Ross Rogers, Jr. and Joseph Rogers v. Estate of William H. Rodgers, Sr., Lavonne Rodgers, Loren Tunnel, William H. Rodgers, Jr., and Renia Rodgers

CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedMay 14, 2024
DocketC.A. No. 2019-0035-BWD
StatusPublished

This text of Ross Rogers, Jr. and Joseph Rogers v. Estate of William H. Rodgers, Sr., Lavonne Rodgers, Loren Tunnel, William H. Rodgers, Jr., and Renia Rodgers (Ross Rogers, Jr. and Joseph Rogers v. Estate of William H. Rodgers, Sr., Lavonne Rodgers, Loren Tunnel, William H. Rodgers, Jr., and Renia Rodgers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Chancery of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ross Rogers, Jr. and Joseph Rogers v. Estate of William H. Rodgers, Sr., Lavonne Rodgers, Loren Tunnel, William H. Rodgers, Jr., and Renia Rodgers, (Del. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

ROSS ROGERS, JR. and ) JOSEPH ROGERS, ) ) Petitioners, ) ) v. ) C.A. No. 2019-0035-BWD ) ESTATE OF WILLIAM H. ) RODGERS, SR., LAVONNE ) RODGERS, LOREN TUNNEL, ) WILLIAM H. RODGERS, JR., ) and RENIA RODGERS, ) ) Respondents. )

POST-TRIAL FINAL REPORT

Final Report: May 14, 2024 Date Submitted: April 10, 2024

Tasha Marie Stevens-Gueh, ANDREW & STEVENS-GUEH, LLC, Georgetown, Delaware; Attorneys for Petitioners Ross Rogers, Jr. and Joseph Rogers.

Jason C. Powell, THE POWELL FIRM, LLC, Wilmington, Delaware; Attorneys for Respondents Estate of William H. Rodgers, Sr. and Lavonne Rodgers.

DAVID, M. Two surviving children of the late Edith Rogers (“Edith”) 1 dispute the validity

of a deed transfer through which Edith gifted their brother, now also deceased, real

property in Frankford, Delaware. The petitioners assert that the deed, which Edith

signed at ninety-five years old in her final month of life, is invalid for lack of capacity

or as the product of undue influence. The widow and administrator of the estate of

the deceased brother who received the property defends the transfer as the decision

of a mother, acting with capacity and of her own volition, who loved all her children

equally, gifted her other children real property in years past, and simply wished to

give her oldest son his fair share of the family property.

For the reasons that follow, this post-trial final report finds that the petitioners

have not carried their burden to prove that Edith lacked capacity or was unduly

influenced to transfer the deed, and that the deed is, therefore, valid. It also

concludes that the respondents have not established entitlement to damages

representing the rental value of the disputed property.

1 This report refers to members of the Rogers/Rodgers family by their first names for clarity; no disrespect or familiarity is intended. Some family members spell their last name with a “d” while others do not; this is not a typo. I. BACKGROUND

The following facts are drawn from the factual stipulations in the parties’ Pre-

Trial Stipulation and the evidence presented at a two-day trial held on October 31

and November 1, 2023. 2

A. Edith Gifts Property To Two Of Her Three Living Children.

Edith and Ross Havelow Rogers, Sr. (“Ross Sr.”), now both deceased, were

parents to five children, three of whom were living at the time of the events at issue

in this report: William Rodgers, Sr. (“William Sr.”), Ross Rogers, Jr. (“Ross Jr.”),

and Joseph Rogers (“Joe”). 3

By all accounts, Edith loved and wished to treat all three of her living children

equally. 4 At trial, Ross Jr. testified that Edith “felt the same way . . . about . . . [all

of] her sons.” 5 Joe agreed that if Edith “gave something to one of [her sons], she

w[ould] . . . give something to the other boy[s].” 6

2 The Pre-Trial Stipulation is cited as “PTS at __”. Trial testimony is cited as “Tr. (Witness) at __”. Trial exhibits are cited as “JX __”. 3 PTS at 3; Tr. (Ross Jr.) at 21:1-17. 4 See, e.g., Tr. (Lavonne) at 437:22-24 (“Mom Edith, Mom loved her boys. She did. She loved her boys.”); Tr. (Antanell) at 128:23-129:1 (agreeing that Edith “loved” and “trust[ed]” William Sr.). 5 Tr. (Ross Jr.) at 55:22-23; see also id. at 63:9-15. 6 Tr. (Joe) at 398:17-399:5; see also Tr. (Antanell) at 151:7-10 (agreeing that Edith treated her sons “fairly” and “equally”); Tr. (Eursula) at 187:24-188:1 (“I’m sure she . . . wanted

2 In 2000, Ross Jr., his wife, Gloria, and their children moved into Edith and

Ross Sr.’s home at 32661 Omar Road in Frankford, Delaware (the “Property”). 7 At

some point thereafter, Edith and Ross Sr. promised to give Ross Jr. a portion of the

Property on which to construct a mobile home so that he could “stay around to help

[them] out.” 8 Ross Sr. died in 2006. 9 After Ross Sr.’s death, Edith told Ross Jr. “to

go and do whatever it t[ook] to have a piece of property turned over to [him].” 10

