In re Estate of Thorn

CourtCourt of Appeals of Kansas
DecidedApril 17, 2020
Docket120931
StatusUnpublished

This text of In re Estate of Thorn (In re Estate of Thorn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kansas 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 Thorn, (kanctapp 2020).

Opinion

NOT DESIGNATED FOR PUBLICATION

No. 120,931

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF KANSAS

In the Matter of the Estate of JAMES E. THORN.

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appeal from Sedgwick District Court; ROBB W. RUMSEY, judge. Opinion filed April 17, 2020. Affirmed.

James T. McIntyre, of Law Offices of James T. McIntyre, of Wichita, for appellant Jamea Wilson.

Shane A. Rosson, of Triplett Woolf Garretson, LLC, of Wichita, for appellee Kimberly Tolley.

Before LEBEN, P.J., SCHROEDER, J., and LAHEY, S.J.

PER CURIAM: On March 2, 2018, James E. Thorn died testate. Upon the death of her father, Kimberly Tolley petitioned the district court to admit Thorn's Last Will and Testament (the Will) to probate. The petition reflected Thorn was survived by his two daughters, Tolley and Jamea Wilson. Wilson filed an objection to the admission of the Will to probate, claiming Thorn lacked testamentary capacity to make the Will or, in the alternative, the Will was the product of undue influence. In addition to making provisions for the benefit of his daughters, Thorn inserted an in terrorem clause in the Will stating anyone who challenged the admission of the Will to probate without probable cause would be disinherited and receive nothing under the Will.

1 Following an evidentiary hearing, the district court admitted the Will to probate, finding: (1) Thorn had testamentary capacity at the time he executed the Will; (2) the Will was not the product of undue influence; and (3) Wilson did not have probable cause to contest the Will. As a result of these findings and after the appropriate petition was filed by Tolley, the district court enforced the in terrorem clause. On appeal, Wilson argues points (1) and (3) were erroneously decided; she does not appeal the district court’s finding the Will was not the product of undue influence. Upon examination of the record, we find substantial competent evidence supports the district court's decision on both issues appealed. We affirm.

FACTS

We briefly set out the facts as they are well known to the parties. In October 2018, the district court admitted Thorn's Will to probate following his death in March 2018. In addition to his two children, Thorn had a longtime companion, Betty Marshall, who he met in 1981. Thorn began experiencing falls and health-related issues in January 2018, resulting in his hospitalization; he experienced some confusion during one or more of his hospital stays but quickly improved; and he participated in rehabilitation services. During this time, he visited with his attorney friend Sean Brennan about his estate plans. Brennan referred Thorn to Jennifer Stultz, an experienced estate planning attorney. Marshall and Brennan contacted Stultz and planned for Thorn to meet with her.

Stultz first met with Thorn on January 16, 2018. Stultz recalled Thorn asking several appropriate questions and responding appropriately to her questions. Thorn discussed various property he owned, including: his assets; a safety deposit box and its contents; paperwork related to unclaimed property his parents had owned, which was held by the Secretary of State; a safe in his garage and its contents; his vehicle, home, and firearms; two storage units he owned; and cemetery plots his parents had owned. Thorn also talked to Stultz about his two children, Wilson and Tolley, as well as about Wilson's

2 children and Tolley's children. Thorn told Stultz he wanted Tolley to receive a significant portion of his estate outright and Wilson to receive a lesser portion of his estate. He expressed concerns Wilson was irresponsible and he wanted her share of the estate held in trust, to be paid at $500 per month until exhausted. Thorn was also concerned Wilson might contest his Will, so Stultz specifically discussed with Thorn including an in terrorem clause.

Stultz again visited with Thorn on or about January 22, 2018, regarding how much he wanted to leave in trust for Wilson. Thorn told Stultz he wanted to leave $70,000 for Wilson. Stultz prepared Thorn's Will and other estate planning documents in accordance with their discussions. Stultz met with Thorn in person for approximately two hours on January 23, 2018, to review the Will and other documents prepared by her. Stultz' administrative assistant, Scott Lawrence, accompanied her to the meeting. Stultz did not observe any signs of confusion in Thorn during their meetings. Stultz reviewed Thorn's Will and the other documents with him, and he asked appropriate and intelligent questions before executing them on January 23, 2018. Thorn confirmed the Will and other documents reflected what he wanted to do with his estate. Stultz believed Thorn understood the provisions of his Will and the other documents he executed. Lawrence, one of the witnesses to the Will, also observed no signs of confusion and noted Thorn asked appropriate questions during the meeting.

Tolley and Marshall were also present for parts of the meeting on January 23, 2018. Marshall did not observe any confusion during the portion of the meeting at which she was present. At the end of the meeting, Stultz discussed the Will and other documents with Thorn without Tolley or Marshall present. Thorn executed the Will and other documents in Stultz' presence and in the presence of the two disinterested witnesses— Lawrence and Virginia Rowsey, the manager of the facility where Thorn was living. After Thorn signed his Will, the two witnesses signed as attesting witnesses. Rowsey

3 observed no signs of confusion and believed Thorn "absolutely" understood what was happening.

After executing the Will and the other estate planning documents, Thorn's health declined and, as a result of one of his hospitalizations, cancerous masses were found in his lungs. Thorn went into hospice care and later died from lung cancer on March 2, 2018.

Tolley filed a petition to admit Thorn's Will to probate on March 14, 2018. The district court filed an order on March 15, 2018, setting a hearing date for April 17, 2018. Notice was mailed to Wilson on March 16, 2018. Wilson retained an attorney who entered an appearance on her behalf on March 19, 2018. Through her attorney, Wilson filed an objection to the admission of the Will on April 16, 2018, and asserted Thorn suffered from chronic alcoholism as well as numerous medical problems before executing the documents at issue. Wilson alleged Thorn lacked capacity to execute the documents, or, in the alternative, the documents were the product of undue influence.

Stultz, Lawrence, Rowsey, Marshall, and Wilson testified at the bench trial. Stultz, Lawrence, Rowsey, and Marshall each testified regarding the matters previously discussed herein. Wilson testified she saw Thorn every day in January 2018, and Thorn recognized her and her husband every time they visited him. Although Wilson alleged Thorn was an alcoholic, she acknowledged he did not consume any alcohol on the date he executed the Will. Wilson claimed Thorn had an estate plan drafted by a different law firm but acknowledged her attorney issued a business record subpoena to the firm and no documents were produced in response. Wilson admitted she had financial troubles; several creditors had open judgments against her, she had declared bankruptcy a few years earlier, and she had recently been sued by a Ford dealership and Ford Motor Credit. Wilson acknowledged the trust's spendthrift provision would protect the money from her creditors.

4 The district court admitted the Will to probate, finding Thorn had the requisite testamentary capacity at the time the Will was executed and the Will was not the product of undue influence.

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In re Estate of Thorn, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-thorn-kanctapp-2020.