La'tona McDonnell v. Estate of Hervie Wayne Chance, Sr.

2025 Ark. App. 488
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedOctober 22, 2025
StatusPublished

This text of 2025 Ark. App. 488 (La'tona McDonnell v. Estate of Hervie Wayne Chance, Sr.) 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
La'tona McDonnell v. Estate of Hervie Wayne Chance, Sr., 2025 Ark. App. 488 (Ark. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Cite as 2025 Ark. App. 488 ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS DIVISION I No. CV-23-802

LA’TONA MCDONNELL Opinion Delivered October 22, 2025

APPELLANT APPEAL FROM THE PULASKI COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT, FIFTEENTH V. DIVISION [NO. 60PR-22-565] ESTATE OF HERVIE WAYNE CHANCE, SR., DECEASED HONORABLE AMY DUNN JOHNSON, APPELLEE JUDGE

DISMISSED AS MOOT

ROBERT J. GLADWIN, Judge

This is an appeal from a series of orders in a Pulaski County probate case. Appellant

La’Tona McDonnell filed a claim against appellee estate of Hervie Wayne Chance, Sr. (“Estate”),

alleging an interest in certain real and personal property belonging to Hervie Wayne Chance,

Sr. (“Chance, Sr.”), at the time of his death. The circuit court denied and dismissed McDonnell’s

claim with prejudice because she was not a party to the case and, therefore, could not assert any

interest in Chance, Sr.’s property. For reversal, McDonnell argues that the circuit court (1)

lacked subject-matter jurisdiction over the dispute, (2) erred in striking her first amended

affidavit and statement of claim, and (3) abused its discretion in barring an out-of-court

statement by the decedent. We dismiss the appeal because it is moot. I. Background Facts

Chance, Sr., a North Little Rock resident, died testate in February 2022. He left a “Last

Will and Testament” dated December 26, 1994, in which he nominated his son, Hervie Wayne

Chance, Jr. (“Chance”), as executor of his will. On March 18, 2022, Chance filed a petition to

admit the will to probate and to be appointed executor of his father’s estate. On March 29, the

circuit court granted the petition and appointed Chance as executor. A notice of the will probate

was published in the Daily Record, a Pulaski County newspaper of general circulation, on April

5 and 12. On August 23, Chance petitioned the circuit court for permission to sell real estate

owned by his father located at 3509 Royal Oak in North Little Rock for the gross sales price of

$239,900. The circuit court entered an order authorizing the sale on August 26. Chance

reported the sale to the circuit court just before 10:00 a.m. on August 30.

At about 4:00 p.m. that same day, McDonnell filed a “Request for Notice of Hearings

and Pleadings” in the case. In her request, she asserted that she had an interest in real property

located at 6973 White Oak Way (hereinafter, the “disputed property”) in Sherwood. She

claimed that Chance, Sr. had conveyed the disputed property to her “by way of an instrument

that he executed on or about February 13, 2020[.]” She attached that document as an exhibit to

her request.1 On September 23, 2022, Chance filed a petition with the court to sell the disputed

property for a gross sales price of $199,900. Chance informed the court in that petition that

McDonnell “claims an interest in the property by virtue of Instrument No. 2022017200

1 That document, titled by McDonnell as “Conveyance of Interest in Real Property,” appears to have been notarized on February 13, 2020, but it was not filed and recorded with the circuit/county clerk until March 10, 2022.

2 recorded 03/10/2022[.]” On September 28, 2022, the circuit court authorized the sale of the

disputed property for the gross sales price of $199,900. On October 10, McDonnell filed a

“Statement of Claim” against the Estate claiming (1) “all equity, interest, right, and claim” that

Chance, Sr. had in the disputed property, (2) reimbursement for payments she allegedly made

on the home loan, property taxes, and insurance for the disputed property from July 2019 to

the present, and (3) ownership of a black 2010 BMW vehicle. She claimed that she had resided

at the disputed property from July 15, 2019, until July 5, 2022, and that Chance, Sr. had

conveyed his interest in that property to her while he was alive. She claimed that Chance, Sr.

had also gifted her the BMW and that she had driven that vehicle daily for about two years.

McDonnell stated that, at the executor’s request, she had parked the BMW in the garage of the

house on the disputed property on July 5, 2022. She estimated that the BMW was worth $6,000,

and she sought compensation in that amount.2

On June 29, 2023, the circuit court entered a scheduling order setting a trial for August

9 and requesting that witness and exhibit lists be exchanged by August 2 and that pretrial

memoranda be filed by August 4. On July 31, Chance filed a report of sale, informing the court

that pursuant to its September 2022 order, he had sold the disputed property on November 19,

2022, for the gross sales price of $199,900. The parties filed witness lists on August 2 and pretrial

memoranda on August 4, as requested. On August 5, McDonnell filed a “First Amended

2 Also on October 10, McDonnell’s attorney informed the circuit court that she had attempted to file her affidavit of claim on September 27. However, an apparent issue with the court’s electronic filing system had prevented the completion of the filing. Counsel averred that she did electronically serve Chance’s counsel with the affidavit of claim on September 27 even though it was not properly filed with the court at that time.

3 Affidavit and Statement of Claim,” seeking to add the imposition of a constructive trust to the

relief she sought. Also on August 5, the circuit court entered an order approving Chance’s report

of sale of the disputed property.

Chance moved to strike McDonnell’s first amended affidavit and statement of claim on

August 8. At a hearing the next day, the circuit court struck the amended claim, stating that

“[a]nything that was not stated timely within the claim period cannot be considered.” The circuit

court also addressed Chance’s motion to dismiss McDonnell’s claim in which he asserted that

the circuit court lacked subject-matter jurisdiction to consider McDonnell’s claim (because she

was a stranger to the Estate) in that probate case. At that hearing, McDonnell disagreed that she

was a stranger to the Estate and argued that the circuit court had subject-matter jurisdiction to

decide her claim. The circuit court stated that it was “inclined to grant the Motion to Dismiss

just as a matter of law” but took the motion under consideration and proceeded with the

hearing. The circuit court then heard testimony from McDonnell and a witness, Connie Lang,

after which Chance moved for a directed verdict on McDonnell’s claim. The circuit court

granted the directed-verdict motion in its bench ruling:

[A]ssuming that everything is true, under the law the claimant is not entitled to relief. Her claim as it was originally filed for an interest in real estate with the alternative of receiving the proceeds from that real estate and for interest in a vehicle that she indicates and has testified was a gift. However; these are not claims within the meaning of the statute, which defines those to be liabilities of the decedent which survive whether rising in contract or tort or otherwise. And none of the testimony and none of the evidence indicates there was any liability on Mr. Chance, Sr.’s part to the claimant in this case. It was not an existing liability at that time. So on that basis, the Court is going to grant the motion for a directed verdict. I think even if the Court were to allow the testimony to go forward and do the full case, I mean the standard for determining whether or not there has been an inter vivos or a gift during the life of the decedent, the standard is clear and convincing evidence. And the evidence that I have heard today indicates quite clearly that Mr.

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2025 Ark. App. 488, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/latona-mcdonnell-v-estate-of-hervie-wayne-chance-sr-arkctapp-2025.