Seong Ja Rector v. Eun Ryong Kim, Individually

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedOctober 14, 2025
Docket0859244
StatusUnpublished

This text of Seong Ja Rector v. Eun Ryong Kim, Individually (Seong Ja Rector v. Eun Ryong Kim, Individually) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Seong Ja Rector v. Eun Ryong Kim, Individually, (Va. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Present: Chief Judge Decker, Judges Ortiz and Chaney UNPUBLISHED

SEONG JA RECTOR MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY v. Record No. 0859-24-4 CHIEF JUDGE MARLA GRAFF DECKER OCTOBER 14, 2025 EUN RYONG KIM, INDIVIDUALLY, ET AL.

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE CITY OF ALEXANDRIA Kathleen M. Uston, Judge

(James Y. Victory; Hanmi Center for Justice, PLLC, on briefs), for appellant. Appellant submitting on briefs.

(George O. Peterson; Aaron S. Book; Alex Xanttopoulos; Jacob Markin; Law Office of George O. Peterson, PLC; Webster Book, LLP; Roop Xanttopoulos Babounakis & Klam, PLLC, on brief), for appellees.

Seong Ja Rector (the wife) appeals the trial court’s order dismissing her petition for an

elective share, family and homestead allowances, and exempt property from the estate of Edwin

Rector (the husband). The wife contends that the trial court erred in converting the jury trial to a

bench trial and denying her continuance motion after considering a last-minute motion to strike her

request for a jury. The wife also argues that the copy of the premarital agreement and testimony

from the executor of the husband’s estate, Eun Ryong Kim (Kim), were inadmissible. She further

suggests the trial court erred in not permitting her witness to testify about the premarital agreement.

Finally, the wife argues that the trial court erred in finding her premarital agreement with the

* This opinion is not designated for publication. See Code § 17.1-413(A). husband admissible and enforceable. For the following reasons, we disagree and affirm the trial

court’s decision.1

BACKGROUND2

Seong Ja Rector met her husband, Edwin Rector, at the salon where she worked. The

husband was a regular client, and, during one visit, the wife told him that she would soon be

deported. The husband suggested that they marry and that he would help her obtain a green card.

She agreed, and at least seven weeks before the wedding, the husband asked her to sign a premarital

agreement. The wife signed it, and the couple married in October 2015 and remained married until

the husband’s death in January 2023.

After the wedding, the husband kept his word and helped the wife with the green card

process. Other steps taken by the husband following the marriage included adding the wife to the

deed of the house and designating her as the beneficiary of his IRA account.

In 2022, the husband entered an assisted living home due to declining health and becoming

“totally blind.” His poor health led him to ask Kim, who was a mutual friend of both the husband

and the wife, to be his power of attorney to assist him with different financial and legal matters. The

husband’s relationship with the wife had deteriorated, and he eventually filed for divorce later that

year. In preparation for the divorce, the husband asked Kim to find the premarital agreement.

1 Having examined the briefs and record in this case, the panel unanimously agrees that oral argument is unnecessary because “the facts and legal arguments are adequately presented in the briefs and record, and the decisional process would not be significantly aided by oral argument.” See Code § 17.1-403(ii)(c); Rule 5A:27(c). 2 When this Court reviews a ruling on a plea in bar on which the parties have presented evidence, the Court “[]view[s] th[at] evidence in the light most favorable to the prevailing parties and accept[s] as true any reasonable inferences that c[an] be drawn from the evidence.” Forest Lakes Cmty. Ass’n v. United Land Corp. of Am., 293 Va. 113, 117 (2017). We therefore recite the relevant facts in the light most favorable to Kim, as the prevailing party below. -2- Kim had heard of the premarital agreement before from the wife. She had mentioned to

Kim that she had signed an agreement before marrying the husband. She described it as a contract

that conditioned the marriage on the husband helping her with the green card process and, in return,

she would care for him and not access his money. After the husband had moved into the assisted

living home, the wife began searching for the premarital agreement and even asked Kim to inquire

with the husband where he kept it because she could not find it. The wife told Kim she wanted to

find it and destroy it because she was worried about not receiving any money.

Eventually, Kim found a copy of the agreement among the husband’s office materials. Kim

took the agreement to the husband and, due to his blindness, read it to him in its entirety. The

husband confirmed that this was the premarital agreement the parties had signed.

While the petition for divorce was pending, the husband passed away. His last will and

testament named Kim as the executor of his estate, and she submitted it to the probate court in

March 2023. The will did not include any provision for the wife. It explicitly stated that the

husband “knowingly and intentionally ma[d]e no provision” for the wife because he was “in the

process of divorcing her.”

The wife petitioned for certain statutory allotments of the husband’s estate. See Code

§§ 64.2-308.3, -309, -310, -311. Kim filed a demurrer and plea in bar to the petition, arguing that

the wife waived her rights to the statutory elections in her premarital agreement with the husband.

The signed premarital agreement contained a “Waiver of Rights in Property and Estate of the

Other” in which each spouse waived “all rights which he or she may at any time have during the life

or after the death of the other.” The agreement also waived “all rights which he or she may at any

time have . . . in the estate of the other after the other’s decease, including, without limitation, the

right to take an elective share, the share of an omitted spouse, a homestead allowance, an exempt

property and family allowance,” or any other rights under Virginia law.

-3- In discovery, Kim’s interrogatories asked the wife to identify “each person who may have

knowledge of [her] signing” the premarital agreement. The wife answered that she was not

aware of anyone with that knowledge. She also answered “none” to the interrogatory that

requested information regarding anyone with whom she had discussed the premarital agreement.

In those discovery responses, the wife acknowledged that the signature on the premarital

agreement appeared to be hers but denied a notary public was present when she signed it. The

wife also claimed that she was given only the signature page and did not see the entire

agreement.

The morning of the plea in bar hearing, Kim moved to strike the jury that had been

scheduled. The trial court noted that the case record did not contain any pleadings requesting a jury

trial. The wife moved to continue the hearing based on the last-minute nature of the motion, but the

court denied the continuance request.

The matter proceeded as a bench trial. Kim testified about her relationship with the husband

and wife, her assistance to the husband, and her search for the premarital agreement. The wife

objected to Kim’s testimony about her conversation with the husband concerning the premarital

agreement. The wife also asserted that Kim only had an inadmissible copy of the premarital

agreement as opposed to the original document. The trial court overruled the wife’s objections and

admitted the testimony and agreement into evidence.

Kim also testified that the wife told her that she had signed the agreement. Being familiar

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