Kim Carroll v. Eva Hill ( 2022 )


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  •                                 RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION
    Pursuant to Sixth Circuit I.O.P. 32.1(b)
    File Name: 22a0129p.06
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
    ┐
    KIM ARLENE CARROLL,
    │
    Plaintiff-Appellant,      │
    >        No. 21-3885
    │
    v.                                                   │
    │
    EVA ARLENE HILL, individually and as former                 │
    Executrix of the Estate of Albert P. Barber; MICHELLE       │
    BARBER; WILLIAM A. BARBER; WILLIAM D. BARBER;               │
    GEAUGA COUNTY PARK DISTRICT,                                │
    Defendants-Appellees.       │
    ┘
    Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Ohio at Cleveland.
    No. 1:20-cv-01833—J. Philip Calabrese, District Judge.
    Decided and Filed: June 16, 2022
    Before: SUTTON, Chief Judge; COLE and DONALD, Circuit Judges.
    _________________
    COUNSEL
    ON BRIEF: Aanchal Sharma, Mark M. Mikhaiel, SCHNEIDER SMELTZ SPEITH BELL
    LLP, Cleveland, Ohio, for Appellant. Philip D. Williamson, Julia B. Meister, TAFT
    STETTINIUS & HOLLISTER LLP, Cincinnati, Ohio, David H. Wallace, TAFT STETTINIUS
    & HOLLISTER LLP, Cleveland, Ohio, for the Hill and Barber Appellees. Todd C. Hicks,
    Bridey Matheney, THRASHER, DINSMORE & DOLAN, LPA, Chardon, Ohio, for Appellee
    Geauga Park District.
    _________________
    OPINION
    _________________
    SUTTON, Chief Judge. Kim Carroll claims that Arlene Barber submitted an invalid
    version of her brother Albert Barber’s will to an Ohio probate court. Roughly 20 years after the
    No. 21-3885                             Carroll v. Hill                                   Page 2
    court probated the will, Carroll allegedly learned that Albert was her father. That prompted
    Carroll to file this lawsuit, claiming that she should have inherited Albert’s estate. The district
    court concluded that she lacked standing and that the probate exception to federal jurisdiction
    barred it from hearing her claims. We affirm for lack of standing.
    Born in 1967, Carroll was raised by a single mother. Her birth certificate listed her
    biological father as “Wallace Hopper Lee.” R.1 at 4. But Carroll never met anyone by that
    name. Save for a two-year period when she lived with another family, Carroll lived with her
    mother throughout her childhood.
    Carroll and her mother lived near property owned by a man named Albert Barber. They
    spent a good deal of time with Albert during Carroll’s childhood. Carroll also got to know
    Albert’s younger sister, Arlene.
    Albert died in 1998. Arlene administered his estate. In 2000, Arlene informed the
    Geauga County Probate Court that she had lost Albert’s will and possessed only an unsigned
    copy. She filed an application to probate the will. The court found that all interested parties
    were given appropriate notice and admitted the will. The court distributed most of the estate—
    land worth $232,000 and slightly over $30,000 in other assets—to Arlene under the will.
    Since the disposition of the estate in the early 2000s, Arlene has disposed of the land she
    received under the will. In 2003, she transferred a parcel to the Geauga County Park District. In
    July 2018, she transferred the rest to William A. Barber, the son of her brother William R.
    Barber. Carroll alleges that suspicious circumstances swirled around this last transaction: that
    William A.’s son prepared a quitclaim deed to transfer the property, that the transfer occurred
    while Arlene was in the hospital following emergency surgery, and that four months later a court
    ruled that Arlene suffered from dementia, leaving her unable to handle her affairs.
    A month after this transfer, according to Carroll, Arlene told her that Albert was her
    father. Arlene allegedly knew the truth all along but concealed it.
    In August 2020, Carroll sued Arlene, William A. Barber, his wife, his son, and the
    Geauga County Park District in federal court. Carroll raised 13 claims under Ohio law, alleging
    No. 21-3885                              Carroll v. Hill                                  Page 3
    that Arlene swindled her out of an inheritance and that the other Barber family members
    wrongfully obtained property from Arlene. Now a citizen of South Carolina, Carroll invoked the
    federal court’s diversity jurisdiction.
    The district court dismissed the lawsuit. It concluded that Carroll lacked standing to file
    the lawsuit and that the probate exception to diversity jurisdiction barred the claims.
    We start and stop with standing. To establish standing under Article III of the U.S.
    Constitution, a plaintiff must establish (1) an injury, (2) that results from the defendant’s
    conduct, and (3) that a court can redress. Gerber v. Herskovitz, 
    14 F.4th 500
    , 505 (6th Cir.
    2021). To fulfill the injury requirement, a plaintiff must allege she has suffered a concrete and
    individualized violation of a legally protected interest. Lujan v. Defs. of Wildlife, 
    504 U.S. 555
    ,
    560 & n.1 (1992). A defendant’s alleged misconduct must “personally harm the plaintiff.”
