In Re: Estate of Jimmy Darryl Banks, Sr.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedOctober 27, 2016
DocketA16A1972
StatusPublished

This text of In Re: Estate of Jimmy Darryl Banks, Sr. (In Re: Estate of Jimmy Darryl Banks, Sr.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re: Estate of Jimmy Darryl Banks, Sr., (Ga. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

FOURTH DIVISION ELLINGTON, P. J., BRANCH and MERCIER, JJ.

NOTICE: Motions for reconsideration must be physically received in our clerk’s office within ten days of the date of decision to be deemed timely filed. http://www.gaappeals.us/rules

October 27, 2016

In the Court of Appeals of Georgia A16A1972. IN RE: ESTATE OF JIMMY DARRYL BANKS, SR. JE-072

ELLINGTON, Presiding Judge.

The Probate Court of Meriwether County entered an order finding Jimmy

Darryl Banks, Jr. (“Banks”) in contempt of court for violating its orders that he

preserve and return certain specified property of his father’s estate. Pursuant to this

Court’s order granting Banks’s application for discretionary appeal, see OCGA § 5-6-

35 (a) (1), he appeals, and, for the reasons explained below, we vacate the contempt

order and remand.

The record shows the following proceedings. Jimmy Darryl Banks, Sr., died

intestate in November 2014. In August 2015, his widow, Eunice Banks, and his

daughter, April Banks (the “petitioners” or the “co-administrators”), filed a petition

for letters of administration in the Probate Court of Meriwether County. On August 19, 2015, the petitioners then filed an emergency motion, seeking an order restraining

Banks and Doris Harris (identified as the decedent’s friend) from disposing of

personal property that had belonged to the decedent, including five specified motor

vehicles, a lawn mower, and a trailer. The probate court immediately granted a

temporary restraining order, enjoining any person in possession of the listed property

from selling, pawning, or otherwise disposing of the property, unless authorized by

court order, and directing such persons to immediately surrender the property to a

sheriff’s deputy at the decedent’s former residence. On September 8, 2015, the

petitioners filed a motion for contempt, alleging that Banks and Harris violated the

temporary restraining order by failing to retrieve or relinquish any of the property

listed in the order.

In two orders entered on September 28, 2015, the probate court recited that it

held a hearing six days earlier (on September 22, 2015). In one order, the probate

court granted the petition for letters of administration and designated Eunice Banks

and April Banks as co-administrators of the estate. In the other order the probate

court ordered Banks and Harris to return all property listed in the August 19, 2015

temporary restraining order. The probate court commanded Banks and Harris to

complete the requirements of that order entered on September 28, “within five days

2 after the hearing held on September 22” and ordered that “failure to comply with this

Order shall be punished by imprisonment . . . [with the contemnor] to remain [in jail]

so charged with contempt until he or she complies with this Order.” During these

proceedings, the co-administrators were represented by attorney Robert Bexley.

On February 5, 2016, the co-administrators filed pro se a motion for imposition

of sanctions for contempt against Banks and Harris, alleging that they failed to return

the property as ordered. Before the hearing on the motion, the co-administrators’

attorney moved to withdraw, and the probate court granted his request on March 1,

2016. The court conducted a hearing on the motion for contempt beginning on March

18 and concluding on March 21, 2016. In an order entered March 22, 2016, the

probate court found that Banks was in wilful contempt of its September 28, 2015

order, based on his failure to return three vehicles and their keys (a 1972 Camaro,1 a

1979 black van, and a 2002 Dodge Stratus), along with the keys to a fourth vehicle

(a 1993 Ford F150) and a lawn mower. The court ordered that Banks be incarcerated

until further order of the court, noting that he could purge himself of contempt by

fully complying with the order to return the property to the co-administrators.

1 The record shows that the temporary restraining order actually referenced a 1992 Camaro.

3 Because Banks’s contumacious conduct occurred outside the presence of the probate

court, the court granted his request for supersedeas, pending this appeal.

1. Banks contends that, because the co-administrators were still represented by

counsel on February 5, 2016, they were without legal authority to represent

themselves in filing a motion for sanctions and, therefore, that the probate court erred

in going forward with the contempt proceeding over his counsel’s oral objections.2

If Banks had formally moved to dismiss the co-administrators’ motion for sanctions

on the basis that they still had counsel of record, which he did not, and the trial court

had dismissed their motion, the co-administrators had only to wait until their counsel

had been permitted to formally withdraw to immediately refile their motion pro se.

By the time of the evidentiary hearing on the co-administrators’ motion for sanctions,

their counsel had formally withdrawn, and they were no longer represented by

counsel. Banks has not articulated any basis for finding that he suffered any prejudice

2 Seagraves v. State, 259 Ga. 36, 39 (376 SE2d 670) (1989) (A layperson does not have the right to represent herself while also represented by an attorney.); Ervin v. Turner, 291 Ga. App. 719, 723-724 (662 SE2d 721) (2008) (The trial court properly dismissed a defendant’s motion to set aside because it was made pro se when she was represented by counsel.); Jacobsen v. Haldi, 210 Ga. App. 817, 819 (1) (437 SE2d 819) (1993) (The trial court properly denied and refused to accept the client’s pro se objection to the reduced damage award because she could not attempt to represent herself by filing pro se pleadings while at the same being represented by counsel of record.).

4 in the trial court’s tacitly allowing the co-administrators’ premature pro se filing to

be held effectively in abeyance pending formal withdrawal of counsel. “The trial

court’s exercise of its discretion in undertaking such actions to aid in the orderly

administration of its business will not be disturbed on appeal absent an impermissible

restriction of [a litigant’s] access to the courts[.]” Higdon v. Higdon, 321 Ga. App.

260, 267 (4) (739 SE2d 498 (2013). Under the circumstances presented here, we

discern no abuse of discretion in the probate court’s economical management of the

proceedings.

2. In related claims of error, Banks contends that the probate court erred in

finding him in wilful contempt and ordering him confined until he returns the

personal property described in the probate court’s September 28, 2015 order, a task

he contends was shown to be impossible under the circumstances.3

3 In particular, Banks contends that he testified at the contempt hearing that the decedent’s estate did not comprise any lawn mower such as that described in the probate court’s temporary restraining order, that the co-administrators failed to rebut his testimony with any evidence, and that the probate court therefore erred in finding him in wilful contempt for failing to turn over a lawn mower that does not exist. Similarly, he contends that there was no evidence that the decedent’s estate comprised either a 1972 [sic] Camaro or a 2002 Dodge Stratus as specified in the probate court’s temporary restraining order, precluding a finding of contempt.

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Related

Ervin v. Turner
662 S.E.2d 721 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 2008)
Seagraves v. State
376 S.E.2d 670 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1989)
Hughes v. Department of Human Resources
502 S.E.2d 233 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1998)
Broadcast Concepts, Inc. v. Optimus Financial Services, LLC
618 S.E.2d 612 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 2005)
Jacobsen v. Haldi
437 S.E.2d 819 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1993)
Holt v. Brown
341 S.E.2d 486 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1986)
Cross v. Ivester
728 S.E.2d 299 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 2012)
Higdon v. Higdon
739 S.E.2d 498 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 2013)
Van Leuvan v. Carlisle
744 S.E.2d 912 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 2013)

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