Ross Jr. engaged a surveyor and an attorney, Stephen Parsons, Esquire, to effect the

transfer, 11 and on June 9, 2008, Edith executed a deed transferring one and a half

acres of the Property to Ross Jr. and Gloria for one dollar. 12

Separately, on February 14, 2005, also with Mr. Parsons’s assistance, Edith

transferred real property in Selbyville, Delaware to Joe and his wife, Sarah, for one

dollar. 13

to treat them equally.”); Tr. (Roslyn) at 209:24-210:1 (“[Edith] loved all her boys the same, equally the same.”); id. at 213:17-214:5 (agreeing that Edith “loved all her boys equally” and that she gifted the Property to William Sr. because Joe and Ross had received two other properties). 7 Tr. (Ross Jr.) at 22:12-23:17. 8 Id. at 46:7-13. 9 Id. at 22:8-11. 10 Id. at 46:24-47:3; see also id. at 61:10-62:19. 11 Id. at 47:3-6. 12 JX 4 at 1; see also Tr. (Ross Jr.) at 48:12-19. 13 JX 1-2; see also Tr. (Ross Jr.) at 64:7-16; Tr. (Joe) at 399:8-9.

3 B. Edith’s Health Declines.

In 2012, Edith was ninety years old. At trial, Ross Jr.’s daughters, Eursula

Knight and Antanell Bailey, testified that by 2012, Edith required daily assistance

from family members, who performed chores around the house, filled and

administered her medications, took her to medical appointments, purchased

groceries, prepared meals, and paid her bills. 14 According to Antanell, by 2013,

Edith was “moving . . . slower” 15 and “more forgetful.” 16 From 2012 through 2014,

however, Edith’s medical records show that she was alert and oriented to her person,

place, and time. 17

In 2015 and 2016, Ross Jr., Gloria, and their daughters Antanell, Eursula, and

Roslyn Knight-Hall (“Roslyn”), as well as William Sr.’s then-girlfriend, Lavonne,

cared for Edith in her home. 18 William Sr., whom Edith had appointed as her

14 See Tr. (Antanell) at 113:12-114:4 (testifying that she saw Edith at least every other day from 2012 through 2017 and “would administer [Edith’s] medication”); Tr. (Eursula) at 163:9, 164:24 (testifying that she saw Edith every day from 2012 through 2017 to “help[] . . . with her medicine, . . . her foods[,] . . . go to the store[,] . . . do her grocery shopping[,] . . . cook for her[,] . . . do her laundry[,]” and “help . . . with her bills”). 15 See Tr. (Antanell) at 117:1-4 (“[Edith] would . . . grab your hands when you would walk together with her.”). 16 Id. at 115:10-19. 17 See, e.g., JX 10 at 24 (stating that Edith was “alert”); JX 10 at 28-29, 38, 42 (stating that Edith was “alert and oriented x 3” and “affect normal”). 18 Tr. (Ross Jr.) at 27:16-28:12; Tr. (Lavonne) at 426:4-20 (testifying that she spoke with Edith daily and would take her to medical appointments when needed).

4 attorney-in-fact through a durable power of attorney (“POA”) in 2007, 19 began

paying Edith’s bills. 20 Ross Jr., Antanell, and Eursula’s daughter, Japayl Knight

(“Japayl”), testified that Edith’s “forgetfulness” worsened in 2016, and that Edith

lacked motivation for activities she once enjoyed. 21 Roslyn and Antanell testified

that “[m]entally, [Edith] began to be a lot [more] forgetful” and would “get stuck in

[a] loop . . . forgetting . . . times of [the] day.” 22 On the other hand, William Sr.’s

son, William Henry Rodgers, Jr. (“William Jr.”), and his wife, Kimberly Rodgers

(“Kimberly”), both testified that they “did [not] notice any memory deficits with

[Edith]” during visits with her in the summers of 2015 and 2016.23 Records from

neurological exams in 2015 and 2016 show Edith continued to be alert and oriented

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

In Re the Purported Last Will & Testament of Langmeier
466 A.2d 386 (Court of Chancery of Delaware, 1983)
Fike v. Ruger
752 A.2d 112 (Supreme Court of Delaware, 2000)
Homestore, Inc. v. Tafeen
888 A.2d 204 (Supreme Court of Delaware, 2005)
In Re Last Will and Testament of Melson
711 A.2d 783 (Supreme Court of Delaware, 1998)
Hudak v. Procek
806 A.2d 140 (Supreme Court of Delaware, 2002)
Coleman v. Newborn
948 A.2d 422 (Court of Chancery of Delaware, 2007)
Schock v. Nash
732 A.2d 217 (Supreme Court of Delaware, 1999)
Du Pont v. Peyton
136 A. 149 (Court of Chancery of Delaware, 1927)
Warrington v. Hignutt
31 A.2d 480 (Superior Court of Delaware, 1943)
Townsend v. Townsend
137 A.2d 381 (Court of Chancery of Delaware, 1957)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Ross Rogers, Jr. and Joseph Rogers v. Estate of William H. Rodgers, Sr., Lavonne Rodgers, Loren Tunnel, William H. Rodgers, Jr., and Renia Rodgers, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ross-rogers-jr-and-joseph-rogers-v-estate-of-william-h-rodgers-sr-delch-2024.