Jerri Lynn Kirkland v. James Calvin Kirkland

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 25, 2023
Docket02-22-00469-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Jerri Lynn Kirkland v. James Calvin Kirkland (Jerri Lynn Kirkland v. James Calvin Kirkland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jerri Lynn Kirkland v. James Calvin Kirkland, (Tex. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

In the Court of Appeals Second Appellate District of Texas at Fort Worth ___________________________ No. 02-22-00469-CV ___________________________

JERRI LYNN KIRKLAND, Appellant

V.

JAMES CALVIN KIRKLAND, Appellee

On Appeal from the 352nd District Court Tarrant County, Texas Trial Court No. 352-329598-21

Before Kerr, Bassel, and Wallach, JJ. Memorandum Opinion by Justice Bassel MEMORANDUM OPINION

I. Introduction

Appellant Jerri Lynn Kirkland appeals from a November 8, 2022 amended

order partially granting temporary injunctive relief that enjoins her from, among other

things, acting as trustee of the Kirkland Living Trust and “taking any action to

oppose, challenge, interfere with, or further delay the issuance of letters testamentary”

to Appellee Calvin Kirkland. Jerri raises four issues. In her first issue, she argues that

the November 8, 2022 order is void for failing to strictly comply with Texas Rule of

Civil Procedure 683’s mandatory requirements. In her remaining issues, she argues

that the trial court abused its discretion by rendering the November 8, 2022 order

because it grants the ultimate relief that Calvin seeks in the underlying suit, because

Calvin failed to satisfy his burden of proving an actual threat of an imminent and

irreparable injury for which he lacks an adequate remedy at law, and because the order

purports to limit her from participating in the probate proceeding for the Estate of

Benny Dale Kirkland that remains pending in Hood County. We hold (1) that the

November 8, 2022 order was superseded by the March 14, 2023 order and that the

subsequent order complied with Rule 683’s mandatory requirements; (2) that the

March 14, 2023 order does not grant the ultimate relief that Calvin seeks because his

pleadings asserted a breach-of-contract cause of action and requested numerous

declarations that are not mentioned in the temporary-injunction order; (3) that Calvin

proved an actual threat of imminent and irreparable injury for which he lacks an

2 adequate remedy at law; and (4) that the order’s anti-suit injunction was inappropriate.

Accordingly, we modify the March 14, 2023 order to delete the portion that enjoins

Jerri from taking any action in the probate proceeding to delay the issuance of the

letters testamentary, and we affirm the order as modified.

II. Factual and Procedural Background

Although this is an interlocutory appeal from the temporary-injunction order,

documents other than Calvin’s application for the temporary injunction impact the

analysis. To assist the reader, we explain the people involved, the various documents

at play, the underlying suit, Jerri’s deposition, and the hearing on the temporary-

injunction application.

A. The People Involved

Jerri was married to Benny Dale Kirkland for the six years preceding his death.

Jerri had a son and a daughter (Eric Bradley Hardaway and Jacey Lynn Hardaway)

from a prior marriage, and Benny had a daughter and a son (Kristin Leigh Tindal and

James Calvin Kirkland) from his prior marriage.

B. The Premarital Agreement

Prior to Jerri and Benny’s marriage, they signed a premarital agreement in

March 2015 with property schedules attached, confirming that Jerri’s separate

property consisted of a 1999 Lexus valued at $4,000; jewelry and clothing valued at

$6,000; and a life insurance policy on her ex-husband with a $50,000 death benefit

3 payable to Jerri, while Benny’s separate property totaled over $3 million. The parties

reaffirmed the premarital agreement in June 2015.

C. The Trust and the Restated Amendment

In February 2020, after Jerri and Benny were married, they created and

executed a revocable inter vivos trust known as the Kirkland Living Trust. Three

months later, Jerri and Benny executed a “Restated Amendment to The Kirkland

Living Trust.” Article I of the document states that Jerri “does herewith resign as

[t]rustee.” The Restated Amendment lists the successor trustees in the following

order of priority: Benny’s son, son-in-law, and daughter—i.e., Calvin Kirkland,

Everett Alan Tindal, and Kristin Tindal. The Restated Amendment limited who

could be appointed as trustee upon the first death (as between Jerri and Benny):

3.A. Successor Trustees. We may, during our joint lifetimes, appoint individuals or corporations as co-Trustees or successor Trustees, by a written instrument other than a Will delivered to the other Trustee(s), if any are then-acting. Upon the death of the first of us, the survivor may appoint, by the same method, individuals or corporation as co-Trustees or successor Trustees; provided however, if a Trustee or co-Trustee is acting who is not related or subordinate to the survivor of us . . . , the power to remove and replace such a Trustee shall be limited to the appointment of a new Trustee or new co- Trustee who is also not related or subordinate to the survivor of us . . . . If the survivor of us is incapacitated, the person who has been nominated to serve as successor Trustee may designate his or her successor, if there is no named successor to that successor Trustee or if the person designated as his or her successor is unable or unwilling to serve. [Emphasis added in italics.]

Because Calvin was listed as the first successor trustee, the surviving spouse (Jerri)

was thus limited to removing and replacing Calvin with someone who was not related

4 to her. The Restated Amendment also limited what provisions of the trust could be

amended by the surviving spouse:

5.C. Revocation and Amendment after the First Death.

(1) On the death of the first of us, the surviving spouse may amend any or all of the provisions of Articles II, III[,] or IV of this Trust [except as such amendment would alter the beneficial interests of the “Decedent’s Trust” (as hereinafter defined)[ or] cause the loss of the marital deduction for all or any part of the Decedent’s Trust].

(2) On the death of the first of us, the surviving spouse shall have the power to amend, revoke[,] or terminate the “Survivor’s Trust” (as hereinafter defined). On revocation or termination of the Survivor’s Trust, all of its assets shall be delivered to the surviving spouse.

(3) On the death of the first of us, the “Decedent’s Trust” (as hereinafter defined) may not be amended, revoked, or terminated; provided however, the surviving spouse shall have the power to change the manner of distribution, whether outright or continued in trust, of the Decedent’s Trust to the deceased spouse’s issue. This Limited Power of Appointment shall include the power to allocate all or an unequal portion of the assets of the Decedent’s Trust to one or more beneficiaries to the exclusion of the deceased spouse’s other issue, so long as such beneficiaries are the issue of the deceased spouse.

(4) Revocation and amendment shall be made in the manner as herein above provided in Paragraphs 5.A. and 5.B.

(5) On the death of the surviving spouse, no trust created herein may be amended or revoked. [Emphasis added in italics.]

And in thirteen separate subparts, several with further subdivisions, the Restated

Amendment set forth in detail how the trust estate would be divided upon the death

of the first spouse, including the creation of the Survivor’s Trust and the Decedent’s

5 Trust, the funding for each of those trusts, and the disposition of the liquid assets

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