Matheny v. Heirs of Oldfield

32 S.W.3d 491, 72 Ark. App. 46, 2000 Ark. App. LEXIS 780
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedDecember 6, 2000
DocketCA 00-87
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 32 S.W.3d 491 (Matheny v. Heirs of Oldfield) 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
Matheny v. Heirs of Oldfield, 32 S.W.3d 491, 72 Ark. App. 46, 2000 Ark. App. LEXIS 780 (Ark. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

WENDELL L. Griffen, Judge.

This case involves an appeal from a will contest. Barbara Matheny appeals from the order of the Sharp County Probate Court admitting an unsigned, undated copy of a will as the valid last will of Roy Oldfield (November will). Appellees purport to be Oldfield’s heirs-at-law. Appellant argues that the probate court erred in holding that the November will had been properly executed and revoked another will (October will) that had been admitted to probate. We affirm the probate court’s order with respect to its finding that the November will was properly executed and revoked the October will. However, because appellees failed to present any proof that the original November will was lost or fraudulently destroyed, as required by the Arkansas statute governing the probate of lost wills, the probate court improperly admitted the November will into probate. Therefore, we conclude that Oldfield died intestate, and reverse for a determination of Oldfield’s heirs-at-law.

Prior to the latter part of 1997, decedent Roy Oldfield had attorney Mark Johnson draft a will for him. During the latter part of 1997, Oldfield had two other wills drafted by attorneys. A will executed on October 2, 1997, in the law office of Sharron Glaze in Batesville left most of Oldfield’s assets to appellant (October will). Another will executed in the law office of Michelle Huff in Hardy left decedent’s assets to his nieces and nephews (November will).

Appellant was a long-time acquaintance of Oldfield, who was a friend of appellant’s sister-in-law. At Oldfield’s request, appellant removed him from a nursing home to five with her and her husband the year before he died. After Oldfield’s death on February 9, 1998, appellant filed a petition to probate the October will and be appointed, executrix of his estate. Appellees., Oldfield’s nieces and nephews, filed a petition to contest the October will, alleging that Oldfield was incompetent to execute a will due to mental incapacity, fraud, undue influence, coercion, and procurement by appellant. Appellees subsequendy submitted a will dated July .29, .1990, alleging that will to be the last valid will of Oldfield-.

Appellees then filed an amended petition to contest the October 1997 will, alleging they had discovered a copy of another will, purportedly executed in November 1997, which they asserted was Oldfield’s last will. During the probate hearing, appellant argued that appellees had not presented sufficient evidence to prove the November will was lost, as required under Arkansas Code Annotated section 28-40-302 (1987). The probate judge found by clear and convincing evidence that the November 1997 will was the last valid will of Oldfield; that the October 1997 will was revoked by the November will; that, appellant should be removed as executrix; that the November will was not properly revoked by decedent at the time of his death; and that appellee Richard Oldfield, should serve as executor. • Appellant appeals from this order. We reject appellant’s argument concerning proof of execution of the November will, but agree that the probate court erred in admitting the November will into probate because appellees failed to meet the proof of a lost will as required under section 28-40-302.

Execution of the November Will

The instrument proffered by appellees was a copy of a will that was unsigned and undated. Three people testified with regard to the circumstances surrounding the execution of the November will: Michelle Huff, who prepared the will, and Tina Hall and Brandi Holloway, who worked for Huff and witnessed the execution of this will. These witnesses testified that as a matter of practice they did not keep a copy of a signed will in their files, and that they put a closing date on the outside of a client’s file, referred to as a “will jacket,” within a few days to one week of the completion of services requested. Huff and Hall testified that Huff’s office prepared only one will for Oldfield. Oldfield’s will jacket showed two closure dates: July 28, 1997, and November 17, 1997.

Huff testified that Oldfield requested legal services from her involving revocation of a power of attorney and drafting a will. She testified that she began gathering information from him to draft the will, but he was unable to remember all of the names of his nieces and nephews that he wanted to include in it. She stated that he dropped by the office periodically to provide this information, and wanted the will drafted to leave most of the assets to the executor to distribute. Her office explained to him that they would not draft the will in that manner. Oldfield signed the revocation of power of attorney on June 11, 1997. Oldfield’s file was first closed on July 28, 1997, but Huff testified that the will was not executed at that time, and that her office closed his file because they believed he was not going to execute the will she had prepared for him.

Huff sent Oldfield a letter dated July 28, 1997, which instructed him to destroy the will drafted by Johnson and also contained a billing statement. Huff testified that under normal circumstances, instructing a client to destroy his own will, sending him a letter that included a bill, and closing the file would indicate that he had executed a will. However, Huff indicated that Oldfield’s case was not “normal” because her office thought he was not going to sign the copy of the will she had drafted.

Huff identified the will submitted by app eñees as an unsigned, unexecuted copy of the wiU she prepared for Oldfield. Oldfield’s file had a second closing date of November 17, 1997. Based on the dates on the wiU jacket and her memory that it was roughly three months from the time he executed the wiñ until he died, she testified that Oldfield executed the wiñ in November 1997.

Tina Hañ testified that she remembered witnessing the November wiñ and that Brandi Hoñoway and Huff were also present. She identified the November wiñ as a copy of the wiñ executed by Oldfield. She stated the wiñ was signed around the time the file was closed on November 17, 1997, and she did not recafi seeing Oldfield after he signed his wiñ. She stated that when he left he took his original signed wiñ with him. Hañ based her recoñection of the November date on the wiñ jacket.

Oldfield sent Huff a letter dated August 20, 1997, requesting that she send him the old wiñ, the revocation of power of attorney and the “new wiñ” she prepared for him.1 He stated in his letter that if he understood and agreed with the wiñ, he would bring it ■with him and come to her office to sign it. In response, Huff’s office sent Oldfield a letter dated September 8, 1997, enclosing his old wifi (drafted by Johnson), his old durable power of attorney, the original revocation of the general durable power of attorney, and a copy of the November wiñ. Hañ testified that after the September 8 letter was sent to Oldfield, the only remaining document in his file was the unexecuted original of the November wiñ. She stated it was not possible that Oldfield signed his wiñ on July 27, 1997, when the file was closed the first time, because when the file was closed the first time, he had not signed the wiñ, and it did not appear he was going to sign the wiñ. She testified that she only prepared one wiñ for him that left his assets to his nieces and nephews.

Brandi Hoñoway testified that she, Huff, and Hañ witnessed the execution of the November wiñ.

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Bluebook (online)
32 S.W.3d 491, 72 Ark. App. 46, 2000 Ark. App. LEXIS 780, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matheny-v-heirs-of-oldfield-arkctapp-2000.