Sue Anderson Teel v. William Lee Teel, of the Estate of Gene Atkins Teel

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedNovember 18, 2025
Docket0053253
StatusPublished

This text of Sue Anderson Teel v. William Lee Teel, of the Estate of Gene Atkins Teel (Sue Anderson Teel v. William Lee Teel, of the Estate of Gene Atkins Teel) 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
Sue Anderson Teel v. William Lee Teel, of the Estate of Gene Atkins Teel, (Va. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Present: Judges Athey, Friedman and Lorish PUBLISHED

Argued at Salem, Virginia

SUE ANDERSON TEEL OPINION BY v. Record No. 0053-25-3 JUDGE FRANK K. FRIEDMAN NOVEMBER 18, 2025 WILLIAM LEE TEEL, EXECUTOR OF THE ESTATE OF GENE ATKINS TEEL, DECEASED

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF MONTGOMERY COUNTY Robert M.D. Turk, Judge

Dennis P. Brumberg (John R. Langley; BWLaw PLC, on briefs), for appellant.

Kyle McNew (H. Gregory Campbell; John S. Huntington; MichieHamlett PLLC; Campbell & Ackerman; Huntington, Huntington & Huntington, PLLC, on brief), for appellee.

Sue Anderson Teel appeals the circuit court’s order finding that she had abandoned her

marital relationship to Gene Atkins Teel (whom we refer to by his nickname “Bull”), forfeiting

her interest in his estate under Code § 64.2-308.14(E). We affirm.

BACKGROUND

Sue and Bull married in 1988 and had no children. They never divorced. In March 2022,

Bull died testate of what Sue described as “farmer’s lung.” In his will, Bull declared that he

“ha[d] been separated [from Sue] for many years” and that “she willfully deserted the marriage

and abandoned [him] and the desertion and abandonment ha[d] continued throughout [his]

lifetime.” Accordingly, the will “ma[d]e no provision for” her and bequeathed Bull’s entire

estate to his brother, William Lee Teel, who later qualified as the estate’s executor. In March 2023, Sue filed a complaint to determine her elective share of the augmented

estate.1 William opposed Sue receiving an elective share, claiming that she had abandoned the

marriage. The trial court held a bench trial in September 2024.

The Evidence at Trial

Sue testified that she and Bull had separated by mutual agreement in July 2016 because

they “fought the entire time that [they] were living together.” They owned two houses together;

after the separation, Sue began living in the house at Claytor Lake while Bull lived in the house

“at the farm.”2

After their separation, Sue and Bull continued to split bills for things like utilities and cell

phones and owned a few cars together. They also adopted two Schnauzers together in November

2016. Sue cared for the dogs on the weekends while Bull cared for them during the week.

In Sue’s words, she and Bull “texted a lot” because they “were still friends.” Sue “did

not see a need to be divorced” but left that decision to Bull, whom she testified did not want a

divorce. Nonetheless, Sue testified that they never discussed getting back together because they

“seemed to get along better” when they lived apart and “went back to being friends.”

In December 2016, about five months after separating from Bull, Sue began a romantic

relationship with Kevin Brown, which became sexual in 2017 and was ongoing at the time of

trial. She and Bull had never discussed having an “open marriage where [they] would be free to

date other people outside the marriage.” When Sue told Bull about her new relationship, Bull

responded simply, “I hope he treats you well.” Sue also claimed that Bull was cordial the few

1 Although Sue had previously furnished William with a claim for the family, exempt property, and homestead allowances, her complaint sought only her elective share. Code §§ 64.2-309 to -311. 2 Sue and Bull still had joint ownership of the two houses when Bull died, and both properties passed to Sue. She was also a 25% beneficiary on one of Bull’s life insurance policies. -2- times he met Brown. Sue’s relationship with Brown was public, and she posted pictures of her

and Brown on social media. Sue testified that her sex life with Bull had been “[n]onexistent” for

“[p]robably 15 to 20 years” before they separated.

Sue further testified that Bull was on her health insurance and that she had offered to take

him to medical appointments and find him in-network caregivers when his illness began but that

those services were ultimately unnecessary. She claimed that she visited him “almost every day”

when he was in the hospital and helped clean his house while he was sick. But she

acknowledged that “[h]is family took over most of his caregiving when he got sick.”

William called nine witnesses during his case in chief who painted a different portrait of

Sue and Bull’s relationship. Bull’s friends Marsha and Clarence Smith, Jr. regularly “hung out”

with Bull and Sue before the separation. They then had dinner with just Bull “[s]everal times a

week” during Sue and Bull’s separation and often visited Bull in the hospital during his illness.

They saw Sue leaving the hospital once but otherwise did not see her there. In fact, Marsha

testified that she never saw Sue and Bull together after 2016, and Clarence testified that he saw

them together only rarely when the two exchanged custody of the dogs. According to Marsha,

Bull was “always very, very sad” when he talked about Sue’s relationship with Brown.

Bull’s friend Kevin Harris had contact with Bull “monthly in some form or another”

during the separation and sometimes took Bull to medical appointments; he noted that Sue “was

never present when [Harris] was with” Bull. Robert Miller saw Bull on average “once a week”

during the separation. He saw Sue with Bull once, “perhaps, exchanging dogs” but usually did

not see them together. Clara Sowers learned about the separation when a restaurant owner asked

Bull “where Sue was” and Bull responded that “she wasn’t there at the house anymore.” Sowers

continued to see Bull “[a]bout three times a week” after the separation and Sue was never

-3- present. She visited Bull in the hospital three times and did not see Sue there. Sowers “could

tell [Bull] was hurt” about Sue’s relationship with Brown.

Ashley Oliver, Mitzi Young, Melinda Smith, and Traci Burke were Bull’s in-home

caregivers from October 2021 until he was hospitalized in January 2022. They worked 12-hour

shifts, and one of them was with Bull every day of the week. Neither Oliver nor Young ever saw

Sue, and Oliver testified that Sue was not involved in Bull’s care. Burke saw Sue once when Sue

exchanged the dogs with Bull. Sue was not one of Bull’s emergency contacts. Young testified

that Bull would sometimes receive a text from Sue and “would become emotional and cry.”

Smith met Sue three times. Brown was present on one of those occasions; according to Smith,

Bull was polite to Brown but cried after Sue and Brown left.

The Trial Court’s Ruling

The trial court issued a letter opinion finding that Sue had “willfully abandoned the

marital relationship . . . and is therefore barred from an elective share of [Bull’s] estate.” The

court acknowledged that the separation had been “more or less agreed to by both spouses” and

that both spouses “retained some joint responsibilities such as paying bills and caring for a group

of dogs.” The court ultimately found, however, that Sue and Bull otherwise “had little, if any,

relationship to speak of.” The court, relying upon testimony that Sue and Bull were rarely seen

together after the separation, as well as evidence of Sue’s ongoing relationship with Brown,

found “that [n]either party cared for the other in the typical marital sense and neither party

fulfilled matrimonial duties.” The court relied on Purce v. Patterson, 275 Va. 190, 194 (2008),

for the proposition that the parties’ mutual separation did not foreclose a finding of

abandonment. The court entered the final order against Sue in December 2024. This appeal

followed.

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