Shewmake v. Estate of Shewmake

940 So. 2d 260, 2006 WL 253846
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedFebruary 3, 2006
Docket1041220
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 940 So. 2d 260 (Shewmake v. Estate of Shewmake) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shewmake v. Estate of Shewmake, 940 So. 2d 260, 2006 WL 253846 (Ala. 2006).

Opinion

[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 262

Alice Shewmake, individually and as conservator and guardian of the estate of her husband, Charlie Burrell Shewmake, Sr., appeals from a judgment entered by the Montgomery Probate Court upon a settlement agreement. We affirm.

Mrs. Shewmake was appointed guardian and conservator of Mr. Shewmake's estate in the spring of 2002. The Montgomery Probate Court ordered Mrs. Shewmake to file an inventory and a partial settlement of her accounts as conservator; she timely filed each. Upon her filing a petition for partial settlement, the probate court set a hearing and, pursuant to Ala. Code 1975, §§ 26-5-2, appointed Fred Matthews to be Mr. Shewmake's guardian ad litem. Additionally, Robert Thorington petitioned the probate court for permission to appear as Mr. Shewmake's legal counsel during the partial-settlement proceedings.1 Matthews filed several objections to both Mrs. Shewmake's inventory and her petition for partial settlement, contending that neither contained the requisite degree of specificity. The probate court eventually scheduled a hearing on Mrs. Shewmake's petition for June 4, 2004, ordering Mrs. Shewmake to deliver to both the court and Matthews a complete and updated inventory by noon on May 26, 2004. The probate court also stated that if Mrs. Shewmake failed to deliver that information, she would be required to explain her failure to comply with the court's order, and if her explanation was unsatisfactory, she would be removed as conservator of Mr. Shewmake's estate. The record does not indicate whether Mrs. Shewmake provided the materials.

On June 4, Mrs. Shewmake arrived at the courthouse with her attorney, Charles N. Parnell III, and the two entered a conference room where they met Matthews, Thorington, and William K. Martin, another attorney representing Mr. Shewmake. William D. Coleman, yet another attorney representing Mr. Shewmake, arrived later. The parties began negotiating a settlement agreement. After extended *Page 263 discussions, the parties entered the courtroom.

The central dispute of this case concerns what transpired that day in the conference room and subsequently in the courtroom. According to Parnell, Martin, and Coleman in their affidavits and subsequent testimony at a hearing held on October 28, 2004, as well as Thorington and Matthews, who each made corresponding assertions in his capacity as an officer of the court, the result of these conference-room discussions was a settlement agreement. According to those participants, during the meeting in the conference room Mrs. Shewmake expressly consented to all of the terms of the agreement. After she did so, they assert, all those who had participated in the conference-room discussions but Martin proceeded to the courtroom, where the settlement agreement was announced to the court and its terms were read into the record by Parnell, with Mrs. Shewmake present. According to Mrs. Shewmake, however, no agreement was ever reached in the conference room and none was announced in the courtroom. Unfortunately, because of a malfunction in the probate court's electronic voice-recording system, the events that transpired in the courtroom on June 4 were not recorded.

On July 1, 2004, the probate court set a status conference for July 9 at which "[t]he parties should be prepared to present oral and/or written information regarding the proposed Settlement Agreement allegedly reached between the parties in this matter." The court sent copies of this order to Thorington, Matthews, and Parnell. On July 8, Thorington and Matthews jointly petitioned the probate court to enter an order "confirming and memorializing the settlement agreement presented orally before this Court on June 4, 2004 by [Parnell]." On July 9, with only Matthews and Thorington in attendance,2 the probate court conducted the scheduled status conference and that same day entered an "Order on Settlement Agreement," reciting within that order both the terms of the settlement agreement as well as that the settlement agreement had been "presented orally to this Court on June 4, 2004, and agreed to by [Mrs. Shewmake]."

The pertinent terms of the agreement, as set forth in the order, were as follows: Within one week of being served with the order, Mrs. Shewmake would move Mr. Shewmake from the assisted-living facility in which he was then residing to a different assisted-living facility. Thorington was to draft an irrevocable trust for Mr. Shewmake's benefit ("Mr. Shewmake's trust"), which would be funded with the proceeds from the auction of most of Mr. Shewmake's personal property, consisting principally of valuable antiques and a "glass collection." Most of Mr. Shewmake's firearms collection was to be sold before the auction,3 and the proceeds from those sales were also to be deposited into Mr. Shewmake's trust. Subsequent to the auction and the deposit into Mr. Shewmake's trust of all the proceeds from the auction and the sale of the firearms, Mrs. Shewmake would resign as conservator and guardian of Mr. Shewmake's estate, and further, within 15 days of depositing the proceeds from the auction into Mr. Shewmake's trust, Mrs. Shewmake would *Page 264 deposit into Mr. Shewmake's trust an amount "sufficient to make up any shortfall between the sum of the [deposits] and the sum of $300,000." Mrs. Shewmake was served with the order entered on the settlement agreement on July 12, 2004.

On July 26, 2004, Mrs. Shewmake notified Parnell by both fax and letter that his legal services as her attorney were being terminated; that same day, Mrs. Shewmake notified the court that she had retained new counsel, who immediately filed a motion to vacate the probate court's July 9 order. Matthews, as Mr. Shewmake's guardian ad litem, filed a response to Mrs. Shewmake's motion to vacate in which he asserted that Mrs. Shewmake had agreed to a binding settlement agreement, which had been read before the court by her counsel, with her present and raising no objections. Matthews supported those assertions with affidavits from Martin and Coleman, as well as a July 27, 2004, letter written by Parnell to numerous individuals involved in the matter, in which he stated, among other things:

"Clearly, there is no question in my mind that the settlement was fully and completely discussed and disclosed to [Mrs. Shewmake], and that she knowingly and intelligently accepted its terms and gave me authority, as her attorney, to accept the settlement terms that we worked out that day. As all of you know, we recited the settlement terms to Judge McKinney in open court, with Mrs. Shewmake present to my immediate right, and she at least acquiesced in the settlement terms at that time."

On October 28, 2004, the probate court conducted a hearing on Mrs. Shewmake's motion to vacate. At the hearing, ore tenus evidence was received from Mrs. Shewmake, Parnell, Martin, and Coleman, as well as two incidental witnesses. On November 18, 2004,4 the probate court entered an order denying Mrs. Shewmake's motion to vacate. Mrs. Shewmake appeals, raising three issues: whether the order entered on the settlement agreement was "not valid for failure to comply with" §§ 34-3-21, Ala. Code 1975; whether there was a valid settlement agreement representing a final "meeting of the minds of [the] parties"; and whether the settlement agreement is in Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
940 So. 2d 260, 2006 WL 253846, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shewmake-v-estate-of-shewmake-ala-2006.