in Re Ward Estate

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 6, 2016
Docket329132
StatusUnpublished

This text of in Re Ward Estate (in Re Ward Estate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
in Re Ward Estate, (Mich. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

In re ESTATE OF JAMES V. WARD, JR.

JAMES V. WARD, III, UNPUBLISHED October 6, 2016 Petitioner-Appellant, V Nos. 327991 & 329132 Ingham Probate Court KAREN POWERS, LC No. 13-000639-DA

Respondent-Appellee.

Before: RIORDAN, P.J., and METER and OWENS, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

In these consolidated cases arising from a will contest, appellant appeals as of right from the probate court’s orders declaring the will invalid, denying a motion to set aside the judgment, and determining heirs. Appellant also challenges the probate court’s determinations that appellee is entitled to attorney fees and those fees are to be paid by appellant personally. We affirm in part and reverse in part.

Appellant is the son, and appellee the daughter, of the decedent. Appellant’s theory of the case was that the decedent executed a will leaving virtually the entire estate to him, to the near-exclusion of appellee. The latter’s theory was that appellant forged the document he wished to enter into probate, and thus that the decedent’s estate should pass according to the laws of intestacy, in three equal shares, to the parties and their half-brother, the decedent’s stepson.

The jury concluded that the putative will was invalid. The probate court thereafter determined that appellee was entitled to attorney fees to be paid by appellant personally, and that the decedent’s intestate heirs included the decedent’s stepson along with the parties.

I. MOTION TO SET ASIDE JUDGMENT

Appellant first challenges the probate court’s denial of his motion to set aside the judgment. We review for an abuse of discretion a court’s decision to deny a motion to set aside a judgment. Gillispie v Bd of Tenant Affairs of Detroit Housing Comm, 145 Mich App 424, 427- 428; 377 NW2d 864 (1985). “An abuse of discretion occurs when the decision results in an

-1- outcome falling outside the principled range of outcomes.” Radeljak v DaimlerChrysler Corp, 475 Mich 598, 603; 719 NW2d 40 (2006).

The parties do not dispute the facts underlying this issue. Appellant was not served with the judgment until after the time had run for post-trial motions, and sought to have the judgment set aside so that the clock could start to run anew in connection with a new judgment. The probate court impliedly concluded that appellee had exercised due diligence in the matter while appellant had not.

We decline to determine whether appellee was a party securing the judgment for purposes of MCR 2.602(D)(1), and, if so, whether the probate court was overly lenient in ascribing due diligence to a party who failed to consider the possibility that MCR 2.602(D)(1) required service of the order in this instance, because we conclude that any error in the matter was harmless. This is because appellant puts forward on appeal, as the only lost opportunity from the delay in question, the ability to move the trial court for a new trial on the ground that the verdict was contrary to the great weight of the evidence, and we conclude that any such motion would have been futile.

MCR 2.611(A)(1)(e) authorizes a court to grant a new trial if a party’s substantial rights have been materially affected because of “[a] verdict or decision against the great weight of the evidence . . . .” However, conflicts in the evidence and the credibility of witnesses are matters for the fact-finder to resolve. Dawe v Dr Reuven Bar-Levav & Assoc, PC (On Remand), 289 Mich App 380, 401; 808 NW2d 240 (2010). Accordingly, “a jury’s verdict should not be set aside if there is competent evidence to support it.” Id. Even “when testimony is in direct conflict and testimony supporting the verdict has been impeached, if ‘it cannot be said as a matter of law that the testimony thus impeached was deprived of all probative value or that the jury could not believe it,’ the credibility of witnesses is for the jury.” People v Lemmon, 456 Mich 625, 643; 576 NW2d 129 (1998), quoting Anderson v Conterio, 303 Mich 75, 79; 5 NW2d 572 (1942).

Appellant points out that the testimony of the attorney who recounted drafting a will for the decedent comported with his own account of the decedent’s preparing a will favoring him largely to the exclusion of appellee, and asserts that concluding that the will at issue was invalid meant concluding that the attorney was lying. That assertion is oversimplified, however. Aside from the jury’s prerogative to doubt the attorney’s honesty, with or without identifying a motive to lie, the jury was entitled to doubt the accuracy of the attorney’s recollections, however honestly he endeavored to report them. Further, even if the attorney’s account was entirely accurate concerning the decedent’s wish to provide more generously for appellant than for appellee, or their half-brother, that still leaves open the possibility that appellant manufactured a document that resembled the original but that purported to give him a still greater advantage over his siblings.

Appellant also points out that a neighbor at one of the decedent’s vacation homes testified that she read the will to appellant before sending it to the latter’s attorney after the decedent died, and argues that the neighbor “would know if the will . . . presented to probate was not the will she gave to [appellant’s attorney], and yet she testified that it was the same will.” Appellant again insists that concluding that the will was invalid meant concluding that a credible witness

-2- was lying. We again bear in mind that the jury was free to doubt the neighbor’s honesty. Beyond that, the jury would not have had to deem the neighbor dishonest to suspect that she did not apply sufficient studiousness when she read the will to appellant, or did not scrutinize the trial exhibit closely enough, to notice if there were differences between what she had read to appellant and what she saw at trial.

Appellant additionally argues that appellee’s document examiner offered internally inconsistent testimony, having opined both that the signature in question was forged and that the signature page at issue had been copied at a different time or on a different machine from the rest of the pages. According to appellant, “Either signatures were forged on a will that [the decedent] did not have prepared, or real signatures were taken from one document and attached to a document that was never actually signed. It does not make sense for both of these to be the case.” Appellant has put forward false alternatives. If appellant was in fact relying on a photocopy of a forged will, he might well have later discovered an error, or improved his ability to mimic the needed signatures, or seized an opportunity to incorporate one or more real signatures from other documents, and so separately photocopied a new signature page to present with the rest of the forgery.

For these reasons, appellant has brought to light only normal credibility contests or other conflicts in the evidence; he has not shown that the verdict depended on testimony that was impeached to the degree that it was, as a matter of law, deprived of all probative value. See Lemmon, 456 Mich at 643.

Because appellant had nothing to gain from acting on the one opportunity he complains was lost as the result of late service of the judgment, any error in the probate court’s refusal to set aside the judgment was harmless and there is no basis for reversal.

II. STEPSON AS INTESTATE HEIR

Appellant next argues that the probate court erred in determining that the decedent’s stepson joined the parties as heirs to the decedent’s estate under the laws of intestacy. This Court reviews the probate court’s findings of fact under the clearly erroneous standard. MCR 2.613(C).

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in Re Ward Estate, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-ward-estate-michctapp-2016.