Joseph Miles v. Kim Gladden

2025 Ark. App. 418
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedSeptember 10, 2025
StatusPublished

This text of 2025 Ark. App. 418 (Joseph Miles v. Kim Gladden) 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
Joseph Miles v. Kim Gladden, 2025 Ark. App. 418 (Ark. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Cite as 2025 Ark. App. 418 ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS DIVISION I No. CV-24-20

JOSEPH MILES Opinion Delivered September 10, 2025

APPELLANT APPEAL FROM THE DREW COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT V. [NO. 22PR-21-22]

KIM GLADDEN HONORABLE QUINCEY ROSS, JUDGE APPELLEE AFFIRMED IN PART; REVERSED AND REMANDED IN PART

STEPHANIE POTTER BARRETT, Judge

Appellant Joseph Miles (hereinafter, “Miles”) appeals the decision of the Drew

County Circuit Court following its May 22, 2023 order denying Miles’s petition for probate

of Lisa Gladden Smith’s (hereinafter, “Lisa’s”) will. Specifically, Miles argues (1) appellee

Kim Gladden (hereinafter, “Gladden”) failed to prove Miles unduly influenced the execution

of Lisa’s 2020 will; and (2) Gladden failed to prove Miles unduly influenced the execution

of Lisa’s 2018 will. We affirm the circuit court’s order as to the 2018 will, and reverse and

remand the 2020 will for a determination regarding whether undue influence was used

regarding the confidential relationship between Miles and Lisa under a preponderance-of-

the-evidence standard.

In August 2017, Miles began a relationship with Lisa, now deceased. At the time

their relationship began, Lisa’s mother had recently passed, and her father was in poor health, eventually passing away in January 2018. Following her father’s passing, Lisa began

drinking heavily, leading to her own health issues.

In early 2018, Lisa retained counsel at Gill Law Firm, where attorney Kelly Brown

guided Lisa through the process of drafting a will. Specifically, Lisa conferenced with Kelly

about leaving her estate to Miles and one of her friends, Linda Sue Barnes. Lisa further

questioned Kelly about her ability to change a life insurance beneficiary designation through

a will, indicating she did not want any portion of her estate to go to her estranged brother,

Gladden.

On October 19, 2018, Linda Sue, also Miles’s friend and employee, found Lisa

unresponsive in her home. Linda Sue did work and odd jobs for Miles at his rental

properties and went to check on Lisa at Miles’s direction. While Linda Sue testified that an

unknown person came to Lisa’s home to deliver IV fluids to her, the medical records from

Baptist Hospital name Melissa Nash, Linda Sue’s daughter, as the person who rendered the

IV to Lisa. Three days later, on October 22, 2018, Lisa was admitted to the hospital for liver

failure due to alcoholism and possible acetaminophen overdose. Following her admission

to the hospital, Miles had Lisa execute a power of attorney naming him and Linda Sue as

Lisa’s attorney in fact—this was evidenced by three short video clips provided to the circuit

court as exhibits 114(a)–(c). Lisa’s attorney, Kelly Brown, emailed Miles several standard

end-of-life documents, including a general power of attorney and a power of attorney for

healthcare with a living will, which Lisa executed. These documents named Miles and Linda

Sue as Lisa’s healthcare proxies and attorneys in fact. Later that day, Lisa was transferred to

2 Baptist Health Hospital in Little Rock. After Lisa’s transfer, Miles emailed Kelly requesting

a last will and testament for Lisa. Miles stated Lisa wanted to leave all her assets to him and

Linda Sue and to change the beneficiary of Lisa’s life insurance from Suzie Flemister to him,

Linda Sue, and Shady Grove Baptist Church of Monticello, Arkansas.

On October 24, 2018, Kelly visited Lisa at Baptist Health to have her execute the will;

however, Lisa was “in and out of consciousness” and unable to do so. On October 29, Lisa’s

conditioned had improved and she was able to execute the will, referred to throughout the

pleadings and herein as the “2018 Will.” However, the terms of the will slightly differed

from what Miles had previously communicated to Kelly. The 2018 Will left $100,000 of

Lisa’s life insurance proceeds to the Joyce Meyers Ministries and the rest of the proceeds to

Miles. The 2018 Will left the residue of Lisa’s estate to Miles or, in the alternative, Charlie

Searcy, a friend of Lisa’s, if Miles predeceased Charlie. The 2018 Will named Charlie as the

personal representative of Lisa’s estate. Kelly later testified that Lisa appeared to be of sound

mind and under no duress or undue influence when she executed the 2018 Will and was

“out of the ICU” and in a “better health state” at that time. Miles was not in the room when

the 2018 Will was executed. On November 9, 2018, Lisa was discharged from the hospital.

On or around April 24, 2019, Lisa and Miles called Kelly to revise Lisa’s testamentary

documents. Lisa asked Kelly to remove Linda Sue from her healthcare-proxy form and

durable power of attorney as well as remove the outreach-ministry portion of the specific

bequest under the life insurance policy.

3 On April 25, 2019, Lisa was arrested for driving while intoxicated. Miles paid Lisa’s

bail and took Lisa to Conway Behavioral Health rehabilitation facility to be treated for

alcoholism. Upon arrival, the facility asked Lisa “if her paperwork was in order,” and Miles

called Kelly requesting a copy of Lisa’s updated will, referred to throughout the pleadings

and herein as the “2019 Will.”

On April 26, 2019, Kelly emailed Miles the 2019 Will with instructions on executing

it. The 2019 Will named Miles as the beneficiary of Lisa’s life insurance policy and the

primary beneficiary of her residual estate, and it named Charlie Searcy the secondary

beneficiary of her residual estate. Miles then forwarded the email to Conway Behavioral

Health and allowed Lisa to use his cellphone to call a notary. Lisa executed the 2019 Will

at Conway Behavioral Health. However, following the execution of the 2019 Will, Lisa was

unable to receive treatment at the facility due to a long waiting list. On April 29, 2019, Lisa

voluntarily admitted herself to a program at Drew Memorial Hospital and was discharged

three days later.

Following Lisa’s discharge from Drew Memorial, she and Miles ended their romantic

relationship, and Lisa moved her things out of Miles’s home and into a house Miles owned

in town. Miles later testified he helped Lisa with several projects to get her “back on her

feet,” including repairing the storm drain at Lisa’s hair salon so she could begin seeing

customers again, cleaning the mold out from Lisa’s parents’ home, and filing an insurance

claim from a fire at Lisa’s house trailer. During this time, Lisa’s brother, Gladden, filed for

bankruptcy, and the bankruptcy trustee offered to sell Gladden’s interest in three tracts of

4 land that Gladden and Lisa inherited from their parents to Lisa and Miles. On September

27, 2019, Miles extended a $115,000 line of credit to Lisa in exchange for a mortgage on her

property so Lisa could buy Gladden’s interest.

On July 20, 2020, Miles sent Lisa text messages stating he wished death and illness

on her family members and friends. Later that month, Lisa contacted Gill Law Firm and

spoke to Amy King, Mr. Gill’s secretary, about removing Miles from her will and revoking

her power of attorney. Amy took the message for Mr. Gill and later tried to call Lisa back,

but Lisa did not answer or return Amy’s call. The record shows that prior to the July 2020

phone call, Lisa sent several text messages expressing frustration with Miles and stating she

wanted to name Suzie Flemister as her beneficiary instead of Miles.

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2025 Ark. App. 418, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/joseph-miles-v-kim-gladden-arkctapp-2025.