Whit Barton, as Special Administrator of the Estate of Lois Barnes Perkins, Troy Brown, Cherryale Burge And Dwaine Riley v. Theophilus C. King, Individually and in His Capacity as the Trustee of the Lois Barnes Perkins Revocable Trust

2023 Ark. App. 380, 676 S.W.3d 19
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedSeptember 13, 2023
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2023 Ark. App. 380 (Whit Barton, as Special Administrator of the Estate of Lois Barnes Perkins, Troy Brown, Cherryale Burge And Dwaine Riley v. Theophilus C. King, Individually and in His Capacity as the Trustee of the Lois Barnes Perkins Revocable Trust) 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
Whit Barton, as Special Administrator of the Estate of Lois Barnes Perkins, Troy Brown, Cherryale Burge And Dwaine Riley v. Theophilus C. King, Individually and in His Capacity as the Trustee of the Lois Barnes Perkins Revocable Trust, 2023 Ark. App. 380, 676 S.W.3d 19 (Ark. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

Cite as 2023 Ark. App. 380 ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS DIVISION I No. CV-20-656

WHIT BARTON, AS SPECIAL Opinion Delivered September 13, 2023 ADMINISTRATOR OF THE ESTATE OF LOIS BARNES PERKINS, APPEAL FROM THE ASHLEY DECEASED; TROY BROWN; COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT CHERRYALE BURGE; AND DWAIN [NO. 02CV-19-42] RILEY

APPELLANTS/CROSS-APPELLEES HONORABLE SAM POPE, JUDGE

V.

THEOPHILIS C. KING, INDIVIDUALLY AND IN HIS CAPACITY AS THE TRUSTEE OF THE LOIS BARNES PERKINS REVOCABLE TRUST AFFIRMED ON DIRECT APPEAL AND APPELLEE/CROSS-APPELLANT ON CROSS-APPEAL

N. MARK KLAPPENBACH, Judge

This appeal concerns the circuit court’s refusal to set aside a trust (direct appeal) and

the removal of the trustee (cross-appeal). We review probate matters de novo but will not

reverse the circuit court’s findings of fact unless they are clearly erroneous. In re Est. of Kemp,

2014 Ark. App. 160, 433 S.W.3d 911. A finding is clearly erroneous when, although there

is evidence to support it, the appellate court is left on the entire evidence with the firm

conviction that a mistake has been committed. Id. We must also defer to the superior

position of the lower court sitting in a probate matter to weigh the credibility of the witnesses. Id. Having reviewed this appeal under the proper standards, we conclude that the circuit

court’s order is not clearly erroneous. We affirm on direct appeal and on cross-appeal.

Lois Barnes Perkins, a 104-year-old resident of Wilmot, Arkansas, died on June 26,

2018. Lois’s husband died in 2001 when Lois was in her late eighties. The years between

2001 and Lois’s death in 2018 are important to an assessment of this litigation.

Lois had no children of her own, but she had two younger sisters and extended

relatives who lived far away in other states. Lois and her husband had lived a frugal life and

accumulated assets that included farmland, a home, and several bank accounts. One cousin,

Gloria Rayborn, said Lois had talked in years past about her desire to leave her assets in a

will to her sisters and their heirs. One of Lois’s sisters, Clematis, held Lois’s medical power

of attorney and was a joint owner of a Citizen’s Bank account.

After Lois’s death, Lois’s relatives learned that Lois had executed a trust in April 2018,

two months before she died. The trust template was found online by one of Lois’s longtime

friends, Theophilis C. King, who drafted the trust for Lois. Lois executed the trust, and it

was notarized. No will was ever found. The trust had a list of eight beneficiaries who would

receive approximately $81,000 each from the trust. Those eight persons were six out-of-state

relatives, Mr. King, and Mr. King’s minor granddaughter.

