Clements v. Clements ( 2014 )


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  • An unpublished opinion of the North Carolina Court of Appeals does not constitute
    controlling legal authority. Citation is disfavored, but may be permitted in accordance
    with the provisions of Rule 30(e)(3) of the North Carolina Rules of Appellate Procedure.
    NO. COA13-596
    NORTH CAROLINA COURT OF APPEALS
    Filed: 4 February 2014
    DONNA G. CLEMENTS, by and through
    her Guardian of the Estate,
    Kimberly Batten,
    Plaintiff
    v.                                      New Hanover County
    No. 10-CVS-2451
    ROBERT S. CLEMENTS, the ALEXANDRA
    LEE CLEMENTS IRREVOCABLE TRUST and
    the KYLE DAVIS CLEMENTS
    IRREVOCABLE TRUST, by and through
    their Trustee MICHAEL GREEN; ALC
    TRADING COMPANY; KDC TRADING
    COMPANY; JAMES SCOTT CONSTRUCTION,
    INC.; and MARIANGELA BARBOSA
    CLEMENTS,
    Defendants.
    Appeal by Defendants from orders entered 13 July 2010, 27
    January 2011, and 13 November 2012 by Judge W. Allen Cobb, Jr.,
    in New Hanover County Superior Court.                 Heard in the Court of
    Appeals 8 October 2013.
    Shipman & Wright, LLP, by W. Cory Reiss, for Plaintiff.
    Pennington & Smith, PLLC, by Kristy J. Jackson, Esq., for
    Defendants Robert S. Clements, ALC Trading Company, KDC
    Trading Company, James Scott Construction, Inc., and
    Mariangela Barbosa.
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    Vaiden P. Kendrick, Attorney at Law, by Vaiden P. Kendrick,
    for Defendants the Alexandra Lee Clements Irrevocable Trust
    and the Kyle Davis Clements Irrevocable Trust by and
    through their Trustee Michael Green.
    J. Albert Clyburn, PLLC, by J. Albert Clyburn, for Charles
    D. Meier, Guardian ad Litem for Kyle Davis Clements and
    Alexandra Lee Clements.
    DILLON, Judge.
    The present appeal involves, in substantial part, a dispute
    as to who is         entitled    to the proceeds from the sale of                   an
    ownership interest in Pharmakon, LLC (“Pharmakon”), a privately
    held company based in Illinois.                Defendant Robert S. Clements
    purchased an interest in Pharmakon (hereinafter, the “Pharmakon
    shares”) in early 2000 using $400,000.00 that he had received
    from    his   then-wife,      Plaintiff   Donna       G.   Clements.        In   2004,
    shortly after his divorce from Mrs. Clements, Mr. Clements sold
    the    Pharmakon     shares   for   nearly     $3    million      and,    thereafter,
    transferred      a    significant       portion       of    the     sale     proceeds
    (hereinafter, the “Pharmakon proceeds”) to entities that have
    also been named as Defendants in the present action.
    Mrs.   Clements     was   adjudicated        incompetent      in    2008,   and
    Kimberly Batten, one of Mrs. Clements’ daughters, brought the
    claims in the present action as Guardian of her estate.                             In
    substance,     Plaintiff      asserts   that    Mr.    Clements      purchased     the
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    Pharmakon      shares       on     behalf     of     Mrs.     Clements       and    that,
    accordingly,         Mrs.   Clements        is     entitled     to    the      Pharmakon
    proceeds.       Plaintiff also asserts a claim – unrelated to the
    claim regarding the Pharmakon proceeds - to recover from Mr.
    Clements monies owed in connection with a $145,000.00 loan (the
    “$145,000.00 Loan”) that Mrs. Clements allegedly made to Mr.
    Clements sometime prior to 2001.
    In this appeal, Defendants seek review of the trial court’s
    orders      denying    their     motions      to    dismiss     Plaintiff’s        claims
    entered 13 July 2010 and 27 January 2011.                      Further, Defendants
    appeal from the trial court’s denial of their summary judgment
    motion on Plaintiff’s claims; the trial court’s grant of partial
    summary judgment for Plaintiff on her claims pertaining to the
    Pharmakon     proceeds      (but    not     with    respect    to    the     $145,000.00
    Loan, a matter which remains pending before the trial court);
    and   the    trial    court’s      award    of     damages    and    other    relief   to
    Plaintiff in conjunction with its grant of Plaintiff’s motion
    for partial summary judgment.                    For the following reasons, we
    dismiss in part, and reverse and remand in part for further
    proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    I. Factual & Procedural Background
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    On 13 February 1997, two days prior to their marriage, Mr.
    and Mrs. Clements executed a Premarital Agreement, which stated,
    in   pertinent    part,     that     each    party’s      respective     separate
    property and any appreciation thereon would remain that party’s
    separate property throughout the marriage.                  The parties agree
    that the Premarital Agreement is valid and enforceable.
