MILBOURNE v. MILBOURNE (And Vice Versa)

CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedMay 1, 2017
DocketS17A0450, S17X0451
Status200

This text of MILBOURNE v. MILBOURNE (And Vice Versa) (MILBOURNE v. MILBOURNE (And Vice Versa)) 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
MILBOURNE v. MILBOURNE (And Vice Versa), (Ga. 2017).

Opinion

301 Ga. 111 FINAL COPY

S17A0450, S17X0451. MILBOURNE et al. v. MILBOURNE; and vice versa.

GRANT, Justice.

This case comes to us as a dispute between the daughter and sister of

decedent Edison Jamal Milbourne (“Edison”). Daughter Janay Milbourne

(“Janay”) filed a caveat asserting that Edison’s January 2013 Will (“January

Will”) was invalid because it had been procured by undue influence by sister

and guardian Vashti Milbourne (“Vashti”); because it had been revoked by

Edison; because it had been improperly executed; and because Edison lacked

testamentary capacity to make the will in the first place. The Gwinnett County

Probate Court rejected all of these contentions on summary judgment motions

except the first; the court found that a question of fact remained on the issue of

undue influence. Vashti disagrees with that decision, and this Court granted

her application for an interlocutory appeal. Janay, meanwhile, filed a cross-

appeal of the probate court’s grant of summary judgment to Vashti on the issue

of revocation. Because the probate court was correct that an issue of fact remains on undue influence, and in its conclusion that Edison did not revoke

his January Will, we affirm both judgments.

I.

Viewed in the light most favorable to the non-movant,1 the facts show

that in 1999, Edison suffered a work-related brain injury that impaired his

ability to care for himself independently. He initially lived at home with his

wife Janita and his infant child, Janay, but it soon became clear that his round-

the-clock care requirements were more than Janita could handle (she worked

two jobs and also cared for Janay). Edison then lived in rehabilitation facilities.

His sister Vashti was appointed as guardian in 2009 — approximately ten

years after Edison’s brain injury and one month after his $726,000 workers

compensation settlement was finalized. Up until the settlement, Vashti had not

been Edison’s caregiver.

1 We conduct a de novo review of the evidence to determine whether a genuine issue of material fact exists, and whether the undisputed facts, when viewed in the light most favorable to the non-moving party, warrant judgment as a matter of law. Benton v. Benton, 280 Ga. 468, 470 (629 SE2d 204) (2006).

2 Following Vashti’s appointment, she came to Georgia and moved Edison

out of his rehabilitation facility. Vashti began to make significant financial

demands. “Because of the huge budget requested by [Edison’s] guardian,” the

probate court appointed a guardian ad litem to advise the court on how best to

manage Edison’s budget and living arrangements. In that same order, the

court provided that Edison would receive a monthly allotment of $1,000; as it

turns out, that was the only money that Edison, Vashti, or Vashti’s daughter

Tiffany, who also lived with Edison, had to pay their living expenses; Vashti

earned no income on her own. Guardian ad litem Janet Grayson explained that

she had tried to make Edison and Vashti understand that the combination of

Edison’s medical needs and his likely lifespan of 26 more years meant that the

settlement money could not be spent quickly. Nonetheless, Grayson recounted

that Vashti repeatedly demanded a Cadillac Escalade (in spite of the fact that

Edison himself had no prospect of being able to drive), about $300,000 for a

four or five-bedroom home, and $27,000 to furnish the home. Vashti also

asked for $30,000 in advance for her services as caregiver. According to

Grayson, Vashti also told Edison “many times” that “[t]hey are going to put

3 you in one of those homes.” Grayson stated that she could see the fear in

Edison’s face when Vashti made these kinds of remarks, and added that in her

view Vashti induced Edison’s fear of long-term care facilities.

Grayson also recalled that Vashti repeatedly stated that “everybody else

had gotten paid, and it was her turn to get paid.” With respect to Edison’s

daughter Janay, on the other hand, Grayson testified that “he very strongly had

a desire to reestablish a relationship with her and to include her in his financial

bounty,” but also that his expectation that Janay may come live with him was

“very sweet but very unrealistic.” There is evidence that Vashti hindered

Edison’s relationship with Janay. When Janay attempted to call Edison at his

home, for instance, Vashti informed her that he was not there, or that he did

not want to speak with her. When Janay visited Edison for one of his

birthdays, which coincided with Christmas Eve, Vashti and Janay got into an

argument, and Vashti called the police. Grayson considered calling Adult

Protective Services and recommending that Vashti be removed as Edison’s

guardian, but made the reluctant decision not to do so because he was

“emotionally dependent” on her.

4 Edison did not have a will when Vashti became his guardian, but

apparently began to seek one after Vashti arrived in Georgia. In her deposition,

Vashti asserted that Edison’s conservator, John Tomlinson, refused to write the

will. Tomlinson, in contrast, testified that he wrote a will for Edison but when

he called to let Edison know the draft was ready to review, Vashti relayed that

she had hired a different lawyer, Charles Tingle, to write the will. When

Tomlinson called Tingle to ask about paying the bill for Edison’s will,

Tomlinson was told that the bill had already been paid.

As it turns out, Vashti found Tingle in “[t]he Yellow Pages just

randomly” and called to set up an appointment with him. Vashti drove Edison

to visit Tingle between two and five times. During one visit, Vashti

approached Tingle about the possibility of replacing Tomlinson as conservator

of the estate and shared relevant documents with him, but, after reviewing the

papers, Tingle declined to do so. Vashti admitted that she filled out the client

information sheet for Edison during the first visit with Tingle, but gave

inconsistent testimony on whether she was present as Edison described his

wishes to Tingle, ultimately claiming that she could not recall whether she was

5 present or not. For his part, Tingle testified that Vashti had “probably”

attended at least one of two meetings regarding the will. As noted above, there

were several additional meetings between at least Vashti and Tingle; the record

is not clear whether Edison attended any of those meetings. Vashti paid the

bills for Tingle’s work over the course of several visits, and, during one of the

meetings, Edison executed the January Will.

Nine months later, in October 2013, Edison executed a second will

(“October Will”).2 Following Edison’s death in July 2014, Vashti submitted

the October Will to probate. Janay filed a caveat alleging that the October Will

was procured through undue influence. The jury returned a verdict denying

probate of the October Will, concluding that it was invalid because Vashti had

2 Although the Court need not determine the contents of either the January Will or the October Will, and does not do so in this decision, a brief review of each illustrates the way the two documents distributed Edison’s estate. The January Will devised most of Edison’s property, including the house he owned, to Vashti except for equal devises of $50,000 to Tiffany and Janay. Under the terms of the January Will, if Vashti predeceased Edison, Janay would take Vashti’s place as devisee.

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