Parson v. Miller

822 S.E.2d 169
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedDecember 20, 2018
DocketRecord 171393
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 822 S.E.2d 169 (Parson v. Miller) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Parson v. Miller, 822 S.E.2d 169 (Va. 2018).

Opinion

OPINION BY CHIEF JUSTICE DONALD W. LEMONS

*172 In this appeal of a judgment in a will contest, we consider whether the trial court erred in refusing to grant the defendant's motion to strike the evidence and by holding that the evidence was sufficient as a matter of law to support the jury's verdict that the will was the result of undue influence.

I. Facts and Proceedings

A. The Complaint

In December 2014, Deneen L. Miller ("Miller") filed an amended complaint in the Circuit Court of Augusta County ("trial court") against Vickie M. Parson ("Parson"), individually and as executor of the estate of Kenneth Cyrus Coffey ("Coffey"), and against Coffey's heirs. According to the complaint, Coffey, who was Miller's father, executed a new will on July 15, 2013, shortly before his death on July 22, 2013 (the "2013 will"). The 2013 will, which was attached as an exhibit, identified Parson, Coffey's niece, as the beneficiary of Coffey's residuary estate. The 2013 will also appointed Parson as executor and contained no other dispositions or gifts. The complaint sought to impeach the 2013 will on the grounds of lack of testamentary capacity (count I), and undue influence (count II).

B. Miller's Evidence

The matter proceeded to a two-day jury trial. Miller testified at trial that Coffey was her father and he was 80 years old when he died. Coffey had lived in Lyndhurst, Virginia, on a large parcel of property. Parson, Coffey's niece, lived on an adjoining parcel of property. Miller had lived at Coffey's home as a young child, but she and her mother had moved away when she was 11 years old. Miller and Coffey reconnected when Miller was 14 years old, and Miller testified that she maintained a close relationship with him from that point on. Miller testified that since she was 18 years old, Coffey had wanted her to come and live with him. However, Miller continued to live in Winchester, approximately two hours away from Coffey. Miller further testified that Coffey also told her "that one day he wasn't going to be there and that everything was to be given to me." The last time Miller recalled Coffey making a statement about leaving her everything was in April or May of 2013. Miller stated that during this discussion, Coffey also showed Miller where he kept his important documents, including his will. However, Miller admitted that she never actually saw the contents of the will.

Miller testified that Coffey was first admitted to the hospital in May 2013. She admitted that she did not visit him during that first hospital stay. He was admitted to the hospital again on June 6, 2013, and was released around June 18, 2013. Although Coffey was able to come home, he was only expected to live for a few months and was placed in hospice care. Miller testified that she assisted Coffey by giving him medications, preparing his meals, and making him comfortable. However, she admitted that she did not visit every week in June and July of 2013. Miller testified that during her visits in June, she observed Coffey have at least two hallucinations, and she told the hospice workers about them. Miller also admitted that Coffey wanted her to move in with him, but she did not do so.

Miller acknowledged that Parson was also helping Coffey during his illness. When Miller first learned that Parson was helping to care for Coffey, Miller testified that "I thought she was a blessing and I thanked her." However, Miller testified that Coffey was not happy about Parson helping him. Miller stated that Coffey "was upset that [Parson] signed [the hospice agreement] because he did not want [Parson] in the house at all." Miller also testified that Coffey was upset on another one of her visits because "[Parson] had just came in and offered that she wanted to purchase the property from him, her and her husband Jack Parson, and he was angry."

Miller testified that the last time she visited her father was on July 6, 2013. She was not able to reach him by telephone after that date. Parson informed Miller that Coffey was upset with Miller and did not want her there. Miller wrote Coffey a letter around July 18 or 19, in which she stated that she wished she knew why Coffey was angry with her, and why "you've turned your heart from me." She also apologized to Coffey for not being *173 with him but explained that she lived 125 miles away. Miller testified that she was unaware of Coffey's mental state when he signed the 2013 will, but she believed Parson manipulated Coffey and gained control over him. Miller stated, "I think she manipulated him. I think she put things in his head. I think she worked her way into my dad's house when I was not there." But when asked what specifically Parson did to gain control of Coffey, Miller replied, "I don't know."

Miller testified that the first time she learned of Coffey's 2013 will was on the day he died. Parson called Miller to tell her Coffey had died, and that Coffey had left everything he owned to Parson. Miller testified that the next day she drove to Coffey's house to look for Coffey's will and other important papers, but the locks had been changed. Miller then went to Parson's house, and Parson handed her a bag with some items that belonged to Miller and told Miller not to go onto Coffey's property or Parson would have her arrested.

Shawn Coffey, Miller's brother and one of Coffey's sons, testified that Coffey had previously told him that Coffey intended "to leave everything" to Miller. Shawn testified that he visited his father twice in the hospital in June 2013. During one visit, Coffey stated that he did not know why Miller kept driving back and forth because Coffey's house "was going to be hers and he didn't know why she didn't - she didn't go there and stay." Shawn testified that during this conversation Coffey was "strong-headed" but he was physically weak. Shawn admitted, however, that during his visits, Coffey never mentioned his will. The last time Shawn spoke to Coffey was June 16, 2013. Shawn admitted that he had no knowledge regarding Coffey's state of mind during the last month of his life, or whether anyone exerted influence over him.

Catherine Harvey, a close friend of Miller's, testified that she often spent time with Miller and Coffey. During those visits, Coffey mentioned that he wanted Miller to move down to live with him, because the house and property were "going to her eventually anyway." Harvey also testified that on several occasions she saw Coffey take out a brown package that held his will, and that on one visit, he read a paragraph from the will out loud.

Mary Wymer, Miller's former sister-in-law and friend, testified that she visited Coffey's house with Miller on several occasions. Wymer described Coffey as someone who was "very forward" and "said what he thought." She had visited Coffey in the hospital in June 2013, and testified that he was upset when she arrived. Parson had just been to see him and asked about buying his property, which had upset Coffey. According to Wymer, Coffey "told them he wasn't going to sell his property, that he was going to leave it to [Miller]." Wymer testified that she had heard Coffey say something similar on previous occasions about wanting Miller to have his house. Wymer admitted that she did not see Coffey in the two weeks prior to his death, and she never spoke to him in July 2013 about his will.

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Bluebook (online)
822 S.E.2d 169, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parson-v-miller-va-2018.