    On 24 February 2000, Mrs. Clements issued a check to Mr.
    Clements in the amount of $400,000.00 to be drawn from a bank
    account that Mrs. Clements held as her separate property.                      Mr.
    Clements used these funds to purchase the Pharmakon shares.
    In    late   2000,     Mrs.    Clements      began   having   issues     with
    alcohol addiction and bouts with depression, and she and Mr.
    Clements separated for a brief period of time.                 On 29 December
    2000,     apparently   as    part    of     his   reconciliation       with   Mrs.
    Clements, Mr. Clements executed two documents before a notary
    public.     The first document concerned the $400,000.00 that Mrs.
    Clements had provided him to purchase the Pharmakon shares and
    stated as follows:
    Please    let    this    letter     serve  as
    documentation that Donna Clements has lent
    to   Robert   S.    Clements    the    sum of
    [$400,000.00] for the purpose of investment
    on her behalf in the Chicago based firm of
    Pharmakon LLC. Let it further be known that
    Robert S. Clements shall serve at the
    pleasure of Donna G. Clements as her
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    representative to Pharmakon, LLC.
    [Signed by Robert S. Clements.]
    The second document concerned the $145,000.00 Loan and stated as
    follows:
    Please    let    this     letter    serve    as
    documentation that Donna G. Clements has
    lent [$145,000.00] to Robert S. Clements for
    the    purpose    of    investment    in    the
    Construction     business,      James     Scott
    Construction   Inc.,   of   which   Robert   S.
    Clements is the President of.
    [Signed by Robert S. Clements.]
    Mr. and Mrs. Clements reconciled immediately thereafter.
    Mrs.    Clements      continued    to    have   mental   health   issues
    following the parties’ reconciliation, and she was admitted for
    alcohol detoxification treatment several times in 2001.
    In     late   2001,    Mrs.   Clements     purportedly   executed   two
    additional documents concerning her interest in the Pharmakon
    shares.    In the first document, a letter to Pharmakon management
    dated 26 November 2001, Mrs. Clements stated the following:
    Please let this letter serve as an outline
    of my involvement with Pharmakon.    I loaned
    Robert Clements funds that he was to invest
    at his discretion.    I understand that the
    investment was in Pharmakon.    . . .    That
    investment was made on his decision and at
    his peril.   I make no claims on Pharmakon;
    only   to   the  original   loan   with   the
    conditions that I made to him.
    -6-
    The second document,            captioned “ACKNOWLEDGEMENT AND QUITCLAIM
    AGREEMENT”     (the      “Quitclaim    Agreement”)        and    dated   31     December
    2001, was purportedly executed by Mrs. Clements in response to a
    redemption offer made by Pharmakon to some of its shareholders.
    The Quitclaim Agreement was purportedly prepared by a Pharmakon
    attorney and bears the apparent signatures of both Mrs. Clements
    and a Pharmakon representative.                  In the Quitclaim Agreement,
    Mrs. Clements describes Mr. Clements as “the record owner” of
    the   Pharmakon          shares,   “having       previously       made     a    capital
    contribution       of    $400,000.00      to    acquire    the    [shares].”          She
    states      that   she    had   “previously      claimed    an    interest       in   the
    [shares], but thereafter acknowledged in writing that she claims
    no interest in the [shares]; and that she held “no claim to the
    [Pharmakon shares,]” that “[Mr.] Clements [was] the sole and
    legal owner, and possesse[d] all right, title, and interest in
    and   to,    the   [shares]”;      that    she    otherwise      “quitclaim[ed]        to
    [Mr.] Clements any and all right, title, and/or interest or
    claim in [the Pharmakon shares]”; and that “in executing [the]
    agreement, [she was] aware of and decline[d] to accept any right
    she may have [had] to the redemption offer.”
