Ramsey v. Taylor

999 P.2d 1178, 166 Or. App. 241, 2000 Ore. App. LEXIS 382
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedMarch 22, 2000
Docket95-3572-E-2; CA A101655
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 999 P.2d 1178 (Ramsey v. Taylor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ramsey v. Taylor, 999 P.2d 1178, 166 Or. App. 241, 2000 Ore. App. LEXIS 382 (Or. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

*244 DE MUNIZ, P. J.

Defendants Melody Taylor and First Interstate Bank appeal from a judgment of the trial court setting aside in part the last will and testament and inter vivos trust of John C. Ramsey, Sr. (Senior) on the ground that Taylor exerted undue influence over Senior. Plaintiff John Ramsey, Jr., (John II), cross-appeals from several aspects of the court’s decision as well. We review de novo, ORS 19.425(3), and reverse on appeal and affirm on cross-appeal.

Plaintiff initiated this action to invalidate the terms of Senior’s last will and inter vivos trust, to invalidate and set aside all transfers made by Senior in the final months of his life to Taylor, and to have those assets made a part of the intestate estate of Senior. Defendants include Taylor, the primary beneficiary under Senior’s last will and trust, First Interstate Bank, the trustee of the trust, and the remaining trust beneficiaries: John Ramsey III (John III) and Ron Ramsey, both of whom are John II’s sons, Leslie and Cody Ramsey, both of whom are great-grandchildren of Senior, 1 and Nan May, a niece of Senior’s deceased wife. Plaintiff further sought a declaration that Taylor was not entitled to any share in Senior’s estate pursuant to ORS 112.455, on the ground that Taylor had feloniously slain Senior by administering morphine to him.

After trial, the court issued an opinion concluding that Taylor did not feloniously kill Senior but that Taylor did exercise undue influence over him. The court set aside most of the transfers made by Senior to Taylor in the last months of his life and also invalidated Senior’s last will and trust to the extent that it benefitted Taylor. The court, however, concluded that the last will and trust remained valid insofar as the remaining beneficiaries were concerned. The court therefore concluded that the bequests and transfers to Taylor should pass to John II pursuant to the laws of intestate succession but that the remainder of the estate should pass to *245 the other beneficiaries pursuant to the terms of Senior’s last will and trust.

On appeal, First Interstate and Taylor assign error to the trial court’s conclusion that Taylor exercised undue influence over Senior in regard to the execution of his last will and trust and to the court’s conclusion that Taylor exercised undue influence over Senior in regard to certain lifetime transfers made to Taylor. On cross-appeal, John II argues that the trial court erred in failing to set aside all lifetime transfers made to Taylor by Senior and in failing to invalidate the final will and trust in their entirety and to allow Senior’s entire estate to pass to him through intestate succession.

On de novo review, we find the following facts pertinent to our legal analysis. For the most part, we recite the facts chronologically. Senior’s wife died in 1984. At that point, he was living in California. After his wife’s death, Senior suffered from depression and alcoholism but received treatment and greatly reduced his drinking. Shortly after his wife’s death, Senior befriended a teenaged girl, Jill Brogdon, who provided housekeeping services for him and helped him with correspondence. He assisted Brogdon in paying for college and remained friends with her throughout the remainder of his life. At trial, Brogdon testified that, when she worked for Senior in the late 1980s, he had

“a lot of negative things to say about his family. He was very bitter towards them. He said they were dishonest; that all they wanted was his money; that they had stolen from him in the past; and that they didn’t come and visit him; and that he didn’t trust them.”

She further testified that Senior instructed her to hide his checkbooks and credit cards before his family came to visit, because his grandsons had stolen his checks and credit cards in the past. She indicated that Senior had received letters from family asking him for money and would dictate “nasty letters” to those relatives, sometimes providing them with funds, but also threatening to cut them out of his will or to reduce the amount of money he was leaving them. He was particularly angry at a granddaughter, Joanne Davis. Throughout the time Brogdon worked for Senior in the mid- *246 to-late 1980s, he instructed her to write out revisions to his will on several occasions.

In 1989, Senior moved from California to Oregon. One of his reasons for moving was so that he could hunt and fish with his son and grandsons. Senior bought a house in which he lived with his grandson, John III, and John Ill’s family. John III was under the impression that Senior was buying the house for John III, but then discovered that Senior intended to live there also. Senior lived in that house from 1989 to 1991. In 1990, Senior’s granddaughter Joanne Davis also moved into the house with her family. Also in 1990, Senior was admitted to Ashland Community Hospital with gastrointestinal problems. Hospital records indicated: “Patient lives with his grandson. Apparently his grandson is quite disruptive, very demanding, threatening, and is a big emotional problem to the patient.”

In late 1990, Senior executed a will leaving his estate to a trust created at the same time. Under the terms of that trust, 30 percent of the estate was to go to John II, 30 percent was to go to Ron, 20 percent was to go to John III, 10 percent was to go to Joanne Davis, and 10 percent was to go to his granddaughter Jeri Zabel.

John III and his family were unhappy with the living arrangements and wanted Senior and the Davis family to leave the house. Eventually Senior found another place for Davis and her family to stay, and, in 1991, also moved out himself, signing over the title of the house to John III and his wife.

Senior then bought the house in which he lived until his death. John II moved in with Senior, but they had trouble getting along. Senior was angry at John II because John II was not taking care of himself but was living off disability pay. Both John II and his half-sister, Betty Kasser, testified at trial that they believed that Senior had bought the house for John II. John II moved out of the house due to his disagreements with Senior.

In July 1991, Senior amended his trust to disinherit his grandsons John III and Ron, apportioning the 50 percent of the estate that previously had been bequeathed to them to *247 the children of Joanne Davis and Jeri Zabel. In September 1991, shortly after John II moved out of the house due to their disagreements, Senior further amended the trust to disinherit John II as well, leaving the entire amount to his granddaughters Zabel and Davis and their children.

After John II moved out of Senior’s house, Senior had a series of women companions who took care of the house for him and helped him with his business affairs, and/or had intimate relationships with him. Senior had his granddaughter Davis living with him for part of the time.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
999 P.2d 1178, 166 Or. App. 241, 2000 Ore. App. LEXIS 382, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ramsey-v-taylor-orctapp-2000.