Kelley v. Jepson, 00-2196 (2001)

CourtSuperior Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJune 20, 2001
DocketC.A. No. 00-2196
StatusPublished

This text of Kelley v. Jepson, 00-2196 (2001) (Kelley v. Jepson, 00-2196 (2001)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kelley v. Jepson, 00-2196 (2001), (R.I. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

DECISION
Before the Court is the Appellee's Motion to Dismiss Appellants' probate appeal for failing to comply with Rhode Island General Laws §33-23-1, et. seq. Appellants have objected to the motion and filed Counter-Motions seeking declarative orders by this Court regarding the probate appeal. This Court has jurisdiction to hear these motions pursuant to Rhode Island General Laws § 33-23-1, et. seq.

Facts/Travel
The pertinent facts are as follows. The Appellants, Katherine M. Kelley and Thomas W. Pearlman, are the named co-executors under the Last Will and Testament executed by Brandt H. Jepson on February 19, 1996. Brandt H. Jepson, a resident of Providence, Rhode Island, died on May 14, 1998. The Appellants filed a petition to probate his Will with the Providence Probate Court shortly thereafter. Herbert Jepson, Brandt H. Jepson's father, contested the Appellants' petition and also filed a petition for administration requesting that his other son, Donald Jepson, the Appellee in this action, be appointed administrator of the estate. On April 4, 2000, the Providence Probate Court entered a Decision and disallowed the Will on the grounds of incompetence. In doing so, the Probate Court denied the Appellants' petition to probate Brandt Jepson's Will and granted Herbert Jepson's petition for administration. The court also appointed the Appellee as Administrator and Appraiser of Brandt Jepson's Estate.

On April 24, 2000, one of the Appellants' attorneys, Robert J. Ameen, filed a Claim of Appeal with the Probate Clerk of Providence. According to Attorney Ameen, a request was made for a certified copy of the Claim of Appeal and the record of the proceedings on that same date. See Ameen Aff., paragraph 5. Attorney Ameen also stated in his affidavit that due to the size of the record appealed from, the Probate Clerk mentioned that she would contact him when the record had been copied. Id. On May 2, 2000, Attorney Ameen filed Reasons of Appeal with the Superior Court along with a certified copy of the Claim of Appeal. The Reasons of Appeal stated however that "the probate court record of the proceedings appealed from is voluminous and will not be ready at the time of the filing of these Reasons of Appeal."

On May 22, 2000, the Appellee filed the present Motion to Dismiss for failure of the Appellants to comply with Rhode Island General Laws §33-23-1. In his accompanying memoranda, the Appellee argues that the Appellants did not file a request for certified copies of the record pursuant to Rhode Island General Laws §§ 33-23-1(a)(1) and (b) with the Providence Probate Court within twenty (20) days after April 4, 2000.1 The Appellee also argues that the Appellants failed to order the transcript

from the Probate Clerk within twenty (20) days. The burden to produce the transcripts, the Appellee maintains, is on the Appellant pursuant to Rhode Island General Laws § 33-22-19.1(c).

Furthermore, the Appellee contends that the Appellants did not file certified copies of the record or the transcript with the Superior Court within thirty (30) days of the same date in violation of Rhode Island General Laws § 33-23-1(a)(2). He states that the deadlines imposed by these statutes are jurisdictional and may not be extended by either the Probate Court or the Superior Court under the circumstances of this case. Moreover, the Appellee points out that extensions of time found in Rhode Island General Laws §§ 33-23-1(c) and (e) are unavailable to the Appellants, and that Rhode Island General Law § 9-21-6 does not assist the Appellants in saving his claim because he had notice of the underlying order and decision.2

In response to the Appellee's Motion to Dismiss, the Appellants contend that they have fulfilled their procedural obligations for filing a claim of appeal for judicial review of a probate court decision.

They request that this Court allow the late filing of the record of proceedings and order that their appeal is not subject to dismissal pursuant to Rhode Island General Law § 33-23-12.3 They argue that any delay in filing documents or perfecting their appeal was caused by the large size of the record of proceedings and the Probate Clerk's inability to make copies within the required time limits. The Appellants further argue that even if this Court finds that the record of proceedings was not filed in time, they can still perfect their appeal under Rhode Island General Law § 33-23-1(b), which allows for corrections or additions to the record, or under § 33-23-1(c), which allows for an extension of additional time reasonably necessary to complete the record. Additionally, the Appellants claim that Rhode Island General Law § 9-21-6 allows for appellate proceedings after time has expired. The Appellants also assert that if this Court rejects the aforementioned arguments, then the Court should declare the section of the statute which mandates the filing of the record, over which an appellant has no ultimate control, unconstitutional for unfairly and irrationally depriving a party of the due process right to appeal. Alternatively, the Appellants state that the Court should declare that the Probate Court decision is not an appealable order since the Appellee failed to comply with Rhode Island General Law § 33-22-31.4

Perfection of Appeal
It should be noted from the beginning that on appeal the Appellants do not, and in fact could not, argue that they perfected their claim of appeal pursuant to Rhode Island General Law § 33-23-1.

Although the Appellants filed their claim of appeal in the Office of the Clerk of the Providence Probate Court within the appropriate amount of time, and filed their Reasons of Appeal and a certified copy of the Claim of Appeal in the Superior Court within the appropriate time, the appeal to the Superior Court did not contain certified copies of the record or a transcript of the probate proceedings within the time allowed by § 33-23-1. The Appellants themselves state in their Reasons of Appeal that "the probate court record of the proceedings appealed from is voluminous and will not be ready at the time of the filing these Reasons of Appeal." The Appellants, aware that they were under an obligation to file such records along with the appeal, also motioned the Court to extend the time to file the record of proceedings.

Rhode Island General Laws §§ 33-23-1(a)(1) and (a)(2) both make reference to filing the record or the record of the proceedings appealed from, which subsection (b) defines as including "copies of documents filed with the probate court and certified by the probate clerk which are relevant to the probate appeal and the transcript (if any) of the relevant probate court proceedings." In the present case, the Probate Court record consists of documents and a transcript, yet neither were filed within the statutory deadlines along with the Reasons for Appeal.

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765 A.2d 840 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 2001)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Kelley v. Jepson, 00-2196 (2001), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kelley-v-jepson-00-2196-2001-risuperct-2001.