King lives in Jackson, Mississippi and claimed to be Lois’s second cousin once

removed. King found Lois during genealogy research, and he came to meet Lois and her

husband in Wilmot in 2001, shortly before Lois’s husband died. Subsequently, King

2 developed a more personal and helpful relationship with Lois, particularly because other

relatives lived so far away from Lois.

Although Lois went to visit Gloria Rayborn in Georgia for three weeks in 2016, Lois

never agreed to move in with her. Lois remained in her home but received help. In the

latter months of 2017 and the early months of 2018, Lois went in and out of the emergency

room and the hospital. She was described as quiet and hard of hearing, had difficulty in her

mobility and used a walker, and was at times agitated and confused about her medication,

her cell phone, and paying her bills on time.

In February 2018, the extended family encouraged Lois to appoint King as her

financial power of attorney because he lived the closest to her. King accomplished this with

an online power-of-attorney form notarized by one of Lois’s friends, Pearlie Ramey. The next

day, King took Lois to Simmons Bank to change some pay-on-death designations, to add new

beneficiaries, and to change the percentage of ownership of each beneficiary.

In late February or early March 2018, Gloria Rayborn came to visit Lois for a month.

Rayborn was concerned about Lois’s ability to continue to live alone, and her home-health-

care services were about to expire under Medicare. She called Adult Protective Services (APS)

three times to express concern about self-neglect and endangerment, although those reports

were later determined to be unsubstantiated. King was informed of these concerns, and when

he shared them with Lois, Lois and King were upset and offended. King thought Rayborn

was trying to put Lois in a mental institution that would impinge on Lois’s legacy. Lois did

not want to go into an institution of any sort.

3 King viewed Lois’s will to be problematic, mainly because a trust would streamline

the distribution Lois wanted without the hassle and cost of probate. King found a trust

template and crafted it to suit Lois’s wishes. When Lois signed the trust documents, she also

had bank accounts and certificates of deposit put in the name of her trust. Lois also had

deeds prepared to convey title to any real property she had into the trust, even a deed to

cemetery property she did not own. In the final version of the April trust, there was a

provision that would prevent any beneficiary from attempting to remove King as the

appointed trustee. Lois died two months later, in June 2018.

Following the funeral on July 3, 2018, King and one of Lois’s nieces went to Lois’s

house to conduct an inventory. Purportedly, there was a sizable amount of cash that Lois

kept in her home in a bag, but when the bag was found, it was empty. Ultimately, the circuit

court found that there was insufficient evidence to support a claim that the alleged money

existed.

King did not inform Lois’s other relatives about the trust at any time before her

funeral or during the inventory at Lois’s house. Instead, family members began to inquire

about Lois’s will, and eight days later, King texted in a family group text that Lois had set up

a trust and that he was the trustee. King described each beneficiary’s home state but did not

include specific names. Despite requests, King did not provide the beneficiaries a copy of

the trust or an accounting.

The Estate filed suit against King on April 3, 2019, to have the trust set aside and to

have King removed as trustee. Even after the suit was filed, King refused to provide the

4 beneficiaries with a copy of the trust and an accounting. It was at the hearing on the Estate’s

petition for a temporary restraining order that King first turned over the trust instrument

for their review. At the trial held over two days in November 2019, the court heard from

twelve witnesses. The thrust of the Estate’s case was that King exerted control and undue

influence over Lois, procuring the trust in violation of his fiduciary relationship to her and

doing so when Lois was not competent to execute such a document. In response, King

asserted that he had helped and cared for Lois for many years, he merely helped her get her

affairs in order in line with her wishes, and he had not violated any fiduciary duty and

certainly not to the degree that warranted his removal as trustee. The circuit court had before

it hundreds of pages of medical documents, noting that there were moments of confusion

but that, in large measure, Lois had been deemed appropriately oriented and without serious

mental issues.

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Related

King v. Barton
2023 Ark. App. 388 (Court of Appeals of Arkansas, 2023)

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2023 Ark. App. 380, 676 S.W.3d 19, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whit-barton-as-special-administrator-of-the-estate-of-lois-barnes-perkins-arkctapp-2023.