Melanie Lake Arrington Smith v. William Arrington, Individually and as of the Estate of William L. Arrington

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 9, 2021
Docket07-19-00393-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Melanie Lake Arrington Smith v. William Arrington, Individually and as of the Estate of William L. Arrington (Melanie Lake Arrington Smith v. William Arrington, Individually and as of the Estate of William L. Arrington) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Melanie Lake Arrington Smith v. William Arrington, Individually and as of the Estate of William L. Arrington, (Tex. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

In The Court of Appeals Seventh District of Texas at Amarillo ________________________

No. 07-19-00393-CV ________________________

MELANIE LAKE ARRINGTON SMITH, APPELLANT

V.

WILLIAM M. ARRINGTON, INDIVIDUALLY AND AS EXECUTOR OF THE ESTATE OF WILLIAM L. ARRINGTON, DECEASED, APPELLEE

On Appeal from the 223rd District Court Gray County, Texas Trial Court No. 38174; Honorable David L. Gleason, Presiding by Assignment

February 9, 2021

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before QUINN, C.J., and PIRTLE and DOSS, JJ.

This interlocutory appeal involves a family feud spanning more than ten years.

Appellant, Melanie Lake Arrington Smith, and her brother, Appellee, William Arrington,

are involved in an ongoing legal battle over the distribution of property following the death

of their mother and later, the death of their father. In 2016, one month after their father

died, Smith sued Arrington individually and as executor of their father’s estate, over the distribution of the estate. Three years into the dispute, Smith filed a Notice of Lis Pendens

claiming an interest in certain real properties located in Gray and Carson Counties. She

contends she was denied her equal share of those properties initially through the

misconduct of the father, in his capacity as executor of the mother’s estate, and now,

through the misconduct of her brother, in his capacity as executor of the father’s estate.

Two businesses, WL & MM Arrington Partnership One, LTD and WL & MM Arrington

Partnership Three, LTD (hereafter “the partnerships”) intervened in the underlying suit,

seeking to have the Notice of Lis Pendens removed and expunged. By their petition in

intervention, they also asserted a claim that Smith fraudulently filed the lis pendens notice,

thereby creating a cloud on the title to real property belonging to the partnerships.

As between her and the partnerships, Smith invoked the Texas Citizens

Participation Act (TCPA), 1 and filed a motion to dismiss the motion to expunge the lis

pendens notice and the claim that it was fraudulently filed. She later amended her motion.

After a hearing, the trial court entered an order denying her motion to dismiss.

By three issues, Smith appeals that order and questions whether (1) filing the filing

of a lis pendens notice is an exercise of petition and free speech rights that falls within

the protections of the TCPA; (2) the partnerships defeated her affirmative defense of

unclean hands; and (3) the hearing on her motion to dismiss was timely after the trial

court granted an extension. The partnerships contend (1) the TCPA does not apply, (2)

Smith’s motion to dismiss was not timely heard, (3) Smith waived whether they

1 The TCPA was amended by the 86th Legislature. See Act of May 17, 2019, 86th Leg., R.S., ch. 378, §§ 1-9, 2019 Tex. Gen. Laws 684. The Legislature specifically provided that chapter 27 of the Act “applies only to an action filed on or after the effective date” of September 1, 2019. Id. at § 11. The underlying suit was filed on December 14, 2016, prior to the effective date. Thus, we will apply the statutes in effect at the time the underlying suit was filed. 2 established each essential element of their claims under the requisite standard of proof

under the TCPA, and (4) Smith failed to establish the affirmative defense of unclean

hands. Smith contests the partnerships’ arguments in her reply brief. We affirm.

BACKGROUND

William L. Arrington and Margareta M. Arrington had two children, the two litigants

in this case, Smith and Arrington. Over time, the parents amassed profitable oil and gas

interests and other business interests. In 2007, they created WL & MM Arrington

Partnership One, LTD, and in 2008, they created WL & MM Arrington Partnership Three,

LTD, the intervenors in the underlying suit. The partnerships (One and Three) were

designed to hold and manage the oil and gas properties of William L. and Margareta M.

Arrington, and Smith was never a limited or general partner in either of those partnerships.

The parents did, however, create the WL & MM Arrington Partnership Two, LTD, a limited

partnership for the benefit of Smith. Smith contends, however, that after the mother’s

death, the father transferred assets out of Partnership Two to her detriment.

In 2008, Margareta suffered a stroke. Smith alleged that after the stroke, the father

engaged in various business transactions that benefitted Arrington and which were

unfavorable to her. Margareta passed away on August 26, 2009, and William was

appointed independent executor of her estate. Under the terms of Margareta’s will, she

bequeathed her personal property to William if he survived and if not, then to the children

in equal shares. She also included a provision that if William survived her, she left “all of

[her] interest in all insurance policies on the life of [her] husband to [her] children in equal

3 shares.” 2 The remainder of Margareta’s will gave the residue of her estate to two

separate trusts—one-half to each trust.

In 2010, William executed a handwritten will revoking all prior wills and specifically

disinheriting Smith and her descendants. The will recited “I leave nothing to our daughter

Melanie L. Arrington Smith . . . never shall anything go to our daughter.” On June 25,

2014, however, he executed a new will bequeathing Smith “the picture behind the piano,

and all of my pictures of my daughter, her husband, her children, and grandchildren,

including my daughter’s wedding picture.” The 2014 will also left her all “oil, gas and other

mineral interests located in the State of Oklahoma and all other real estate” owned in the

State of Oklahoma which were held by WL & MM Arrington Partnership Two, LTD. 3

Two years later, William passed away. His Last Will and Testament appointed

Arrington as Independent Executor of his estate. Except for the specific bequests to

Smith mentioned above, Arrington inherited the father’s estate.

Dissatisfied with the management of the father’s estate, Smith filed suit against

Arrington, individually, and as executor of the estate on December 14, 2016. By her live

pleading (third amended petition) filed on March 16, 2018, she asserts that the father and

Arrington consisted of “two generations of scheming, stealing, and self-dealing” that

2 William obtained a life insurance policy on his life for $976,000 issued by Jackson National Life Insurance Policy naming Margareta as owner and beneficiary. On her death, one-fourth of the policy proceeds were intended for Smith and one-fourth were intended for Arrington with the remaining one-half intended for William. In a letter written by William on December 2, 2011, he indicated “I wanted to put my $448,000.00 in a Trust . . . so that when I die the $488,000.00 is [Smith’s] to do whatever she wants to do with it . . . . [Smith] has never said ‘thank you’ or ‘it’s nice of you to want to give this to me’ or anything else to show any appreciation.” Smith learned through discovery that William allowed the policy to lapse and that his efforts to reinstate the policy with Arrington as the sole beneficiary had failed.

3 As executor of the father’s estate, Arrington deeded the Oklahoma properties to Smith on April 1,

2018.

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Melanie Lake Arrington Smith v. William Arrington, Individually and as of the Estate of William L. Arrington, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/melanie-lake-arrington-smith-v-william-arrington-individually-and-as-of-texapp-2021.