and assistant vice president of Bancorp South, testified that Sally was a customer of the bank but that Willis was not. Knight testified that, in response to a telephone call from Sally, he notarized a deed at Willis’s home on March 14, 2007. Knight stated that Willis referred to him as “Mr. Knight” and asked about his wife, father-in-law (Dr. Robert Lane), and kids. Knight testified that Willis seemed alert but appeared frail. Knight stated that Willis’s mind seemed “okay,” his conversation was “normal,” and his responses were appropriate. Knight stated that Willis sat in a recliner beside the front door; Willis already had the déed in his "hands; arid Willis signed it and wrote “March 14.” Knight acknowledged that Willis’s penmanship was slow. Willis gave the deed to Knight after signing it; Knight crossed out the year 1997 and wrote 2007; and Willis placed his initials beside that |4change. Knight then notarized the deed. Knight testified that he felt as though Willis signed the deed of his own free will. Knight testified that there was no business venture with which he was associated where he stood to gain something from notarizing the deed.

Knight further testified that, on March 16, 2007, Sally came to Bancorp South and asked him to deposit four checks. One First Security Bank check was completely blank, except for Willis’s signature. Sally asked Knight to complete the check and write $47,800 as the amount. Knight did as Sally requested. Knight admitted that he did not call Willis to verify whether he had in fact signed the check, whether Willis had $47,800 at First Security Bank, or whether Willis had authorized Sally to deposit the check into her account. Knight testified, however, that no banker verifies a check in such manner when it is presented for deposit. Knight stated that he would have complied with Sally’s request even if the president of the Bancorp South banks in Arkansas had been present in his office.

John Jr., Willis’s nephew, testified that, on March 14, 2007, he and his wife arrived at Willis’s home between 10 a.m. and noon and stayed overnight. John Jr. did not recall anyone coming to Willis’s house to notarize a deed. John Jr. first became aware of the deed when Sally showed him the deed on March 15 or 16 and explained that it was “the way Willis wanted it.” According to John Jr., Sally told him that the deed was signed on Wednesday night and notarized the next day. When asked about Willis’s mental capacity during Willis’s final days, John Jr. stated that Willis was in a great deal of pain and that occasionally he was not lucid because the pain overcame him. Likewise, John Jr.’s wife of twelve years, Katherine, testified that Willis “was not very lucid.” John Jr. testified that he knew that his grandmother |fiZelma had deeded the Hankins farm to Willis while she was in a nursing home but that his family was “very secretive on their business.” John Jr. testified that John Sr. and Willis did not have much to do with each other for a twenty-year period. John Jr. described Willis as a quiet man and said of his father, “[John Sr.’s] way was the only right way, or it was no way.” John Jr. testified that Willis never told him what he planned to do with the farm in the event of his death but that it did not surprise him that Willis did not leave the farm to John Sr.

Linda Ward, a licensed practical nurse (LPN) working for Community Medical Center, Home Health and Hospice, testified that she met Willis when Zelma was in the hospital and that she met Sally at the nursing home where Zelma resided before her death. Ward testified that she and Sally, also an LPN, had a professional relationship. Ward testified that hospice workers visited Willis from March 1 through March 16, and that each visit usually lasted approximately thirty minutes. Ward stated that Willis took several medications, including pain killers and sedatives. Ward stated that Willis was disoriented and confused at times, likely due to the medication, but that there were times when Willis was cognitive and alert; he knew exactly what his condition was; and he could remember dates, places, and times.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
425 S.W.3d 8, 2012 Ark. App. 641, 2012 WL 5423899, 2012 Ark. App. LEXIS 743, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hankins-v-austin-arkctapp-2012.