    In     February     2002,    Mrs.   Clements    informed       her       financial
    advisor that she owned the Pharmakon shares.                      In February 2004,
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    Mrs. Clements’ financial advisor listed the Pharmakon shares as
    assets solely owned by Mrs. Clements.                  However, the income tax
    returns jointly-filed by Mr. and Mrs. Clements reflect that only
    Mr.    Clements    received      distributions      made      by       Pharmakon    with
    respect to the Pharmakon shares during that time period.
    Mr. and Mrs. Clements separated in July 2004.                     On 26 August
    2004, Pharmakon was sold to another company, and Mr. Clements
    received the Pharmakon proceeds in the amount of $2,924,500.00.
    Mr. Clements used the Pharmakon proceeds to, inter alia, make
    payments on a James Scott Construction business line of credit,
    create the KDC Trading and ALC Trading entities, establish the
    Kyle   Davis     Clements    Irrevocable       Trust    and    the      Alexandra    Lee
    Clements       Irrevocable       Trust    for     his      son         and   daughter,
    respectively, and pay a debt owed on real estate known as the
    Camp Wright Property.
    On   13   March   2007,    Mr.    Clements      filed       a    complaint    for
    absolute divorce against Mrs. Clements in New Hanover County
    District Court (the “District Court action”).                           Mrs. Clements
    filed an answer and counterclaim seeking equitable distribution.
    A judgment of absolute divorce was entered on 9 November 2007,
    and the court subsequently dismissed Mrs. Clements’ equitable
    distribution claim on grounds that, in light of the Premarital
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    Agreement, the parties’ dispute concerned only separately-owned
    property, and thus “there was no dispute for the family court to
    decide in the context of an equitable distribution action under
    Chapter 50 . . . .”
    On      25        February          2008,     Mrs.     Clements        was          adjudicated
    incompetent       by       the    New    Hanover       County     Clerk       of    Court.       Mr.
    Clements     subsequently               married        Defendant        Mariangela          Barbosa
    Clements and, on 24 September 2008, conveyed the Camp Wright
    Property     to       himself          and      Ms.     Barbosa      as    tenants          by   the
    entireties.
    On     24        May    2010,       Plaintiff       filed     her     complaint         in   the
    present    action          in    New    Hanover        County     Superior         Court.        With
    respect    to     the      Pharmakon          proceeds,    Plaintiff          asserted       claims
    against     Mr.       Clements          for     conversion,          replevin,          breach    of
    fiduciary       duty,       constructive          fraud,       and   breach        of    contract.
    Plaintiff’s complaint also requested a declaratory judgment as
    to Plaintiff’s rights in the Pharmakon proceeds; imposition of a
    constructive trust for the Pharmakon proceeds, much of which, as
    previously       stated,         had     been     transferred        by    Mr.      Clements      to
    several     of       the    other        named        Defendants;       and    an       injunction
    prohibiting          Mr.        Clements        “from     transferring             or    otherwise
    disposing       of    assets       which       had     “been    purchased,         acquired,      or
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    funded    with     [Mrs.    Clements’]     separate    property          .    .    .    .”
    Further, the complaint sought repayment of the $145,000.00 Loan.1
    On    8    June     2010,    Defendants   Clements,      ALC    Trading,          KDC
    Trading, and James Scott Construction filed motions to dismiss
    Plaintiff’s claims.          The trial court denied Defendants’ motions
    by order entered 13 July 2010.
    On     3    August    2010,     Defendants     again   moved        to       dismiss
    Plaintiff’s claims, asserting, inter alia, that the statute of
    limitations barred         Plaintiff’s claims;        that Plaintiff’s claim
    for breach of contract regarding the Pharmakon proceeds related
    to the Premarital Agreement “over which the Superior Court ha[d]
    no jurisdiction”; and that Plaintiff’s claims seeking equitable
    relief    were    barred    by    the   equitable    defenses       of   laches        and
    estoppel.        Following a hearing on the matter, the trial court
    entered an order on 27 January 2011 denying Defendants’ motion
    to dismiss.
    On    24     July    2012,    Plaintiff   moved    for     partial           summary
    judgment against Defendants with respect to her claims regarding
    the Pharmakon proceeds; however, her motion did not encompass
    her claim for repayment of the $145,000.00 Loan.                             Defendants
    1
    The complaint was subsequently amended to add a claim for
    fraudulent conveyance relating to Mr. Clements’ conveyance of
    the Camp Wright Property into an estate by the entireties with
    his current wife, Mariangela Clements.
