Murphy v. Motherway

66 So. 3d 770, 2010 Ala. Civ. App. LEXIS 206, 2010 WL 2885959
CourtCourt of Civil Appeals of Alabama
DecidedJuly 23, 2010
Docket2090037
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 66 So. 3d 770 (Murphy v. Motherway) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Civil Appeals of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Murphy v. Motherway, 66 So. 3d 770, 2010 Ala. Civ. App. LEXIS 206, 2010 WL 2885959 (Ala. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

BRYAN, Judge.

Louise Motherway (“Louise”) is the proponent of a will executed by her father, M.C. Murphy (“M.C.”), on March 5, 2002 (“the 2002 will”). M.C.’s other child, Joe Murphy (“Joe”), contested the 2002 will in the Jefferson Circuit Court and requested a jury trial. At trial, Louise orally moved for a judgment as a matter of law (“JML”) at the close of Joe’s case-in-chief. The trial court granted that motion and later entered both a judgment in favor of Louise and an amended judgment in favor of Louise by executing separate written documents. From the amended judgment in favor of Louise, Joe appeals. We affirm.

Facts

The following facts are undisputed. M.C. was born in 1911. Louise and Joe were born of M.C.’s first marriage and are his only children. Louise was born in 1933, and Joe in 1937. M.C. and his first wife divorced in 1954. Following a second marriage that produced no children and ended in divorce, M.C. married Maxine Krout, who had no children, in 1958. No children were born of M.C.’s marriage to Maxine. M.C. remained married to Maxine until she died on December 23, 2001, at the age of 90.

During their marriage, M.C. farmed a parcel of real property (“the farm”) that his father, Monroe Murphy, had deeded to him; the farm contained approximately 245 acres. There is a site located approximately in the northwest quadrant of the farm that the parties refer to as Monroe Murphy’s home site. There is another site located approximately in the southwest quadrant of the farm that the parties refer to as Louise and Joe’s birth site. In addition, there are two lakes located approximately in the southeast quadrant of the farm. In approximately 1972, M.C. and Maxine acquired a parcel of land in Brent and built a home on it (“the Brent home”).

Maxine, who had worked for a bank, paid all of her and M.C.’s bills and handled all their bank accounts before she died. If M.C. purchased an item at a store with a check, he signed a blank check and handed it to the cashier for him or her to complete.

In 1973, M.C. executed a will that left all of his property to Louise and Joe in equal shares if Maxine predeceased him. In 1990, Louise bought a three-acre portion of the farm that included Monroe Murphy’s home site. During a family gathering the week before Christmas 1990, M.C. asked *773 Louise what part of the farm she would like to have. When M.C. asked the question, Maxine was in the room, but Joe was not. Louise responded that she would like to have Louise and Joe’s birth site and the two lakes. M.C. and Maxine then called Joe into the room. M.C. told Joe he was going to divide the farm between Louise and Joe; that Louise had requested Monroe Murphy’s home site, Louise and Joe’s birth site, and the two lakes; and that Joe would receive the rest of the farm. Joe testified that he was surprised by M.C.’s proposal to divide the farm between Louise and him and that he expressed his gratitude.

Joe testified that, after that conversation, he went to the courthouse to gather information about the farm. He further testified that, without knowing that Louise had already bought a three-acre portion of the farm containing Monroe Murphy’s home site, he called M.C. on December 27, 1990, and suggested a different division of the farm than that proposed by M.C. According to Joe, M.C. was “testy” in response to Joe’s proposing an alternative method of dividing the farm and said that “he did not have to give the property away, that he could sell it.”

Joe testified that he still did not know that Louise had purchased a three-acre portion of the farm containing Monroe Murphy’s home site when he sent M.C. and Maxine a letter on December 28, 1990, suggesting that, for purposes of M.C.’s giving the farm to Louise and Joe, the farm should be divided into a 122-acre parcel containing Louise and Joe’s birth site and a 123-acre parcel containing Monroe Murphy’s home site and the two lakes. The letter further suggested that Louise be given her choice of those two parcels or that she and Joe draw lots to determine which of those two parcels each of them would receive.

Joe testified that M.C. did not respond to his December 28, 1990, letter and that he assumed that M.C. was angry at him. Louise and her two sons, Mike and Mark Motherway, all testified that M.C. had told them that Joe’s December 28, 1990, letter made him angry.

The undisputed evidence established that, in 1991, M.C. and Maxine went to attorney Mike Murphy, a distant relative of M.C., to have new wills prepared. Mike Murphy prepared new wills for them, and M.C. executed his on July 3, 1991 (“the 1991 will”). The 1991 will provided that, if Maxine predeceased M.C., Joe would receive a 58-acre parcel of real property and that Louise would receive all the rest of M.C.’s property.

The undisputed evidence also established that, in 1996, M.C. and Maxine executed new wills (“the 1996 wills”). Each of the 1996 wills created a spousal trust and a family trust. Maxine’s 1996 will named her nieces and nephews as her residuary beneficiaries, while M.C.’s 1996 will named Louise and Joe as his residuary beneficiaries and provided that Louise would receive the Brent home and that all the rest of his property would be divided equally between Louise and Joe.

It is also undisputed that, in 1997, M.C. and Maxine executed a deed conveying all their jointly owned property, including the Brent home and the farm, to Louise and Joe subject to a life estate retained by M.C. and Louise. For reasons undisclosed by the record, however, M.C. and Maxine did not tell either Louise or Joe about the deed conveying M.C. and Maxine’s jointly owned property to them at that time.

Louise testified that, after Maxine died, M.C. asked her to pay his bills and help him with his financial affairs. The evidence was undisputed that M.C. had difficulty reading; however, the evidence re *774 garding the cause of that difficulty was inconclusive. Louise testified that M.C. could read without difficulty until he began to suffer from macular degeneration late in life. One of Louise’s sons suggested that the paucity of M.C.’s formal education was a cause of his difficulty in reading. Louise testified that M.C. left school after the sixth or seventh grade, while one of Louise’s sons testified that M.C. left school after the third or fourth grade.

Attorney Mike Murphy testified that M.C. and Louise came to his office on January 2, 2002, a little over a week after Maxine died. Mike Murphy testified that he explained to M.C. the spousal trust and family trust created by Maxine’s 1996 will and that M.C., whose 1996 will also provided for the creation of a spousal trust and a family trust, stated that he did not want a spousal trust and family trust in his will and that he wanted a simple will instead. Mike Murphy testified that he met with M.C. on at least two other occasions to discuss the terms of a new will, and Louise did not accompany M.C. on at least one of those visits. Mike Murphy testified that, in his meetings with M.C., M.C. told him what he wanted done with his property and that M.C. did not act any differently when Louise was present than he did when Louise was absent. Mike Murphy further testified that, on February 12, 2002, he sent M.C. a draft of a new will.

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Related

Brown v. Brown
90 So. 3d 716 (Court of Civil Appeals of Alabama, 2011)

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Bluebook (online)
66 So. 3d 770, 2010 Ala. Civ. App. LEXIS 206, 2010 WL 2885959, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/murphy-v-motherway-alacivapp-2010.