Rodgers v. Rodgers

2012 Ark. 200, 406 S.W.3d 422, 2012 WL 1631773, 2012 Ark. LEXIS 227
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMay 10, 2012
DocketNo. 11-1020
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2012 Ark. 200 (Rodgers v. Rodgers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rodgers v. Rodgers, 2012 Ark. 200, 406 S.W.3d 422, 2012 WL 1631773, 2012 Ark. LEXIS 227 (Ark. 2012).

Opinions

JIM GUNTER, Justice.

11Appellant appeals the circuit court’s order finding that proceeds from the sale of timber, which was harvested from land that was specifically devised in a will, should be considered part of the decedent’s residuary estate. On appeal, he urges this court to reverse the circuit court and hold that if property that is the subject of a specific devise is sold by an attorney in fact at a time when the testator is incompetent, and the testator does not regain testamentary capacity before his or her death, an ademption of the specific devise does not take place as to the unex-pended, identifiable proceeds of the sale. We have assumed this case because it involves a significant issue needing clarification or development of the law; therefore, we have jurisdiction pursuant to Ark. Sup.Ct. R. 1 — 2(b)(5). We agree with appellant and reverse. '

On April 16, 2009, appellant filed a petition for probate of will and appointment of an executor in the Cleveland County Circuit Court. The decedent, Mary Rodgers, passed away 12on April 11, 2009, and appellant was nominated in Mary’s will to serve as executor. The will, dated November 9, 1987, divided Mary’s real property into four parcels and devised the parcels as follows: Parcels 1 and 2 to appellant; Parcel 8 to appellee Burt Rodgers; one-half of Parcel 4 to appellee Gary Morgan; and one-half of Parcel 4 to Nancy Morgan, Gary’s sister. An order admitting the will to probate and appointing appellant as executor was entered that same day, April 16.

Appellee Morgan filed a petition to challenge Mary’s will and appellant’s authority as executor, asserting that Mary had executed two codicils to her will on May 15, 2008. Attached to the petition were the first codicil, in which Mary stated her desire to change the executor of her last will and testament from appellant to appellee Morgan, and the second codicil, in which Mary amended the description of Parcel 2 to exclude the portion of land on which her house was located and stated that she ■wished to give that portion of land to appellee Morgan and Nancy Morgan. The second codicil also eliminated thirteen of the distributees of the residual estate and increased appellee Morgan’s and Nancy Morgan’s shares of the residual estate to twenty-five percent each. After a hearing on the matter, however, the court found that at the time the codicils were executed, the decedent was so demented that she did not and could not understand their import and significance; that the preparation and execution of the two codicils were the products of undue influence by appellee Morgan and his wife, Renea Morgan; and that the decedent lacked the requisite testamentary capacity to execute the codicils. Thus, appellee Morgan’s petition to have the codicils admitted to probate was denied.

|sOn September 18, 2009, appellant, in his capacity as executor, filed a motion to construe the will. The motion explained that at the time the will was executed, Mary owned the fee simple title to several tracts of land containing valuable timber referred to as the “timbered tracts.” Two timbered tracts in particular, Tracts 1 and 2, are located respectively in Parcels 1 and 2, which were devised to appellant in Mary’s will. On September 15, 2008, ap-pellee Morgan, acting as Mary’s attorney in fact, executed a timber deed conveying all merchantable hardwood and pine trees in Tract 1 to Silvicraft, Inc., for $36,552.1 On October 9, 2008, appellee Morgan conveyed by timber deed all of the pine and hardwood trees measuring 24 inches in diameter or larger in Tract 2 to two different companies, for a total sale price of $261,286. A portion of the proceeds from these sales was used for Mary’s continued care and maintenance; however, another portion was transferred by appellee Morgan to Nancy Morgan by placing it in a payable-on-death account on which Nancy Morgan was the at-death beneficiary. The remaining portion of the proceeds became an asset of Mary’s estate at her death. Based on these facts, appellant requested that the court decide whether an ademption had occurred.

On October 11, 2010, a hearing on the motion to construe the will was convened, but the court found it would be helpful for the parties to submit briefs before the court heard testimony on the issue, so the matter was continued. Appellant, in his individual capacity, filed |4a pre-trial brief asserting that an ademption did not occur as a result of the timber sales and that the proceeds of the timber sales should pass pursuant to the specific devise of the real property from which the timber was sold. Appellant argued that while the sale of the timber did result in a change in the form of the property, there was no intention shown on the part of the testatrix with respect to the issue of ademption other than the will. Appellant also cited Ark. Code Ann. § 28-24-102, entitled “Sale of property devised by ward not an ademption,” which provides:

In case of a guardian’s sale or other transfer of any real or personal property specifically devised by a ward who was competent to make the will, but was incompetent at the time of the sale or transfer and never became competent thereafter, so that the devised property is not contained in the estate at the time of the ward’s death, the devisee may, at his or her option, take the value of the property at the time of the ward’s death with the incidents of a general devise or take the proceeds thereof with the incidents of a specific devise.

Ark.Code Ann. § 28-24-102 (Repl.2012). Appellant argued that the principle behind this statute should also be applied in the case at bar and that an attorney in fact should not have the ability to frustrate the testamentary plan of the principal. Appellant also filed a brief in his capacity as the executor that made similar arguments against a finding of ademption.

Appellee Burt Rodgers filed his own response to the executor’s brief in support of the motion to construe the will and argued that this case was not an ademption case because the land left to appellant is still in existence, and he will receive that land once the probate is concluded. Ap-pellee Morgan, along with Renea Morgan and Nancy Morgan, also filed a brief arguing that there was no ademption issue because appellant will still receive the real property devised to him by the will. Appellant, in his capacity as executor, filed a reply and argued that |sappellees’ argument that this was not a case of ademption ignored the fact that the parcels of land that had been devised to him were not identical to the land as presently situated.

A hearing on the matter was held on January 31, 2011, at which the court, after hearing further arguments from counsel, took the matter under advisement. In a letter opinion filed May 25, 2011, the court declined to extend Arkansas’s non-ademption statute, Ark.Code Ann. § 28-24-102, to include durable powers of attorney and concluded that

[w]hether the Court finds that there has been a partial ademption, that is that the timber was adeemed, or that there has been no ademption because the executor takes this land as a devise, is really not the point. The point is what happens to the proceeds from the sale of the timber. In either case, it would become part of the residuary estate.

On June 27, 2011, a written order was entered that incorporated these findings. Appellant, in his capacities as executor and an interested party, filed a notice of appeal from this order on July 21, 2011.

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Bluebook (online)
2012 Ark. 200, 406 S.W.3d 422, 2012 WL 1631773, 2012 Ark. LEXIS 227, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rodgers-v-rodgers-ark-2012.