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    countered    with     their    own   motion     for      summary   judgment     with
    respect to all of Plaintiff’s claims.                    Both sides introduced
    competing    expert    testimony      concerning         Mrs.    Clements’    mental
    capacity in late 2001, when she purportedly executed the two
    documents    concerning       her    interest       in   the    Pharmakon    shares.
    Defendants submitted the affidavit of their expert Dr. James E.
    Bellard, which states his opinion, in part, that “[t]he claim or
    suggestion   that     [Mrs.    Clements]      was    similarly     incompetent    in
    2001 is simply not supported by the medical record.”                     Plaintiff,
    in turn, submitted the affidavit of her expert, Dr. George P.
    Corvin, in which he criticizes Dr. Bellard’s methods as “not
    sufficiently valid and reliable,” since Dr. Bellard had formed
    his opinion as to Mrs. Clements’ competency “without conducting
    a personal evaluation or examination of Ms. Clements or seeking
    to interview those who knew her during the relevant period.”
    Also in his affidavit, Dr. Corvin opined that Mrs. Clements “had
    frontal   lobe   damage       that   permanently         changed   her   from    her
    baseline ability [and that those] changes directly impaired her
    ability in the latter half of 2001 and beyond to manage her own
    affairs and to communicate important decisions concerning her
    property[.]”
    -11-
    The   summary          judgment          motions    came    on     for    hearing        on   7
    August 2012.            On 13 November 2012, the trial court entered a
    declaratory judgment and order granting Plaintiff’s motion for
    partial      summary         judgment       and        denying    Defendants’          motion    for
    summary judgment.                The order sets forth 132 findings of fact,
    148 conclusions of law, and 102 footnotes, concluding, inter
    alia,     that        Dr.    Corvin’s           opinion     concerning          Mrs.     Clements’
    competency       in     2001         was   admissible,           but    that     Dr.     Bellard’s
    opinion was inadmissible on grounds that it was not formed based
    on    sufficiently           reliable       methods;       that    there       was     no    genuine
    issue that Mrs. Clements lacked the requisite mental capacity
    beginning        in     2000      (when         the     Pharmakon       shares       were     first
    acquired)      to      make      a    gift       or     enter    into     a     contract       that,
    therefore,       any        agreement       to    convey     the       Pharmakon       shares    was
    void; and that, consequently, Plaintiff was the owner of the
    Pharmakon shares and thus entitled to the Pharmakon proceeds.
    The trial court ordered that the trusts and accounts funded with
    the    Pharmakon        proceeds           be    disgorged        and    that     all       property
    obtained with the Pharmakon proceeds – for instance, the Camp
    Wright    property           –   be    sold       in    order     to    satisfy        Defendants’
    obligation to Mrs. Clements’ estate.
    -12-
    On 16 January 2013, the parties executed a memorandum of
    consent    judgment      and   order,    in    which     they    agreed    to     stay
    execution of the trial court’s summary judgment order and order
    on damages, as to all Defendants other than Mr. Clements, and to
    liquidate    the    accounts    held    by     Defendants       ALC    Trading,   KLC
    Trading, Kyle Davis Clements Irrevocable Trust, and Alexandra
    Lee Clements Irrevocable Trust and transfer the proceeds to the
    New Hanover County Clerk of Superior Court pending resolution of
    this appeal.
    From the trial court’s orders entered 13 July 2010, 27
    January 2011, and 13 November 2012, Defendants now appeal.
    II. Jurisdiction
    Our review of the record reveals that Plaintiff’s claim
    with respect to the $145,000.00 Loan remains pending before the
    trial     court.        Accordingly,    all     of     the    orders    from    which
    Defendants presently appeal are interlocutory in nature.                       Veazey
    v. City of Durham, 
    231 N.C. 357
    , 362, 
    57 S.E.2d 377
    , 381 (1950).
    “Generally,        an    interlocutory         order     is     not     immediately
    appealable.”       Builders Mut. Ins. Co. v. Meeting Street Builders,
    LLC, __ N.C. App. __, __, 
    736 S.E.2d 197
    , 199 (2012) (citing
    N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1A-1, Rule 54(b) (2011)).                      “An exception to
    this general rule lies, however, where the order appealed from
    -13-
    ‘affects a substantial right.’”              
    Id. (citing N.C.
