MEADOWS v. BEAM

CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedOctober 30, 2017
DocketS17A1305
Status200

This text of MEADOWS v. BEAM (MEADOWS v. BEAM) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
MEADOWS v. BEAM, (Ga. 2017).

Opinion

302 Ga. 494 FINAL COPY

S17A1305. MEADOWS v. BEAM et al.

PETERSON, Justice.

This case involves a dispute among the children of Dorothy Rita Beam

(“Decedent”) concerning the distribution of her estate. Decedent’s daughter,

Dorothy Marian Meadows (“Marian”), filed a petition to probate Decedent’s

2014 will and codicil, and Marian’s siblings — John Beam, Jr., Margaret Beam,

and Jayne Heggen (collectively, “Caveators”) — filed a caveat alleging that

Decedent lacked testamentary capacity to execute the will and codicil. After a

trial, a jury returned a verdict in favor of Caveators, finding that Decedent

lacked testamentary capacity and awarding attorneys’ fees to Caveators.1 Marian

appeals and argues, among other things, that the evidence does not support a

finding that Decedent lacked testamentary capacity. We agree and we reverse.

1 The jury rejected Caveators’ claims the will was invalid due to fraud, duress, or undue influence. Those claims are not before us on appeal. 1. Trial evidence viewed in the light most favorable to Caveators.

On appeal, we view the evidence in the light most favorable to the

prevailing party. See Patterson-Fowlkes v. Chancey, 291 Ga. 601, 602 (732

SE2d 252) (2012). Although the focus is on a testator’s capacity at the time a

will is executed, evidence of a testator’s condition before and after the execution

of the will may be relevant for this purpose. Id.

Viewed in this manner, the evidence shows that Decedent suffered from

many medical problems, including arthritis, congestive heart failure, diabetes,

and hypertension. In September 2013, Decedent, then 90 years old, was

admitted into a hospital and exhibited confusion and forgetfulness during her

hospitalization.

Before her hospitalization, Decedent began to express certain beliefs that

Caveators found strange. She said that she had been offered a job with the West

Lumber Company, but she had stopped working there many years earlier.

Decedent continued to make this assertion through 2014. In August 2013,

Decedent also claimed she was offered a job at a Kroger grocery store where she

and her husband played bingo, but her husband was dead and bingo was no

longer played at the Kroger store.

2 Following her September 2013 hospitalization and during her short stay

at a rehabilitation facility in October 2013, Decedent asked Jayne to do some

cleaning at Decedent’s house and to donate some of Decedent’s belongings to

charity. Jayne explained that many items were already marked for donation and

she identified additional items of clothing that could be donated. Before Jayne

donated clothing that was not already marked, Jayne brought the clothing to

Decedent for her approval. Jayne also reorganized her mother’s house to make

it safer upon Decedent’s return from the rehabilitation center, explaining to

Decedent where she moved things. Later, Decedent accused Jayne of stealing

her clothes and also removing documents from her house without permission.

Decedent also came to believe that her son John stole originals of her

certificates of deposit and attempted to withdraw the money. In March 2014, as

a result of her belief that John was stealing from her and mismanaging her

funds, Decedent revoked John’s power of attorney that she executed in 2004,

asked him to return several estate documents, and questioned why the hospital

asked for Decedent’s 2004 will. John testified that he accessed a safe deposit

box while Decedent was hospitalized because the hospital requested the

executed power of attorney and her living will (which were in the same

3 envelope as her will), and that he did not know where the original certificates

were located and never touched them. John asked his mother about the

certificates and why she believed he took them, but she could not answer any of

his questions.

In March 2014, Decedent told people that H&R Block offered her a job

because she did a “good job” preparing her own taxes that year, but her taxes

actually had been prepared by a third party. Decedent also believed she broke

her ankle by tripping over an extension cord at her church, but her family

testified that the incident did not happen and her family doctor had no record of

it either. Around this time, Decedent told Jayne that a nurse had visited her

house to draw blood in preparation for an upcoming gallbladder surgery and that

an ambulance would pick her up for the surgery and bring her back home

afterward, but her family doctor had no history of the surgery.

Also in 2014, Decedent began complaining about her sister-in-law, called

her names, and blamed her for causing Decedent’s medical problems, but

Decedent’s sister-in-law had been dead for over 15 years. Decedent also asked

Jayne to move back home to finish her college degree even though Jayne had

obtained her degree about 40 years prior. Beginning in April 2014, Decedent

4 sometimes would become confused in phone conversations with Margaret,

asking who she was and confusing her for Jayne even though Margaret had

previously identified herself.

Decedent’s sister, Norma Aballo, with whom she was very close, stated

that when she visited Decedent in November 2013, Decedent was showing signs

of confusion and memory failure. Sometime after March 2014, Decedent told

Aballo that she was going to sell her house in Georgia and move to North

Carolina with Marian because she had no family or friends in Georgia. Decedent

also told her daughter Margaret that she had no family in Georgia. Aballo also

testified that, around this time, Decedent was not acting rationally and began to

accuse Caveators of stealing things from her and began to isolate Caveators,

which surprised Aballo because Caveators had been the ones who had done

everything for Decedent. Aballo said that Decedent had become a different

person because of her behavior, memory loss, and confusion.

In April 2014, Decedent executed a will naming Marian as executor and

devising property to her children, except to John, with a majority of her estate

going to Marian. In the 2014 will, as amended by a July 2014 codicil, Decedent

provided that she would not directly give John any assets since “he is a

5 successful business man, financially astute, [and] independently wealthy,” and

instead bequeathed $10,000 to a charity in his honor. Decedent had previously

executed a will in 2004 in which she devised her property to her four children

in equal shares. Shortly after signing the codicil in July 2014, Decedent died.

Aballo stated that she was shocked to hear about the contents of

Decedent’s 2014 will.2 Aballo testified that she believed that Decedent’s “mind

was going” because she thought Decedent always had intended to divide her

property equally among her children on account of the “strife” Decedent and her

siblings had experienced during the distribution of their mother’s estate,

something Decedent told Aballo she “never” wanted her children to experience.

At trial, Caveators introduced the testimony of Dr. Matthew Norman, a

board-certified forensic psychiatrist, to the effect that he reviewed Decedent’s

medical records, various depositions, affidavits from people that knew her, and

other material in the case. Based on this review, Dr. Norman opined that

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