James Brett Holmes v. Becky Turner

188 So. 3d 1229, 2015 Miss. App. LEXIS 445, 2015 WL 5102641
CourtCourt of Appeals of Mississippi
DecidedSeptember 1, 2015
Docket2014-CA-00819-COA
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 188 So. 3d 1229 (James Brett Holmes v. Becky Turner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
James Brett Holmes v. Becky Turner, 188 So. 3d 1229, 2015 Miss. App. LEXIS 445, 2015 WL 5102641 (Mich. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

MAXWELL, J.,

for the Court:

¶ 1. “Generally, when necessaries are furnished to a person who by reason of mental incapacity cannot himself make a contract, the law implies or imposes an obligation or agreement on his part to pay for them[.]” 1 In this case, while Frances Turner was a total-care Alzheimer’s patient, her son Jimmy Turner wrote a series of checks to her to cover the cost of her nursing care. Thus, the law recognized an implied contractual obligation that Frances would repay Jimmy.

¶2. This obligation to reimburse Jimmy arose when the implied contract ended in November 2009. This is' when Jimmy stopped paying for Frances’s care and When Jimmy’s sister set up a conservator-ship for Frances that contained all of Frances’s assets. But Jimmy never as *1231 serted a claim against the conservatorship. Neither did Jimmy’s son, Brett Holmes Turner, who became the representative of Jimmy’s estate after Jimmy died in March 2011.

¶3. Instead, Brett waited two more years, until' March 2013, to file a claim against Frances’s estate, .which had been opened after Frances died in September 2011. Because Brett did not file Jimmy’s claim within the three-year statute of limitations, 2 we affirm the chancellor’s order, which disallowed Jimmy’s claim for being untimely.

Background Facts and Procedural History

I. Power of Attorney

114. For the last decade of her life, Frances was a total-care patient in a nursing home. She had three adult children: Jimmy, Becky, and Paul. From the time she entered the nursing home in May 2002 until the end of 2009, her son Jimmy had power of attorney and was responsible for paying her bills on her behalf.

¶ 5. Starting in September 2007, Jimmy began writing a series of personal checks to his mother — totaling almost $85,000— purportedly to pay for her nursing care. While his mother had assets to pay for her care (more than $150,000), these assets were tied up in stock investments. Apparently, Jimmy did not want to sell the stock while his mother was still alive for tax reasons. So he advanced her cash.

II. Conservatorship

¶ 6. Jimmy wrote the last check to his mother on November 20, 2009. A month later, his sister, Becky, discovered her mother owed $11,000 to the nursing home in past-due bills. Becky immediately filed for a conservatorship. She was appointed Frances’s conservator in January 2010. Though Jimmy had been notified of the hearing involving his mother’s conservator-ship, he never appeared in that matter.

¶ 7. Becky’s first action as conservator was to liquidate her mother’s stocks and begin using the proceeds to pay for Frances’s nursing care. Becky planned to use all the cash from the stock sale to pay for Frances’s care and, when that' money ran out, enroll Frances in Medicaid. According to Becky, Jimmy got mad that she sold the stock. He left Becky a string of angry voicemails, insisting the- money from the stocks belonged to him. Becky responded with a letter, written in February 2010. In this letter, she explained the stock proceeds had been placed in the conservator-ship and had to be used to pay for Frances’s care. ' Beyond these phone calls, there is no evidence Jimmy sought repayment from the conservatorship for the money he had advanced his mother for her care.

III.Estate

¶ 8. A year later, in March 2011, Jimmy died. Frances died six months later, in September 2011. Upon Frances’s death, Becky filed to end the conservatorship and open her mother’s estate. Becky notified Jimmy’s son, Brett, that his grandmother’s will had been probated. Under the terms of Frances’s will, because Jimmy predeceased Frances, Brett'was to inherit his father’s share of the estate.

¶ 9. Starting November 17,2011, Becky published a series of notices in the newspaper. These notices alerted potential creditors that they had ninety days from December 1, 2011, 'to probate their claims *1232 with the estate. Becky did not mail any individual notices, since she was unaware of anyone with a claim against Frances’s estate.

¶ 10. In March 2013, more than a year after the ninety-day period expired, Brett, in his capacity as representative; of Jimmy’s estate, filed a claim against Frances’s estate. Brett attached the cancelled checks from Jimmy to Frances. And he insisted his father’s estate should be repaid the approximately $85,000 Jimmy had advanced to his mother to pay for her care.

¶ 11. Becky moved to close Frances’s estate. In her motion, she asserted Frances’s estate did not owe Jimmy’s estate anything. Becky argued there could have been no binding agreement that her mother would repay Jimmy the money he advanced her because Frances had been an Alzheimer’s patient, incapable of entering a contract. Further, Becky asserted Brett probated his claim too late.

¶ 12. In response, Brett argued Frances did not have to be capable of entering a contract to bind her estate. Because Jimmy had power of attorney, he could act on her behalf — including advancing his money to her with the expectation of being repaid. But even if there was no contract, Brett argued equitable doctrines, like unjust enrichment, favored Jimmy’s estate being repaid.

¶ 13. Brett also suggested he had timely asserted his father’s estate’s right to repayment. According to Brett, the ninety-day notice period to probate claims did not apply because Jimmy’s estate was a “reasonably ascertainable creditor,” enti-tied to personal mailed notice, which Becky never gave. See Miss.Code Ann. § 91-7-145(2) (Rev.2013); In re Estate of Ladner, 911 So.2d 673, 675-76 (¶¶ 13-14) (Miss.Ct.App.2005) (strictly interpreting section 91-7-145(2) to require mailed notice be given to a “reasonably ascertainable creditor” before ninety-day statutory period begins to run). Brett also argued his March 2013 claim fell within the three-year statute-of-limitations period, which in his view did not begin to run until Frances died in September 2011.

¶ 14. After a hearing, the chancellor disallowed the claim. Becky had stipulated the proceeds from the checks Jimmy wrote to Frances between 2007 and 2009 were used for Frances’s benefit. But the chancellor found “Brett ha[d] been unable to provide sufficient proof ... to justify” the assertion the checks represented loans. The chancellor relied on the February 2010 letter Becky wrote to Jimmy as evidence that Becky considered the checks Jimmy wrote as gifts, not loans to be repaid at her death.

■ ¶ 15. Additionally, the chancellor found the claim was time-barred. According to the chancellor, Jimmy’s estate was not a “reasonably ascertainable creditor” entitled to personal mailed notice. Thus, the published notice to creditors had been sufficient to start the ninety-day clock against Jimmy’s estate. This meant Brett probated Jimmy’s estate’s claim fourteen months too late.

¶ 16.

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188 So. 3d 1229, 2015 Miss. App. LEXIS 445, 2015 WL 5102641, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/james-brett-holmes-v-becky-turner-missctapp-2015.