    Gen. Stat. §
    1-277(a) (2011); N.C. Gen. Stat. § 7A-27(d)(1) (2011)).                “[T]his
    Court has previously held that entry of summary judgment for a
    monetary   sum   against     one    of     multiple   defendants    affects   a
    substantial   right”   and    is    thus     “immediately   appealable   under
    N.C. Gen. Stat. §§ 1-277 and 7A-27.”              Brown v. Cavit Sciences,
    Inc., __ N.C. App. __, __, 
    749 S.E.2d 904
    , 907 (2013) (citing
    Equitable Leasing Corp. v. Myers, 
    46 N.C. App. 162
    , 172, 
    265 S.E.2d 240
    , 247 (1980)).
    Here, the trial court’s 13 November 2012 orders granted
    Plaintiff’s motion for partial summary judgment and entered a
    judgment for a monetary sum against Defendants.                 Execution of
    the judgment has not been stayed with respect to Mr. Clements.
    Moreover, the accounts of some of the other Defendants have been
    liquidated and paid over to the court.                 We hold under these
    circumstances that the trial court’s grant of partial summary
    judgment in Plaintiff’s favor affects a substantial right and is
    thus immediately appealable.             
    Myers, 46 N.C. App. at 172
    , 265
    S.E.2d at 247.
    However,     Defendants’       challenges    to   the   trial   court’s   13
    July 2010 and 27 January 2011 orders denying their motions to
    dismiss Plaintiff’s claims and the trial court’s order denying
    -14-
    their motion for summary judgment are not properly before this
    Court at the present time.            The trial court did not certify
    these     interlocutory     orders    for    immediate   appellate     review
    pursuant to N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1A-1, Rule 54(b); and, upon review
    of Defendants’ contentions, we conclude that Defendants have not
    met their burden in demonstrating that these orders affect a
    substantial right.
    III. Analysis
    Defendants contend that the trial court erred in granting
    Plaintiff’s motion for partial summary judgment.           We agree.
    A     motion   for    summary    judgment   is   appropriately   granted
    where “the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories,
    and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any,
    show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and
    that any party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.”
    N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1A–1, Rule 56(c) (2011).               “The burden is on
    the moving party to show the absence of any genuine issue of
    fact and his entitlement to judgment as a matter of law.”              In re
    Will of Lamanski, 
    149 N.C. App. 647
    , 649, 
    561 S.E.2d 537
    , 539
    (2002).     “If the moving party has established the lack of a
    genuine issue of material fact, then the burden shifts to the
    non-moving party to present his own forecast of evidence to show
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    that a genuine issue of material fact does exist.”              Williams v.
    Smith, 
    149 N.C. App. 855
    , 857, 
    561 S.E.2d 921
    , 923 (2002).
    In     its   order    granting    Plaintiff’s    motion   for     partial
    summary judgment, the trial court determined that Mrs. Clements
    was the owner of the Pharmakon shares when the shares were sold
    in August 2004, reasoning that the evidence established as a
    matter of law that Mrs. Clements lacked the mental capacity to
    make a $400,000.00 gift to Mr. Clements at the time she issued
    him the check for that amount, or, alternatively, lacked such
    capacity at the time she signed the Quitclaim Agreement in late
    2001.
    We believe, however, that there remain genuine issues of
    material fact such that Plaintiff was not entitled to judgment
    as a matter of law, including a genuine issue concerning Mrs.
    Clements’ mental capacity during the relevant time periods.
    Regarding Mrs. Clements’ mental capacity, the trial court
    concluded    that   Mrs.    Clements   “did   not    possess   the    required
    mental capacity to gift, to execute contracts, or comprehend the
    effect of a gift on her estate (in February 2000, November 2001,
    or   December     20012)[,]”   and,    therefore,    she   could     not   have
    2
    These dates represent when the Pharmakon shares were purchased
    in Mr. Clements’ name; when Mrs. Clements wrote the letter to
    Pharmakon management stating that she claimed no interest in the
    -16-
    relinquished       ownership     of       the    $400,000.00      or   the    Pharmakon
    shares purchased with those funds.                   The trial court based this
    conclusion       essentially     upon      its    determination        that   testimony
    offered by Plaintiff’s expert witness, Dr. Corvin, constituted
    the    only     admissible   expert       opinion    concerning        Mrs.    Clements’
    competency – which was that Mrs. Clements lacked the requisite
    mental capacity to make a gift as early as late 2001.                            Though
    Defendants       attempted     to     introduce       Dr.   Bellard’s         countering
    expert opinion, the trial court concluded that Dr. Bellard’s
    methodology       in   forming      his    opinion    was   unreliable         and    thus
    inadmissible       since,    unlike       Dr.    Corvin,    Dr.    Bellard      had    not
    actually conducted a face-to-face interview with Mrs. Clements
    or with anyone who had had contact with Mrs. Clements in the
    early 2000’s.
