Succession of Mary Agnes Clark

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 23, 2022
DocketCA-0022-0190
StatusUnknown

This text of Succession of Mary Agnes Clark (Succession of Mary Agnes Clark) 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 Mary Agnes Clark, (La. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA COURT OF APPEAL, THIRD CIRCUIT

22-190

SUCCESSION OF MARY AGNES CLARK

**********

APPEAL FROM THE FOURTEENTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT PARISH OF CALCASIEU, NO. 58338 HONORABLE DERRICK D. KEE, DISTRICT JUDGE

D. KENT SAVOIE JUDGE

Court composed of Elizabeth A. Pickett, Billy Howard Ezell, and D. Kent Savoie, Judges.

MOTION FOR PARTIAL DISMISSAL GRANTED; REVERSED IN PART AND RENDERED; VACATED IN PART AND REMANDED WITH INSTRUCTIONS; AND AFFIRMED IN PART. Winfield E. Little, Jr. Attorney at Law 616 Broad Street Lake Charles, LA 70601 (337) 430-0907 COUNSEL FOR APPELLEE: Larry D. Clark

George D. Fagan Adam D. Whitworth Leake & Anderson 1100 Poydras Street, Suite 1700 New Orleans, LA 70163 (504) 585-7500 COUNSEL FOR APPELLANTS: Laura Clark Rogers Lynn Clark-Shoemaker Melissa Clark Thorpe

Lisa Clark Lorman In Proper Person 7895 W. Trail North Drive Littleton, CO 80125

Shelby Fruge In Proper Person 1308 Waverly Street Lake Charles, LA 70605

Deanna Fruge In Proper Person 1308 Waverly Street Lake Charles, LA 70605 SAVOIE, Judge.

Laura Clark Rogers, Lyn Clark-Shoemaker, and Melissa Clarke Thorpe

(collectively, “RST parties”1) are legatees of Mary Agnes Clark’s (“Ms. Clark’s”)

2017 Will. They appeal the trial court’s Final Judgment of Possession rendered

November 17, 2021. In response, Appellee Larry D. Clark (“Larry”) has filed a

motion to partially dismiss the RST parties’ appeal.

For the reasons that follow, we grant Larry’s motion to partially dismiss the

appeal, reverse in part and render judgment, vacate in part and remand with

instructions, and affirm in part.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

The decedent, Ms. Clark, executed a Last Will and Testament on January 1,

2017 (“the Will”). Therein, she left all of her property to her four step-

granddaughters, including the three RST parties, as well as to her former neighbors,

Shelby Fruge and Deanna Fruge (“the Fruges”). The Will also named Ms. Clark’s

step-nephew, Larry, as the independent administrator.

Ms. Clark passed away in Lake Charles, Louisiana, on August 17, 2018. On

August 29, 2018, Larry filed a Petition for Probate, asking the trial court to admit

the Will to probate and recognize him as the independent administrator of the

estate. The trial court entered an order as prayed for and issued Letters of

Independent Administration.

On May 7, 2020, Larry filed a sworn detailed descriptive list (“DDL”)

listing property comprising Ms. Clark’s estate. In addition, the DDL expressly

listed a Hancock Whitney account (“HW account”) with a balance of $122,016.52

1 The parties referred to these parties collectively as RST parties in the trial court and in their briefs to this court. Therefore, we will also refer to them as the RST parties. as “Property Claimed to be not part of the Estate of [Ms. Clark].” Larry explained

the basis of the omission in his April 29, 2020 affidavit attached to the DDL.

According to Larry, Ms. Clark gifted him the HW account by making him a co-

owner with survivorship benefits, the account was subject to Mississippi law, and

therefore he became the sole owner of the account upon Ms. Clark’s death.

On July 30, 2020, the RST parties filed a Motion to Traverse and Objections

to Larry D. Clark’s Adverse Claim Against the Succession, Motion to Remove the

Executor and His Counsel, Motion to Appoint a Replacement Executor, and

Motion for Other Relief. Therein, the RST parties sought a judgment to include

the HW account as part of Ms. Clark’s estate. They further sought judgments

removing Larry as independent administrator, requiring Larry to render an account

and report of his work, appointing a replacement executor, and terminating

attorney Winfield Little’s representation of Larry.

A hearing on the RST parties’ motions was held on April 21, 2021. The trial

court rendered oral reasons for ruling on June 1, 2021, and then signed a judgment

on June 29, 2021, denying all of the RST parties’ motions filed July 30, 2020.

On August 12, 2021, Larry filed a Petition Filing Final Tableau of

Distribution, Final Accounting and for Possession. He attached thereto a Final

Tableau of Distribution and an Amended Final Accounting, which he sought to

have approved by the trial court and homologated. He further requested that he be

discharged as independent administrator and that the succession be closed.

The Amended Final Accounting reflected that the value of the funds held in

the hands of the independent administrator was equal to the cash value shown on

the May 7, 2020 DDL, with the exception of a minor correction to the amount of a

refund that had been deposited into the estate’s account. It further reported the

2 value of a Morgan Stanley brokerage account through June 30, 2021, as well as

interest deposited into the estate’s Chase Bank account through June 23, 2021.

The Amended Final Accounting also listed debts and expenses paid, including

$51,607.00 in attorney fees paid to Mr. Little from the estate’s Chase Bank account,

and Larry’s executor’s fee of $96,378.30. According to the Amended Final

Account, the net value of the estate available for distribution in accordance with

the Will was $4,118,530.61.

On August 26, 2021, the RST parties filed Objections to the Executor’s

Petition for Possession, Amended Final Accounting, and Tableau of Homologation.

They asserted that they objected for the same reasons set forth previously and ruled

on by the trial court in June 2021. They further objected to the amount of attorney

fees and costs paid to Larry’s counsel because documentation supporting the fees

and costs incurred was not provided, and also because it included fees and costs

associated with Larry’s personal claim to the HW account. The RST parties also

asked the trial court to compel Larry and his counsel to produce itemized

statements and invoices supporting the legal fees and costs paid for by the estate.

The parties agreed to submit the matters in dispute “without the necessity of

the Court conducting a contradictory hearing . . . while preserving the RST Parties’

rights of appeal with respect to matters described . . . in the Court’s June 29, 2021

Judgment[.]”

Ultimately, the November 17, 2021 judgment overruled the RST Parties’

“original and continuing objections” to Larry’s August 12, 2021 petition “for the

same reasons set forth in the Court’s June 29, 2021 Judgment . . . and also stated in

the Court’s Reasons for Judgment communicated during the June 1, 2021 Zoom

conference and hearing[.]”

3 The November 17, 2021 judgment also denied the RST parties’ request to

compel Larry to produce supporting documentation for legal services and costs that

Mr. Little billed to the Succession because the RST Parties had not served formal

written discovery requesting that information, and it further stated that Larry had

the lawful right to use succession funds to pay attorney fees and costs incurred in

defending against the RST parties’ challenges to the DDL.

The judgment also approved and homologated the Amended Final

Accounting and Tableau of Distribution and transferred ownership of Ms. Clark’s

entire estate to the legatees in the respective proportions provided by the Will. In

addition, the judgment ordered that $25,000 be transferred to the trust account of

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