John A. Haverstick and Jerry Haverstick v. Frances Haverstick

2021 Ark. App. 260
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedMay 26, 2021
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 2021 Ark. App. 260 (John A. Haverstick and Jerry Haverstick v. Frances Haverstick) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
John A. Haverstick and Jerry Haverstick v. Frances Haverstick, 2021 Ark. App. 260 (Ark. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

Elizabeth Perry Cite as 2021 Ark. App. 260 I attest to the accuracy and ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS integrity of this document DIVISION II 2023.06.27 15:54:21 -05'00' No. CV-20-363 2023.001.20174 JOHN A. HAVERSTICK AND JERRY Opinion Delivered May 26, 2021

HAVERSTICK APPELLANTS APPEAL FROM THE WOODRUFF COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT V. [NO. 74PR-18-25]

FRANCES HAVERSTICK APPELLEE HONORABLE CHALK S. MITCHELL, JUDGE

AFFIRMED

BART F. VIRDEN, Judge

Brothers, John Haverstick (“John Jr.”) and Jerry Haverstick, filed a motion to set

aside the Woodruff County Circuit Court’s order admitting the will of their father, John

Haverstick (“John Sr.”) , to probate and appointing their stepmother, Frances Haverstick,

as the personal representative of the estate. Frances filed a motion to dismiss John Jr. and

Jerry’s motion to set aside. The circuit court granted Frances’s motion to dismiss, and the

brothers appeal the circuit court’s decision. We affirm.

I. Relevant History

John Sr. died on May 2, 2018. John Sr.’s will, executed on October 20, 2015, named

Frances, John Jr., and Jerry as heirs and nominated Frances as the administrator of the estate.

John Sr.’s estate mainly consisted of a $400,000 Farm Bureau annuity, and it set forth that

John Jr. and Jerry would receive $10,000 each in proceeds from the annuity, and Frances

would receive the balance of the annuity proceeds and the remaining estate. On May 21, Frances petitioned the Woodruff County Circuit Court for probate of the will and requested

that the court appoint her as the personal representative of the estate. The order granting

the petition was entered the same day, and the testamentary letter was entered on May 23.

On July 15, 2018, John Jr. and Jerry filed a motion to set aside the order probating

the will and appointing Frances as the personal representative of the estate, and in the same

motion they contested the will. The brothers argued that the petition for probate and for

appointment of a personal representative was neither signed by the petitioner nor verified

as required by Arkansas Code Annotated section 28-1-109(a) (Repl. 2012). Moreover, they

argued, section 28-1-109(b) requires that notice of the hearing on the petition must be

given to each named heir and/or devisee who has filed a demand for notice. The brothers

conceded that neither of them had filed a demand for notice; however, they argued that

they were not served in accordance with either section 28-1-109(a) or section 28-1-112

(Repl. 2012), and the court did not have jurisdiction over the case. As for their will contest,

the brothers asserted that section 28-40-117 (Repl. 2012) provides that an attested will shall

be proved by the testimony of at least two witnesses, and no proof of will was filed. Also,

John Jr. and Jerry called into question the validity of their father’s signature on the will. The

brothers requested that the court invalidate the will and remove Frances as the

representative. Additionally, the brothers requested that the circuit court set aside paragraph

five of the will, which provides that the estate is the beneficiary of the proceeds of the

annuity worth $400,000. They contended that the annuity’s beneficiary designations could

2 be changed in accordance with the provisions of the annuity and could not be changed

through a will.

On July 16, Frances responded, explaining that John Jr. and Jerry received letters

advising them that their father’s will had been admitted to probate. 1 She also contended that

her failure to sign or verify the petition was being corrected, and the proof of will was

attached to the will and filed in the circuit court. Additionally, Frances asserted that the

beneficiary of an annuity may be changed “by direct reference to such change within the

body of the will itself.”

On January 17, 2019, John Jr. and Jerry amended their motion. In addition to the

arguments in their original motion, the brothers recounted that in 1992, their father

obtained the annuity worth $400,000 and later changed the terms in 2000, 2004, and 2005

through Bobby Bowen, a Farm Bureau insurance agent. Before the October 20, 2015

revision, Frances, John Jr., and Jerry were to receive one-third equal shares of the annuity.

The brothers contended that in a deposition, Frances stated that John Sr. had asked her to

call his attorney, Bay Fitzhugh, and make the appointment to revise his will and that he

drove them to Fitzhugh’s office; however, later Frances stated that she drove them to the

appointment. The brothers asserted that Frances also testified that she was responsible for

cleaning, bathing, and dressing their father at the time the will was changed. The brothers

alleged undue influence, asserting that their father did not have the mental capacity to make

1 Proof of publication of notice of the probate of John Sr.’s will was filed August 20 setting forth that the notice of probate ran on August 16.

3 the will, Frances had isolated John Sr. from his family and made him completely dependent

on her, and she had hidden the changes to their father’s will from both sons and his insurance

agent and friend, Bobby Bowen. Frances responded with a motion to dismiss.

On November 8, 2019, the court held a hearing on the motions. Frances, a licensed

practical nurse, described her relationship with John Sr. as loving and close. She testified

that John Sr. was diagnosed with Parkinson’s in 2013, and in that same year, she obtained a

durable power of attorney. Parkinson’s limited John Sr.’s driving ability as the disease

progressed, and sometime after the 2015 will was executed, Frances began signing his name

for him. Toward the end of John Sr.’s life, Frances took care of his bathing and cleaning

and cooked his meals. She testified that her husband died in May 2018 from COPD,

congestive heart failure, and chronic respiratory failure. Frances explained that her husband

was never diagnosed with dementia or took medication for it and never showed the

symptoms of dementia, except toward the very end of his life in 2017. Even then, Frances

testified, he did not suffer from end-stage dementia, and up to his death, John Sr. knew

everyone and could carry on a conversation. Frances recalled that in 2015, John Sr.

complained that his sons never came to see him, and he expressed the desire to change his

will. Frances testified that she told her husband that John Jr. and Jerry were busy with work

and could not visit him, but John Sr. was determined to change his will. Frances recalled

that her husband, who often asked her to place his phone calls, asked her to call his attorney

and set up an appointment. She stated that John Sr. drove them to the appointment, and he

went in the office and closed the door while she sat in the waiting room for about thirty

4 minutes and chatted with Patty, Fitzhugh’s secretary. When Fitzhugh and John Sr. emerged

from the lawyer’s office, Fitzhugh asked Patty to find Bobby Bowen’s phone number, and

Fitzhugh called Bowen while she and John Sr. were still there. Frances stated that although

she remembered that the call occurred, she did not hear the other side of the phone call and

could not say who Fitzhugh was speaking to. Frances testified that a couple of days after the

will was revised, Patty, who “must have” typed the will, called the Haversticks and told

them that John Sr. needed to come back and sign the will.

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