John Wesley Bays v. Kristie D. Kiphart Individually and as Trustee of the Demand Right Irrevocable Trust for Bryce A. Bays

486 S.W.3d 283, 2016 WL 2604789, 2016 Ky. LEXIS 175
CourtKentucky Supreme Court
DecidedMay 5, 2016
Docket2014-SC-000324-DG
StatusUnknown
Cited by3 cases

This text of 486 S.W.3d 283 (John Wesley Bays v. Kristie D. Kiphart Individually and as Trustee of the Demand Right Irrevocable Trust for Bryce A. Bays) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Kentucky Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
John Wesley Bays v. Kristie D. Kiphart Individually and as Trustee of the Demand Right Irrevocable Trust for Bryce A. Bays, 486 S.W.3d 283, 2016 WL 2604789, 2016 Ky. LEXIS 175 (Ky. 2016).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT BY

JUSTICE NOBLE

This case presents the question whether a dying spouse’s decision to remove the surviving spouse as a life-insurance beneficiary and to name someone else can constitute fraud on the surviving spouse’s statuary elective share. Like the Court of Appeals, this Court concludes that it cannot.

I, Background

John Wesley Bays and Carole Kiphart married in 2000. They had one child, Bryce Bays. In 2001, John and Carole executed reciprocal wills. Carole was a physician and had a substantial income.

In 2000, Carole obtained a life-insurance policy through Prudential Insurance Company for $125,000. Her husband was initially named as a beneficiary of this policy, but little else is known about it. Presumably, it is standard term life insurance.

In January 2002, she also obtained a $750,000 policy from American General Life Insurance Company, with the benefits payable 80% to her husband and 20% to her son. Although this policy was generally a term life policy (with a thirty-year term), it had two facets that set it apart from ordinary term-life insurance. First, it was a return-of-premium policy, meaning that at the end of the term, if Carole lived, all of her premiums would be re *285 turned to her. Under this provision, the policy built up a cash value over time, and could be surrendered in exchange for this cash value. The cash value did not build up linearly, representing the full value of the premiums from the beginning. Instead, it had no cash value for its first five years, with a cash value beginning to accrue at the end of the sixth year. Even then, the cash value was substantially less than the premiums paid. The cash value was not to equal the premiums paid until the end of the thirty-year term. (Carole would die shortly before the end of the sixth year of the policy, that is, five years and ten months into the policy.)

The policy also included a terminal-illness accelerated benefit rider. Under that provision, if Carole was diagnosed with a terminal illness and was expected to die within twelve months, she could call up to 50% of the proceeds of the policy, to a maximum of $250,000. Exercising this option would have reduced the benefit payable on her death to any named beneficiary.

Carole was diagnosed with cancer in December 2006. Despite this diagnosis, Carole never invoked the terminal-illness acceleration rider on her American General Policy.

In September 2007, Carole was admitted to the Markey Cancer Center in Lexington, Kentucky. While there, and without John’s knowledge, she executed a new will that largely disinherited her husband. She had relatively liquid assets (such as á certificate of deposit for' more than $90,000, multiple bank accounts, and a retirement account) and other valuable personal property (such as horses), with a combined value of over $150,000. Nonetheless, she mostly left John only personal and household effects in the new will. The will also purported to “bar ... dower and all statutory, marital rights he may have in [her] estate.” The will included a holographic codicil disposing of the bulk of the estate, with many specific bequests of cash, horses, a truck, and other property, largely to members of Carole’s family.

Around the same time, Carole also created two trústs, the Demand Right Irrevocable Trust for Bryce A. Bays and the Carole Kiphart Bays Living Trust. At that time, she removed John and Bryce 1 as beneficiaries on the life-insurance policies, and instead named the trusts as the beneficiaries. The American General policy’s proceeds were to be paid into the Demand Right Irrevocable Trust, and the Prudential policy’s proceeds were to be paid into the Living Trust,

Carole died on October 28, 2007. In November 2007, Carole’s September 2007 will was admitted to probate, and her sister, Kristie Kiphart, was appointed executrix of the estate under the September 2007 will. Kristie was also trustee of both trusts. She invested the proceeds of the American General policy with Raymond James & Associates, and the proceeds of the Prudential policy were paid into the Knóx Circuit Court Clerk, under an agreed order.

John quickly began challenging what had occurred. In December, he renounced the will under KRS 392.080, and instead elected to take his spousal share under KRS 392.020. He also filed a declaration of rights action with respect to the will, seeking to recover the portion of his spousal share that may have been delivered to. various legatees .under the will and to the beneficiaries of the life insurance policies. *286 His primary theory was that there was fraud on his statutory spousal interest because the beneficiaries of the insurance policies had been changed and the trusts established without his knowledge or consent, and the policies (and their proceeds) were part of Carole’s estate. . .

In 2008, John also filed a separate action to recover money that he claimed was missing from a safe-deposit box he had shared with his wife. And in 2009, he sued to have the September 2007 will declared void because it was not executed in accordance with KRS 394.040. The Knox Circuit Court consolidated all three actions.

The circuit court held in John’s favor with respect to the will, declaring it void. The will itself proclaimed that it had been executed in Louisville, although there is no question that Carole signed it in Lexington. Additionally, one of the witnesses did not actually see Carole sign the. will and, instead, later signed as a witness in Louisville, as did the notary who certified the signatures. Thus, the will clearly failed to meet the requirements of KRS 394.Ó40, which states that a non-holographic will is valid only if the testator signs the will “in the presence of at least two (2) credible witnesses, who shall subscribe the will with their names in the presence of the testator, and in the presence of each other.”

The other claims were decided in a bench trial in 2011. The circuit court denied John’s claim about the cash that he claimed was supposed to be in the safe-deposit box, concluding there was insufficient evidence. But the court found in John’s favor with respect to the claimed fraud on his statutory spousal interest. Specifically, the court found that John did not know or consent to the changes of insurance-policy beneficiaries or the creation of the trusts to be funded with the proceeds of the policies. And the court concluded that those were “fraudulent [inter] vivos transfers.” Moreover, the court held that the insurance policies were personalty to be considered in calculating John’s share of his wife’s estate. (By statute, he is entitled to one half of all surplus personalty after renouncing the will.) Based on this, the court entered judgment in John’s favor for $454,093.38, plus interest.

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486 S.W.3d 283, 2016 WL 2604789, 2016 Ky. LEXIS 175, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/john-wesley-bays-v-kristie-d-kiphart-individually-and-as-trustee-of-the-ky-2016.