Michelle Phillips v. Ann D. Ball

CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMay 28, 2021
Docket2019 CA 001299
StatusUnknown

This text of Michelle Phillips v. Ann D. Ball (Michelle Phillips v. Ann D. Ball) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Michelle Phillips v. Ann D. Ball, (Ky. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

RENDERED: MAY 28, 2021; 10:00 A.M. NOT TO BE PUBLISHED

Commonwealth of Kentucky Court of Appeals

NO. 2019-CA-1299-MR

MICHELLE PHILLIPS; ANN APPELLANTS RODGERS; AND LALLIE DAVIS

APPEAL FROM TAYLOR CIRCUIT COURT v. HONORABLE SAMUEL TODD SPALDING, JUDGE ACTION NO. 18-CI-00019

ANN D. BALL; EDWARD D. JONES APPELLEES & CO., L.P.; AND W.G. BALL, JR.

AND

NO. 2019-CA-1372-MR

ANNA D. BALL CROSS-APPELLANT

CROSS-APPEAL FROM TAYLOR CIRCUIT COURT v. HONORABLE SAMUEL TODD SPALDING, JUDGE ACTION NO. 18-CI-00019

ANN RODGERS; EDWARD D. CROSS-APPELLEES JONES & CO., L.P.; LALLIE DAVIS; MICHELLE PHILLIPS; AND W.G. BALL, JR. OPINION AFFIRMING

** ** ** ** **

BEFORE: COMBS, LAMBERT, AND K. THOMPSON, JUDGES.

LAMBERT, JUDGE: These appeals arise from a petition for declaration of rights

filed by Ann D. Ball1 (Mrs. Ball) related to the ownership of funds deposited in an

investment account held by Edward D. Jones & Co., LP (Edward Jones). Three of

the defendants have appealed from various orders of the Taylor Circuit Court,

including the denial of their motion for summary judgment and the final judgment

entered following a jury trial. Mrs. Ball has cross-appealed from the order denying

her request for costs. We affirm.

Mrs. Ball filed a complaint on January 12, 2018, naming Edward

Jones2 and her five children, Carrie Ball, Michelle Phillips, W.G. Ball, Jr., Lallie

Davis, and Ann Rodgers as defendants. In her complaint, Mrs. Ball sought a

reformation of agreements and/or a declaration of rights to establish that she was

the sole owner of Edward Jones Account No. 407-12316-1-9 (Account No. 3). She

explained that in January 2004, she and her husband, William Garland Ball

1 Ann D. Ball’s first name is mistakenly listed as “Anna” in both the complaint and in the notice of cross-appeal. We shall use her correct first name when we refer to it in this opinion. 2 Early in the proceedings, Edward Jones filed a motion to compel arbitration and stay the proceedings. In March 2018, the circuit court entered an agreed order holding this motion in abeyance pending further litigation of Mrs. Ball’s claims, noting that she had not asserted any affirmative claims against Edward Jones.

-2- (Garland), opened Edward Jones Account No. 407-08088-1-3 as joint tenants with

right of survivorship with a deposit of $50,000.00 (Account No. 1). Garland

passed away in April of 2005, and in May of that year, the assets from that account

were transferred to Edward Jones Account No. 407-11481-1-0 (Account No. 2).

This account was registered to Mrs. Ball and two of her daughters, Carrie and

Lallie, as joint tenants with right of survivorship. Mrs. Ball alleged that she did not

understand that this transfer would divest her of any of her ownership interest in

the account. She believed the transfer would permit Carrie and Lallie to have

access to information about the account to assist her with her investment decisions.

In June 2005, Mrs. Ball deposited an additional $301,500.00 into Account No. 2.

The same month, Mrs. Ball set up a systematic withdrawal ACH option to obtain

$1,080.00 per month from this account.

In July 2006, the assets from Account No. 2 were transferred to

Account No. 3, registered to Mrs. Ball and all five of her children as tenants in

common. As with Account No. 2, Mrs. Ball did not understand that any of her

ownership interest in the funds was being divested. She believed the transfer was

to permit her children to access information about the account in order to assist her

with investment decisions. In August 2006, Mrs. Ball set up an ACH option to

obtain $1,080.00 per month from Account No. 3. In October 2009, Mrs. Ball

deposited an additional $100,000.00 into this account. As of July 2017, the

-3- account balance totaled $642,209.82. Mrs. Ball was sole contributor of funds

deposited into the account; the children did not deposit any of their individual

funds into it. Mrs. Ball alleged that the purpose of the account was for her sole

benefit and that the account documents did not reflect the true intent of the parties

in identifying ownership. The children should not have been listed as tenants in

common as Mrs. Ball should have been listed as the full owner. Mrs. Ball was

refused access to the account by the children, which led to the filing of the action.

Based upon these allegations, Mrs. Ball alleged causes of action for

mutual mistake, unilateral mistake, and lack of consideration, and she sought

reformation of the Account No. 3 documents to confirm she was the sole owner.

She sought a declaration of rights pursuant to Kentucky Revised Statutes (KRS)

418.040 and requested that the account be held in constructive trust for her benefit.

In addition, Mrs. Ball sought a trial by jury and costs. Defendant W.G. Ball, Jr.,

(Dubby) filed an entry of appearance and stated that he believed the allegations in

the complaint were true and did not want to file any pleadings. Defendant Carrie

Ball filed a pro se answer responding to Mrs. Ball’s complaint. While she insisted

that she and her other siblings had an ownership interest in Account No. 3 pursuant

to Mrs. Ball’s wishes, Carrie stated she was voluntarily removing herself from the

Edward Jones account because she needed “some peace” in her life. The court

-4- entered a judgment on the pleadings against Carrie on Mrs. Ball’s motion in March

2018, ordering Carrie’s removal from the Edward Jones account.

The remaining children, Michelle, Lallie, and Ann (hereinafter, “the

Ball Children”), continued to defend against Mrs. Ball’s claims and filed an

answer. They claimed that Mrs. Ball had failed to state a claim for which relief

may be granted and affirmatively pled the defenses of equitable estoppel, statute of

limitations, and breach of contract.

In August 2018, the Ball Children filed a motion for summary

judgment seeking dismissal of Counts I, II, IV, and V of Mrs. Ball’s complaint.

They alleged that Mrs. Ball’s claims of mutual and unilateral mistake in the first

two counts were barred by the applicable ten-year statute of limitations as set forth

in KRS 413.130. As the contract at issue was entered into in June 2006, the filing

of the complaint in 2018 was untimely. They also argued that Counts IV and V

(for a declaration of rights and constructive trusts) were both derivative of the

underlying theory of the case and should be dismissed.

In response, Mrs. Ball argued that summary judgment was premature

as discovery had not been completed. She also argued that the Ball Children were

estopped from making a statute of limitations argument because fraud and mistake

claims are also governed by a statute of repose (KRS 413.130(3)), which extends

the date on which a cause of action accrues until the mistake was discovered. She

-5- relied upon the confidential relationship between her and her children and asserted

that she did not know about the ownership of the account until 2016, when she was

denied access to the funds. In reply, the Ball Children continued to dispute that the

action was timely filed.

In December 2018, Mrs. Ball filed a motion for summary judgment.

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Michelle Phillips v. Ann D. Ball, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/michelle-phillips-v-ann-d-ball-kyctapp-2021.