Lawrence Miller, Jr. v. Brittany Bunch, Administratrix of the Estate of Autumn Raine Bunch

CourtKentucky Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 13, 2022
Docket2021 SC 0071
StatusUnknown

This text of Lawrence Miller, Jr. v. Brittany Bunch, Administratrix of the Estate of Autumn Raine Bunch (Lawrence Miller, Jr. v. Brittany Bunch, Administratrix of the Estate of Autumn Raine Bunch) 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
Lawrence Miller, Jr. v. Brittany Bunch, Administratrix of the Estate of Autumn Raine Bunch, (Ky. 2022).

Opinion

RENDERED: DECEMBER 15, 2022 TO BE PUBLISHED

Supreme Court of Kentucky 2021-SC-0071-DG

LAWRENCE MILLER, JR. APPELLANT

ON REVIEW FROM COURT OF APPEALS V. NO. 2019-CA-1856 LETCHER CIRCUIT COURT NO. 15-CI-00023

BRITTANY BUNCH, INDIVIDUALLY AND AS APPELLEE ADMINISTRATRIX OF THE ESTATE OF AUTUMN RAINE BUNCH

OPINION OF THE COURT BY JUSTICE LAMBERT

REVERSING & REMANDING

In the underlying action, the Letcher Circuit Court found that Lawrence

Miller, Jr. (Mr. Miller) willfully abandoned his stillborn daughter, Autumn

Raine Bunch (Autumn). Based on this finding, the circuit court ruled that

KRS1 411.137 and KRS 391.033, collectively known as Mandy Jo’s Law,

prevented Mr. Miller from being awarded any of the settlement proceeds from

the wrongful death action against the hospital where Autumn was born. Mr.

Miller appealed the circuit court’s ruling to the Court of Appeals, which

affirmed. After thorough review, we reverse and hold that Mandy Jo’s Law, as

currently written, is not applicable when the child in question is stillborn.

1 Kentucky Revised Statute. I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

In 2013, Mr. Miller was dating Autumn’s mother, Brittany Bunch (Ms.

Bunch). The couple broke up in late 2013 due, in part, to the fact that Mr.

Miller discovered Ms. Bunch was also sleeping with another man, Silas Walker

(Mr. Walker). On October 31, 2013, shortly after Mr. Miller and Ms. Bunch

separated, Ms. Bunch discovered she was pregnant. In November 2013, Ms.

Bunch met with Mr. Miller and showed him the positive pregnancy test. Ms.

Bunch also met with Mr. Walker and showed him the pregnancy test. Ms.

Bunch and Mr. Walker began dating in December 2013, and then remained

together throughout her pregnancy.

Ms. Bunch had a difficult pregnancy and had to be hospitalized three or

four times due to complications. On May 27, 2014, she was admitted to the

hospital at thirty-three weeks and four days. She was exhibiting symptoms of

preeclampsia, and an emergency Caesarean section was performed the next

day. Tragically, Autumn did not survive the birth.

In December 2014, Ms. Bunch was appointed the Administratrix of

Autumn’s Estate by an order of the Letcher District Court. A month later, Ms.

Bunch filed suit against the hospital alleging, inter alia, wrongful death. Mr.

Walker was named in the complaint as a co-plaintiff, and the complaint stated

that “[t]he Plaintiffs, Brittany Bunch and Silas Lee Walker are the natural

parents of Autumn Raine Bunch.” Ms. Bunch did not tell Mr. Miller about the

suit, and he instead found out about it from a friend. In May 2015, Mr. Miller

filed a motion to intervene in the suit based upon his allegation that he, not

2 Mr. Walker, was Autumn’s biological father. He then filed a motion for an

order to compel DNA testing. That testing would ultimately prove Mr. Miller’s

paternity, and Mr. Walker was dismissed as a plaintiff in September 2017.

