In Matter of Guardianship of Loyce Juanita Parker v. Parker

2008 OK CIV APP 62, 2008 OK 62, 189 P.3d 730
CourtCourt of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 19, 2008
Docket104,828. Released for Publication by Order of the Court of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma, Division No. 3
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 2008 OK CIV APP 62 (In Matter of Guardianship of Loyce Juanita Parker v. Parker) 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.

Bluebook
In Matter of Guardianship of Loyce Juanita Parker v. Parker, 2008 OK CIV APP 62, 2008 OK 62, 189 P.3d 730 (Okla. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

BAY MITCHELL, Viee-Chief Judge.

T1 This appeal involves competing guardianship proceedings filed in neighboring states regarding the same proposed ward. Appellant Linda S. Jones (Daughter) appeals the June 7, 2007, order of the District Court of Jefferson County, Oklahoma, determining Loyee Juanita Parker (Mother) to be an Oklahoma resident incapacitated by reason of dementia and appointing Appellee Alvin Edward Parker, Jr. (Son) general guardian of Mother's person and property. Daughter argues the Oklahoma trial court did not have jurisdiction because Daughter was the first to apply for appointment as Mother's guardian, having initiated a proceeding in the County Court of Wilbarger County, Texas several weeks before Son filed for guardianship in Oklahoma. We find the District Court of Jefferson County, Oklahoma properly exercised jurisdiction over this action and affirm its decision appointing Son as Mother's general guardian.

Facts and Procedural History

T2 Mother has lived in Jefferson County, Oklahoma almost her entire life. She was born in Addington, Oklahoma in 1919. After attending high school in Claypool, she spent the next seventy years living on a cattle ranch east of Waurika, with husband Alvin Edward Parker, Sr. (Father).

T8 Mother and Father formed a trust in 1991 (the Trust), assigning their personal and real property to Father as Trustee. The real property so transferred comprised several large areas of ranch land in Jefferson County. The stated intent of the Trust was to relieve Mother and Father "of the responsibility of managing the trust assets in the event that they become incompetent." The Trust provides Son shall serve as Successor Trustee upon Father's death, resignation, or inability to serve. All four of Mother and Father's children 1 signed the "Acceptance" page of the Trust, demonstrating their assent to its terms and conditions.

[4 When Father died May 20, 2006, Son assumed the role of Successor Trustee. According to the Trust terms:

during any period in which the Settlors [Mother and Father] are, in the opinion of the Trustee, incapable of managing their own affairs, the Trustee may, in his discretion, pay to or use for the benefit of the Settlors, so much of the income and principal of the trust as the Trustee determines to be required for their support, comfort, and general welfare, in the manner of living in which they are accustomed, or for any other purpose for which the Trustee believes to be in the best interest of the Settlors.

In keeping with this section, Son has used funds from the Trust to pay Mother's rent and other living expenses. In addition to such distributions, Mother's assets include monthly Social Security checks and her immediate personal belongings.

*733 T5 Shortly after Father's death, Mother toured the Heartland Plaza assisted living facility (Heartland) in Duncan, Oklahoma with Son and at least one of her three daughters. The family met with Heartland's administrator who told them an apartment was available. The next day, they decided Mother should take the apartment. Unfortunate, ly, by that time, the vacancy had been filled. At Daughter's suggestion, the family concluded Mother should stay at the Alterra Sterling House assisted living facility (Alter-ra) near Daughter's home in Vernon, Texas until another apartment became available at Heartland. Mother arrived in Texas June 11, 2006 and stayed with Daughter for about two weeks before moving to her new accommodations at Alterra.

T6 Approximately four months later, Son learned an apartment would soon be available at Heartland. He called the Alterra business office October 80, 2006, and left a message saying he planned to move Mother out of the facility in a few weeks' time. In response, an Alterra employee wrote a letter to Son dated November 1, 2006, acknowledging receipt of his October 80, 2006 telephone message but reminding him thirty days' written notice was required to terminate Mother's residency agreement.

T7 One month later, on December 1, 2006, Daughter filed an application in County Court of Wilbarger County, Texas (County Court), seeking appointment as permanent guardian of Mother's person and estate. Daughter attached to her application a letter written by Bryan Wieck, M.D., a Texas physician, who had examined Mother November 9, 2006. In it, Dr. Wieck stated Mother suffers significant cognitive defects due to progressive dementia that render her incapable of making decisions. The County Court appointed a Texas lawyer to act as Mother's "attorney ad litem " in the case.

[ 8 In his response in opposition to Daughter's Texas guardianship application, Son informed the County Court Mother's permanent domicile and residence is in Oklahoma and her stay in Wilbarger County only temporary. Consequently, he argued, any guardianship of Mother should issue in Oklahoma, not Texas.

T9 On December 16, 2006, Son helped Mother move out of Alterra and into an apartment at Heartland in Duncan, Oklahoma. He then petitioned the District Court of Jefferson County (the Oklahoma trial court), to appoint him special (temporary) guardian of Mother's person and estate. Without knowledge of the competing action Daughter had initiated in Texas, the Oklahoma trial court appointed Son special guardian of Mother's person and estate December 19, 2006. In so doing, it found Mother appears to be impaired by reason of age and infirmity, and that her health, safety, and financial resources would be in imminent danger if a special guardian were not appointed. The Oklahoma court further determined both Mother and Son to be residents of Jefferson County and found Son qualified to serve as special guardian. Waiving the bond requirement, it ordered Son's appointment as special guardian to remain in force for thirty days. Its December 19, 2006 Order appointing Son special guardian of Mother's person and estate was the first order to issue in either Oklahoma or Texas appointing a guardian of any sort for Mother. On December 21, 2006, Son filed a new petition, this time for appointment as general (permanent) guardian of Mother's person and estate, which the Oklahoma trial court set for hearing January 11, 2007.

110 Also after moving Mother to Heartland, Son twice amended his response in the Texas case, arguing Mother's return to Oklahoma and his appointment as special guardian of her person and estate rendered the Texas action moot. He also applied for appointment as Mother's permanent guardian in Texas. At the December 27, 2006 hearing in the Texas case, the County Court granted Son's motion to transfer the matter to the 46th District Court of Wilbarger County, Texas (the Texas trial court).

11 Daughter then applied for temporary guardianship (pending resolution of her application for permanent guardianship) of Mother's person only (not her estate) in the Texas trial court January 8, 2007, which it granted the next day. In so doing, the Texas trial court found Son's actions in filing a competing guardianship proceeding in Okla *734 homa were "designed to attempt to defeat jurisdiction in this Court." It ordered Son to return Mother to its jurisdiction and deliver custody of Mother to Daughter by January 10, 2007. Mother, however, refused to leave Oklahoma.

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Related

In Re: Avery, M.
Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2026
In Re the Guardianship of Parker
329 S.W.3d 97 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 2010)
Frankie Lee Cada v. State
Court of Appeals of Texas, 2009

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Bluebook (online)
2008 OK CIV APP 62, 2008 OK 62, 189 P.3d 730, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-matter-of-guardianship-of-loyce-juanita-parker-v-parker-oklacivapp-2008.