    TransUnion LLC v. Ramirez, 
    141 S. Ct. 2190
    , 2205 (2021).
    Carroll has not plausibly pleaded that the Barbers’ misconduct injured her, that they left
    her any worse off. The heart of her claim is that Arlene deprived her of an opportunity to contest
    Albert’s will. But even assuming the truth of all these allegations, she would not have been
    eligible to contest Albert’s will when he died.
    Ohio law shows why. Even if Arlene had notified Carroll of her relationship with Albert
    at the time he died, that revelation would have come too late. Under Ohio probate law, Carroll
    could not have contested the will during probate proceedings in 2000 unless she first brought a
    parentage action establishing Albert as her father within the permitted time—five years after
    turning 18—for doing so. Steinberg v. Cent. Tr. Co., 
    247 N.E.2d 303
    , 305 (Ohio 1969) (holding
    that a party may contest a will only if she stands to benefit from its invalidation); Brookbank v.
    Gray, 
    658 N.E.2d 724
    , 727 (Ohio 1996) (explaining the limited methods by which a child born
    out of wedlock may establish paternity for purposes of inheriting from an intestate father);
    Powell v. Williams, 
    185 N.E.3d 595
    , 599–600 (Ohio Ct. App. 2022); Byrd v. Trennor,
    
    811 N.E.2d 549
    , 553 (Ohio Ct. App. 2004); In re Est. of Hicks, 
    629 N.E.2d 1086
    , 1088–89 (Ohio
    Ct. App. 1993); Beck v. Jolliff, 
    489 N.E.2d 825
    , 829 (Ohio Ct. App. 1984).
    No. 21-3885                              Carroll v. Hill                                    Page 4
    By the time Albert died, however, Carroll no longer had this option. Ohio required her to
    initiate paternity proceedings before she turned 23. Ohio Rev. Code § 3111.05. Albert died
    when Carroll was 31. Arlene’s failure to notify her about her relationship with Albert in the end
    merely deprived Carroll of the experience of losing a claim in the Ohio courts.
    Had Arlene told Carroll earlier, it is true, she might have filed a parentage action before
    she turned 23. But that is not her claim. She objects only to Arlene’s failure to inform her at the
    time Albert died. And she has not pleaded that she would have filed a parentage action if she
    had learned the truth before the limitations period expired. If a plaintiff lacks the ability to take
    advantage of an opportunity, the deprivation of that opportunity does not count as an injury
    under Article III. Carney v. Adams, 
    141 S. Ct. 493
    , 500–01 (2020); Aiken v. Hackett, 
    281 F.3d 516
    , 519–20 (6th Cir. 2002); Beztak Land Co. v. City of Detroit, 
    298 F.3d 559
    , 565–68 (6th Cir.
    2002).
    Carroll resists this conclusion on the ground that failure to prove paternity does not bear
    on whether she pleaded an injury. The complaint alleges that Albert is her father, she stresses,
    and we must assume the truth of that allegation at this juncture. True enough. But her ability to
    contest Albert’s will—the centerpiece of any injury—turns on whether she has legally
    established he is her father, not whether she shares his DNA. It’s their legal relationship, not
    biological relationship, that would make her eligible to obtain relief.
    Carroll adds that she did not learn the truth until 2018, noting that a fraud claim does not
    accrue until the victim reasonably should have discovered the wrongdoing. But this argument
    does not come to grips with the defect in her complaint. The problem is not that the statute of
    limitations bars her fraud claim. It is that the statute of limitations bars a parentage claim. Had
    Carroll tried to contest Albert’s will in 2000, the Ohio courts would have ruled that the time for
    filing a paternity action had come and gone, leaving her with no cognizable injury today.
    That Carroll alleges a monetary injury does not change things. Yes, this kind of injury
    amounts to “a prototypical form of injury in fact.” Collins v. Yellen, 
    141 S. Ct. 1761
    , 1779
    (2021). But this argument merely converts Carroll’s injury-in-fact problem into a traceability
    problem. Traceability requires Carroll to show a “causal connection” between her financial
    No. 21-3885                             Carroll v. Hill                                   Page 5
    injury and the Barbers’ conduct. Lujan, 
    504 U.S. at 560
    . Even if Arlene had told Carroll upon
    Albert’s death that he was her father, Carroll would not have been able to contest the will for the
    reasons just laid out. Because she would have suffered the same financial injury regardless of
    what the Barbers did, she cannot establish that this injury flows from their conduct. Warth v.
    Seldin, 422 U.S 490, 504 (1975).
    Having affirmed the district court’s decision to dismiss this case for lack of standing, we
    need not resolve whether the probate exception to Article III separately deprives us of
    jurisdiction over these claims.
    We affirm.