After several years of litigation, the hospital, Ms. Bunch, and Mr. Miller

reached a settlement of all the claims and the hospital was released from the

litigation. Shortly thereafter, in July 2019, Ms. Bunch requested that the

circuit court hold a hearing to determine the division of the settlement funds.

Ms. Bunch asserted that Mr. Miller abandoned Autumn, prior to her birth, and

therefore he should not be awarded any of the settlement proceeds in

accordance with Mandy Jo’s Law. In defense, Mr. Miller contended that Mandy

Jo’s Law was inapplicable because it only pertains to the support, care, and

maintenance of a living child post-birth, and not an unborn child in utero.

During the hearing, Ms. Bunch testified that when she showed Mr. Miller

her positive pregnancy test in November 2013, he did not say anything or ask

her if she needed anything. Mr. Miller did not ask her if he was the father of

the child at that time, however he subsequently requested a DNA test that

apparently did not occur. Ms. Bunch alleged the following: she attempted to

get Mr. Miller to go to her doctor’s appointments with her, but he refused; Mr.

Miller only sent her a $25 money gram to Walmart in January or February

2014, but provided no other financial assistance to her; Mr. Miller never came

to visit her during her hospitalizations; and he did not come to, or help pay for,

Autumn’s funeral. Mr. Miller did come to the hospital on the day Autumn was

born, but Ms. Bunch believed he was high and made him leave. When

3 confronted with the fact that she named Mr. Walker as Autumn’s father in her

wrongful death action against the hospital, Ms. Bunch stated that she did so

because “he could have been her father.”

Mr. Miller’s testimony attempted to refute all of Ms. Bunch’s substantive

claims. Specifically, he testified that he gave her more than $25 during her

pregnancy; that he went to one of her doctor’s appointments with her; that he

only knew of one time she was hospitalized and that he spoke to her on the

phone for an hour thereafter; that he was not high when he came to the

hospital, and was only made to leave when he said something about fighting

Mr. Walker, who was also present that day; and that he was told by Ms.

Bunch’s family not to attend Autumn’s funeral.

The circuit court ultimately found Ms. Bunch to be more credible and

ruled in her favor. In its findings of fact, conclusions of law, and order, the

court found that Mandy Jo’s Law was applicable. Though the court did not

state so explicitly, it seemed to base this conclusion on the fact that Kentucky

permits a wrongful death suit for the death of a viable fetus. As it was

undisputed that Autumn was a viable fetus, the court concluded Mandy Jo’s

Law could apply. With regard to whether Mr. Miller willfully abandoned

Autumn, the court made the following findings:

The record in this case makes clear and the Court finds that the Intervening Plaintiff, Lawrence Miller, Jr., willfully abandoned Ms. Bunch when he learned that she had become pregnant and that he might be the father of her unborn child. Because he abandoned Ms. Bunch and her unborn child in their time of need, the Intervening Plaintiff, Lawrence Miller, Jr., has no claim to wrongful death damages . . . In fact, testimony in this case shows that Mr. Miller abandoned Ms. Bunch as soon as he learned she was 4 pregnant . . . Further testimony establishes that Mr. Miller offered no support, financial or otherwise, to Ms. Bunch during her pregnancy, other than a $25.00 money gram to be used at Walmart . . . Testimony in the case also shows that Mr. Miller did not contribute to or even attend the funeral service for Autumn Raine Bunch[.]

In Hafley v. McCubbins, 590 S.W.2d 892, 894 (Ky. [App.] 1979), the Court of Appeals defined what it means to abandon a child in the context of a civil wrongful death claim. The Hafley Court held that to abandon a child meant “neglect and refusal to perform natural and legal obligations to care and support, withholding of parental care, presence, opportunity to display voluntary affection and neglect to lend support and maintenance.” In Kimbler v. Arms, 102 S.W.3d 517, 522 (Ky.

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Lawrence Miller, Jr. v. Brittany Bunch, Administratrix of the Estate of Autumn Raine Bunch, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lawrence-miller-jr-v-brittany-bunch-administratrix-of-the-estate-of-ky-2022.