Thomas Hawkins, as of the Estate of Joyce Hawkins v. Colin Griffin, Laura Griffin Fry, Christina Griffin Taylor, and Murray Griffin

2025 Ark. App. 125, 708 S.W.3d 78
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedFebruary 26, 2025
StatusPublished

This text of 2025 Ark. App. 125 (Thomas Hawkins, as of the Estate of Joyce Hawkins v. Colin Griffin, Laura Griffin Fry, Christina Griffin Taylor, and Murray Griffin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thomas Hawkins, as of the Estate of Joyce Hawkins v. Colin Griffin, Laura Griffin Fry, Christina Griffin Taylor, and Murray Griffin, 2025 Ark. App. 125, 708 S.W.3d 78 (Ark. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Cite as 2025 Ark. App. 125 ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS DIVISION III No. CV-23-589

THOMAS HAWKINS, AS EXECUTOR Opinion Delivered February 26, 2025

OF THE ESTATE OF JOYCE HAWKINS, APPEAL FROM THE MARION DECEASED COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT APPELLANT [NO. 45CV-20-73]

V. HONORABLE JOHNNIE A. COPELAND, JUDGE COLIN GRIFFIN, LAURA GRIFFIN FRY, CHRISTINA GRIFFIN TAYLOR, DISMISSED WITHOUT PREJUDICE AND MURRAY GRIFFIN APPELLEES

CINDY GRACE THYER, Judge

Thomas “Kirk” Hawkins, as executor of the estate of Joyce Hawkins, deceased, appeals

a Marion County Circuit Court order dismissing his breach-of-contract and unjust-

enrichment claims against his stepsiblings, Colin Griffin, Laura Griffin Fry, Christina

Griffin Taylor, and Murray Griffin (collectively, “appellees”). Because we lack a final,

appealable order, we dismiss the appeal without prejudice on jurisdictional grounds.

Clyde William Griffin and Joyce Lynn Griffin were married for over thirty years and

are the parents of the parties. Kirk is Joyce’s son; the other four children are Clyde’s children.

In 2018, Clyde and Joyce were living together in South Carolina. In June of that year,

Clyde, age eighty-four, began having health issues that required full-time professional care. It

was agreed that Clyde would move to Arkansas so that his son, Colin, could care for him. To facilitate this, Clyde and Joyce advanced Colin $140,000 to purchase a home in Arkansas

with a verbal agreement that Colin would care for Clyde. The parties intended for Joyce to

move to Arkansas as well during Clyde’s recovery. Clyde moved to Arkansas in July of that

year.

Joyce, however, did not move to Arkansas. Kirk claims that the appellees informed

Joyce that she was no longer welcome to live with Clyde in the house in Arkansas. Appellees

claim that Joyce had a serious drinking problem and that Joyce’s move to Arkansas was

conditioned on her obtaining and maintaining sobriety.

In December 2018, Clyde filed for divorce. In May 2019, in anticipation of their

divorce, Clyde and Joyce entered into a property settlement agreement. Under the

agreement, Joyce was to receive their South Carolina home and a car, monthly alimony, the

balance of four bank accounts, and 50 percent of Clyde’s life insurance proceeds upon his

death. Joyce was to pay Clyde $96,407.32 in full settlement of the accounts, real estate, and

household furnishings. Joyce paid Clyde the money due under the settlement agreement on

June 4, 2019, and Clyde made the first alimony payment.

On June 13, 2019, the court orally granted the parties a divorce from bed and board.

However, June passed away the following day before the divorce decree, which incorporated

the property settlement agreement, was entered of record.1

1 Because Joyce passed before the divorce decree was entered, an order voiding the decree was entered on September 25, 2019.

2 On June 18, while driving Clyde to South Carolina after Joyce’s death, Colin allegedly

told Kirk that the divorce (and, by implication, the property settlement agreement) might be

overturned because Joyce had died before the decree had been entered. Laura, on the other

hand, allegedly texted Kirk that she did not agree with Colin and believed the property

settlement agreement should be honored. Clyde allegedly verbally agreed to honor the

property settlement agreement and signed a quitclaim deed transferring the South Carolina

house to Kirk.

Clyde died in December 2019 before the terms of the property settlement agreement

were fully executed. At least two terms of the agreement were outstanding at the time of his

death: the insurance proceeds and the four bank accounts. Evidently, sometime after Joyce’s

death, Clyde had removed Joyce as a beneficiary of his life insurance policy, naming only

Laura, Christina, and Murray as beneficiaries. Additionally, it appears he had never

transferred the four bank accounts into Joyce’s or her estate’s name.

In August 2020, Kirk, as executor of Joyce’s estate, filed suit against appellees for

breach of contract and unjust enrichment. He claimed that appellees, as Clyde’s heirs, had

breached the property settlement agreement and that their intentional failure to abide by

the agreement had resulted in their unjust enrichment in the amount contemplated by the

property settlement agreement. More specifically, Kirk sought to enforce the portions of the

property settlement agreement related to the life insurance proceeds and the four bank

accounts.

3 In September 2020, appellees moved to dismiss the complaint. They argued first that

the court lacked personal jurisdiction over Laura, Christina, and Murray, who lived in

Washington, Missouri, and Michigan, respectively. Appellees also argued that the complaint

should be dismissed against all four appellees for failure to state facts upon which relief could

be granted. More specifically, they argued that the breach-of-contract action should fail

because the property settlement agreement was a contract between Clyde and Joyce, and as

nonparties, there was a lack of privity between them and the estate. As to the unjust-

enrichment claim, they first alleged that, because Colin was not a beneficiary of the life

insurance policy and did not receive any of the proceeds from it, a claim for unjust

enrichment could not be brought against him. They further argued that there was no

confidential relationship between the parties and that the complaint had not alleged that

they had committed any act, much less a fraudulent one.

The court entered an order dismissing the breach-of-contract claim against all the

appellees for lack of privity of contract between any of the appellees and Joyce or the estate.

The court also dismissed the unjust-enrichment claim against Christina, Laura, and Murray

for lack of personal jurisdiction and failure to state a claim under Arkansas Rule of Civil

Procedure 12(b)(6). The court, however, allowed the cause of action for unjust enrichment

to go forward against Colin. In so doing, the court noted that it was feasible that Colin could

have changed the beneficiaries of the life insurance policy as alleged in the complaint. The

order made no mention of the unjust-enrichment claim as to the bank accounts.

4 In December 2022, Colin moved for summary judgment. In his motion, Colin

asserted that the estate’s claim for unjust enrichment must fail because he did not receive

any of the proceeds from the life insurance policy and claimed that the estate lacked standing

to bring the action because Joyce had predeceased Clyde. The bank accounts were not

mentioned in the motion or the brief in support.

The estate responded, asserting that it had standing to bring the action and claiming,

once again, that the estate was entitled to one-half of the proceeds from Clyde’s life insurance

policy.

A hearing was held on the motion for summary judgment on January 19, 2023. The

sole focus of the hearing was the validity of the estate’s claim with respect to the life insurance

The circuit court ultimately granted Colin’s motion for summary judgment. The

order entered by the court focused solely on the facts surrounding the change in beneficiaries

of the life insurance policy. It then dismissed the “complaint” pursuant to Arkansas Rule of

Civil Procedure 56 on the grounds that Colin had not received any of the life insurance

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Related

Covenant Presbytery v. First Baptist Church
2014 Ark. App. 301 (Court of Appeals of Arkansas, 2014)

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2025 Ark. App. 125, 708 S.W.3d 78, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thomas-hawkins-as-of-the-estate-of-joyce-hawkins-v-colin-griffin-laura-arkctapp-2025.