Ronda Kirkpatrick v. Kenneth Cusick

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 19, 2013
Docket13-13-00149-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Ronda Kirkpatrick v. Kenneth Cusick (Ronda Kirkpatrick v. Kenneth Cusick) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ronda Kirkpatrick v. Kenneth Cusick, (Tex. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

NUMBER 13-13-00149-CV

COURT OF APPEALS

THIRTEENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

CORPUS CHRISTI – EDINBURG

RONDA KIRKPATRICK, Appellant,

v.

KENNETH A. CUSICK, Appellee.

On appeal from the County Court at Law No. 1 of Nueces County, Texas.

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before Justices Rodriguez, Garza and Perkes Memorandum Opinion by Justice Garza

Appellant, Ronda Kirkpatrick, challenges the trial court’s summary judgment in

favor of appellee, Kenneth A. Cusick, in a dispute related to right-of-survivorship bank

accounts opened by Ronda’s deceased mother, Mary Gwendolyn Cress (“Gwen”). We

reverse and remand. I. BACKGROUND

For several years, Gwen entrusted her son, Sam Cress, to manage her finances.

In 2009, Gwen’s health began to deteriorate, and she began to question Sam’s financial

decisions. Eventually, Gwen asked her daughter Donna Cusick and Donna’s husband

Kenneth, an Assistant United States Attorney in Corpus Christi, Texas, to help her

secure control of her finances away from Sam. On July 31, 2009, Sam told Gwen that

he would no longer handle her financial affairs, and he gave her a cashier’s check

representing the funds in his control that belonged to Gwen. Gwen then decided to

rewrite her will to disinherit Sam and remove Sam as the executor of her estate. Ronda

and Donna assisted Gwen in removing Sam from positions of authority with respect to

her financial accounts.

In early August 2009, Gwen asked Kenneth to be the executor of her will and to

take over management of her financial accounts. Kenneth agreed. Gwen then opened

two joint bank accounts at Prosperity Bank in Corpus Christi containing a total of

approximately $282,000, with Kenneth named as joint tenant with a right of survivorship.

Gwen executed the documents to open the accounts on August 5, 2009, and Kenneth

signed them later that day. Later in August 2009, Gwen executed a new will naming

Donna and Ronda as primary beneficiaries and Kenneth as executor; she also executed

a power of attorney designating Kenneth as her attorney-in-fact.

Gwen died in September 2009. At that point, pursuant to the terms of the joint

accounts, Kenneth became sole owner of the funds on deposit therein. Subsequently,

he wrote a $12,500 check to each of Ronda and Donna.1 He then closed the accounts

1 Kenneth made at least one other distribution to Ronda out of the account funds, but the record does not reveal the precise amount.

2 and transferred the remaining funds to other accounts that he owned.

Believing that she was entitled to half of the funds in the accounts set up by her

deceased mother, Ronda filed suit against Kenneth and Donna on March 18, 2011. Her

original petition asserted causes of action of fraud, unjust enrichment, breach of trust

under Texas Property Code section 114.001, and breach of fiduciary duty. Kenneth

answered and filed a motion for partial summary judgment “on all of [Ronda]’s claims

and causes of action related to the creation of an alleged equitable trust.” 2 In the

motion, Kenneth asserted that “upon the death of [Gwen], all sums in the account

vested in [Kenneth] belonged to him, and he owed no fiduciary duty to [Ronda] or

anyone else.” Therefore, according to the motion, “no genuine issue of material fact

exists that [Kenneth] committed fraud, breach of trust, breach of fiduciary duty, or any of

the other causes of action alleged by [Ronda].” The motion further argued that “no

evidence exists that [Gwen] suffered any kind of mental incapacity at the time she

opened the bank accounts” or “was coerced in any way into opening the bank accounts

or naming [Kenneth] as a joint owner with right of survivorship and as a pay-on-death

beneficiary.”3 In its prayer for relief, the motion asked that “[Ronda] take nothing by way

of this lawsuit against him.”

In support of his summary judgment motion, Kenneth attached copies of the

signature cards corresponding to the bank accounts at issue. On each document, a box

next to the term “Multiple-Party Account With Right of Survivorship” is checked. The

2 Donna filed a separate motion for summary judgment which was granted. Ronda later non- suited her claims against Donna. Donna is not a party to this appeal. 3 In another part of the motion, Kenneth asserts: “There is no evidence that [Gwen] failed to understand what she was doing when she opened the bank accounts and named [Kenneth] joint owner with right of survivorship and pay-on-death beneficiary, that she was not of sound mind to do so, or that she was coerced in any way.”

3 cards are signed by both Gwen and Kenneth. Kenneth’s motion also attached a bank

statement corresponding to one of the accounts opened by Gwen, dated August 31,

2009 and showing a balance of $272,392.57.

The summary judgment evidence offered by Kenneth also included deposition

testimony by Roxana Perez, a banking officer with Prosperity Bank in Corpus Christi.

Perez stated that Gwen came to the bank by herself in the summer of 2009 and asked

to open a checking account and a money market account. Perez prepared the

paperwork and brought them to Gwen at the retirement home where she lived. Gwen

gave Perez a check drawn on a Frost Bank account in order to fund the two new

accounts. According to Perez, Gwen was “absolutely” decisive about what she wanted

to do and she did not have difficulty communicating. Perez stated that she did not

suggest that Gwen put Kenneth on the account, but rather, Gwen understood the nature

of the account and decided on her own to make Kenneth a co-owner. Perez agreed

that she took “special care” to communicate to Gwen the difference between a

survivorship account and a joint account, and that Gwen had no hesitation or doubt in

what she was doing by making Kenneth a co-owner of the account with a right of

survivorship. Perez testified:

[Gwen] was a very sharp lady. She was in full—she had her full faculties. I mean I’m very positive of that, and I explained what a multi-party account means, and I explained what an authorized signer means, and she—this is the one that she chose. I explained the different types of accounts and she told me what she wanted.

....

She told me she wanted [Kenneth] on the account, and I asked her, in what capacity, as an authorized signer or as an owner of the account? She says, as an owner of the account.

4 ....

When I explained to her what a multi-party account was, I specifically told her that if something were to happen to her upon her death, the money would go to her—to him. . . . And she said, that’s fine, he’s the executor of my estate. So she said, that’s fine.

According to Perez, Gwen did not tell her whether she had an agreement with Kenneth

or Donna as to what would be done with the account funds in the event of Gwen’s

death. Perez denied having ever told anyone that the accounts were set up for the

benefit of Ronda and Donna.

Ronda filed a response to Kenneth’s motion arguing that summary judgment

should be denied because there are questions of material fact as to “(a) the unfairness

of the transaction by which [Kenneth] was designated as joint tenant with right of

survivorship in [Gwen]’s checking accounts, and (b) [Kenneth]’s breach of fiduciary

duty.” In particular, she claimed that there was a fact issue as to whether Kenneth

“entered into a formal fiduciary relationship” with Gwen by “(1) agreeing to help handle

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