Succession of Curtis Tino Thompson, Sr. (consolidated with) Succession of Curtis Thompson

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 28, 2024
Docket55,861-CA 55,862-CA (Consolidated Cases)
StatusPublished

This text of Succession of Curtis Tino Thompson, Sr. (consolidated with) Succession of Curtis Thompson (Succession of Curtis Tino Thompson, Sr. (consolidated with) Succession of Curtis Thompson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Succession of Curtis Tino Thompson, Sr. (consolidated with) Succession of Curtis Thompson, (La. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

Judgment rendered August 28, 2024. Application for rehearing may be filed within the delay allowed by Art. 2166, La. C.C.P.

No. 55,861-CA No. 55,862-CA (Consolidated Cases)

COURT OF APPEAL SECOND CIRCUIT STATE OF LOUISIANA

No. 55,861-CA

SUCCESSION OF CURTIS TINO THOMPSON, SR.

***** consolidated with

*****

No. 55,862-CA

SUCCESSION OF CURTIS THOMPSON

Appealed from the Fourth Judicial District Court for the Parish of Ouachita, Louisiana Trial Court Nos. 2021-3067 and 2021-3337

Honorable Don C. Burns, Judge (Ad Hoc)

CARL VAN SHARP Counsel for Appellant, Belle Jones

MARY ALICE BRYANT Counsel for Appellee, Metha Michelle Thompson

Before STEPHENS, THOMPSON, and MARCOTTE, JJ. THOMPSON, J.

This is a cautionary tale that intertwines diminished capacity and the

potential for undue influence, in which an elderly gentleman suffering from

progressive dementia dating back to 2012, who was subsequently

interdicted, was set upon by his caretaker in tireless efforts to gain control of

his assets. Her efforts included use of a power of attorney to transfer assets

to herself, two attempts to have wills drafted in her favor, attempting to

intervene in his interdiction proceeding, and a failed 2019 attempt to have

the 81 year old gentleman marry her, which was only foiled when the

attentive justice of the peace refused to perform the ceremony after speaking

with the intended groom and quickly confirming he lacked capacity.

Upon his death in 2021, a succession proceeding was instituted by his

children, and the caretaker responded by filing a separate succession

proceeding and presented a 2019 notarial will that benefitted her, which had

been drafted during the pendency of the testator’s interdiction proceeding.

After the dueling succession proceedings were consolidated, the notarial

testament was declared a nullity by the court due to the lack of capacity. In

response, the caretaker presented a 2017 handwritten will, also in her favor.

The trial court subsequently also declared the second will a nullity based on

a lack of capacity of the testator. The caregiver now appeals that decision,

and for the reasons set forth herein, we affirm the trial court’s judgment.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Curtis Tino Thompson, Sr. (“Curtis”) died on September 28, 2021, at

the age of 83. Curtis had been married only once, and he was predeceased

by his former wife, Lola Mae Thompson, with whom he shared six children.

In all, Curtis fathered ten children and was survived by nine, including his daughter, Metha Michelle Thompson (“Michelle”). Following her father’s

passing, Michelle filed a petition for intestate succession,1 in which she

sought and was appointed as the Independent Administratrix of the

succession (Docket #21-3067). Despite the pending intestate proceeding

initiated by Michelle, a separate succession action was filed on November

10, 2021, by Belle Jones (“Jones”), Curtis’s caretaker in his later years. This

first action filed by the caretaker was a petition for execution of testament,

which included a purported statutory will by Curtis dated May 7, 2019

(Docket #21-3337). Jones asserted in her filing with the court that she had

been named as the executrix and universal legatee of Curtis in this testament.

An order was signed by the court, which may have been unaware of the

already opened succession proceeding for Curtis, naming Jones as the

executrix of his estate.

On December 10, 2021, Michelle filed a motion to disqualify Jones as

the executrix and supplement her petition to annul the statutory will.

Michelle alleged in her motion that through abuse of a power of attorney that

Jones had transferred Curtis’s vehicles into her name and taken over $60,000

from his bank accounts, all while knowing that Curtis had suffered from

dementia for many years. Michelle argued that Jones should be disqualified

under La. C.C.P. art. 3097(A)(6) because she is a person of “bad moral

character” and exploited Curtis. Michelle argued Jones had exploited Curtis,

a person with infirmities, in violation of La. R.S. 14:93.4. Michelle further

noted that she filed a petition for interdiction2 for Curtis on October 10,

1 Filed in the Fourth Judicial District Court, Ouachita Parish, Louisiana on October 15, 2021 2 Docket #18-3328 in the Fourth Judicial District Court, Ouachita Parish, Louisiana. 2 2018, and that the judgment of interdiction of Curtis was filed on February

6, 2020, in which Jones had attempted to intervene. With two pending

succession proceedings in the same court, an intestate succession filed by

Michelle and a testate succession filed by Jones, a motion to consolidate the

two successions and other various motions was filed and granted by the trial

court.

A hearing was held on November 22, 2022, on the various motions,

and the trial court ruled that the two succession proceedings would be

consolidated into a single administration action. The trial court further

ordered that:

• The notarial testament of Curtis, dated May 7, 2019 and filed by

Jones, was null because interdiction proceedings had been brought

against Curtis at that time based upon numerous infirmities exhibited

by him in the months and years leading up to the filing of petition for

interdiction.

• The order appointing Jones as testamentary executrix was vacated and

the court terminated Jones’s appointment.

• The independent administration was converted to an administration

under court supervision, with Michelle remaining as Administratrix.

• Proceeds from certain life insurance policies on Curtis were ordered to

be deposited into the court registry.

• A hearing was set for consideration of the validity of a purported

olographic testament of Curtis dated December 26, 2017, which had

subsequently been presented by Jones.

On February 6, 2023, the trial court conducted the hearing to

determine whether Curtis was capable of executing an olographic will on 3 December 26, 2017, and, if so, whether he actually executed it. Several

witnesses testified at that hearing. The first person to testify was Curtis’s

treating physician, Dr. Clyde Elliott, who was qualified as an expert in the

diagnosis, recognition of signs, and treatment of dementia and Alzheimer’s

by the court. He testified that Curtis suffered from generalized brain atrophy

that affected all spheres of his functioning and that this atrophy was global

and permanent. He diagnosed Curtis with dementia in 2012 and noted that

the disease would only worsen with time. Specifically, Dr. Elliott testified:

His dementia had deteriorated from 2012 significantly as it went along by 2018, he was incompetent. He was almost incompetent in 2012. Would have difficulty supporting him to make anything at that point. He was already getting lost. We were thinking in terms of Alzheimer’s – thinking in terms of dementia. We had the findings with the MRI and the VA was seeing the same thing that I was seeing. And at that point, if somebody had asked me to render an opinion as to whether he would be competent to do anything, I would have had a difficult time even in 2012.

(emphasis added). Dr. Elliott testified that he met with Curtis in January of

2018, only days after the olographic will was created, and stated that he was

not competent to draft a will. He testified:

Q: Okay.

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Related

In Re Succession of Furlow
17 So. 3d 475 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2009)
In Re Succession of Rhodes
899 So. 2d 658 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2005)

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