    Even assuming arguendo that the trial court did not err in
    excluding Dr. Bellard’s opinion, we believe that the court erred
    in concluding that the other evidence was insufficient to raise
    a     genuine    issue   concerning         Mrs.     Clements’     capacity.          For
    instance, in his affidavit, Dr. Corvin expressed no opinion on
    Mrs. Clements’ capacity in 2000 – when Mrs. Clements signed the
    Pharmakon shares, but that she had merely loaned $400,000.00 to
    Mr. Clements; and when Mrs. Clements executed the Quitclaim
    Agreement with Pharmakon.
    -17-
    $400,000.00 check to Mr. Clements and the Pharmakon shares were
    purchased in his name - but only stated his opinion that she
    lacked   sufficient      capacity      as    of    late    2001.           Moreover,      Dr.
    Corvin’s   opinion       was   not    dispositive         on    the    issue       of    Mrs.
    Clements’ capacity during that time simply because it was the
    only   expert    testimony     admitted,          as      our   Supreme       Court      has
    specifically      held     that      “[u]ncontradicted             expert      testimony
    [concerning a person’s mental state] is not binding on the trier
    of fact.   Questions of credibility and the weight to be accorded
    the evidence remains in the province of the finder of fact.”
    Scott v. Scott, 
    336 N.C. 284
    , 291, 
    442 S.E.2d 493
    , 497 (1994).
    As the   trial court correctly              states in its order,                  “the
    measure of capacity is the ability to understand the nature of
    the act in which he is engaged and its scope and effect, or its
    nature   and    consequences,        not    that   he     should      be    able    to   act
    wisely or discreetly, nor to drive a good bargain, but that he
    should be in such possession of his faculties as to enable him
    to know at least what he is doing,”                    Ridings v. Ridings, 55 N.C.
    App. 630, 633, 
    286 S.E.2d 614
    , 617 (1982).                         In Ridings, this
    Court stated that there is a presumption of mental capacity to
    contract and that the testimony of an expert witness to the
    contrary “would be sufficient to raise a genuine issue of [the
    -18-
    party’s] ability to grasp the nature and consequences of his
    actions.”    
    Id. (emphasis added).
                 Thus, while expert testimony
    may be sufficient to raise a genuine issue with respect to an
    individual’s       lack     of    capacity,      such     testimony          does   not
    necessarily establish this lack of capacity as a matter of law.
    
    Id. In this
    present case, there is other evidence from which a
    jury could infer that Mrs. Clements understood the nature of her
    acts   during     the    relevant      time   periods.         For   instance,      Mrs.
    Clements’ medical records from 2001, when she was in alcohol
    rehabilitation treatment, describe her as “cognitively capable”
    and having “cognition [which] appear[ed] intact.”                       Further, it
    could be inferred from Mrs. Clements’ November 2001 letter to
    Pharmakon   –     in    which    she   stated   that     the    risk   (and    reward)
    regarding the success of Pharmakon was being borne entirely by
    her husband and that she merely had merely made a loan to him –
    that she understood the nature of her acts.                    Additionally, there
    is deposition testimony from individuals who knew Mrs. Clements
    and    evidence    regarding       business     transactions         which    she   had
    engaged in which a jury could infer that she understood the
    nature of her business transactions during the relevant time
    periods.     Accordingly, we hold that the trial court erred in
    concluding, as a matter of law, that Mrs. Clements lacked the
    -19-
    requisite mental capacity to make a gift or a loan in late 2001
    because there is a genuine issue as to whether she understood
    the nature and consequences of her actions at that time.          See,
    e.g., McDevitt v. Chandler, 
    241 N.C. 677
    , 680, 
    86 S.E.2d 438
    ,
    440 (1955) (holding that the question of capacity to make a deed
    is a question of law based on certain facts such as whether the
    grantor understood the nature and consequences of his actions).3
    Moreover,   assuming   that   the   issue   of   Mrs.   Clements’
    capacity is resolved in Defendants’ favor, there is evidence
    from which a jury could find facts supporting the conclusion
    that Mr. Clements was the owner of the Pharmakon shares.           For
    instance, there is evidence from which it could be inferred that
    Mrs. Clements gifted $400,000.00 to Mr. Clements or subsequently
    gifted the Pharmakon shares to him.      Specifically, the evidence
    indicates that Mrs. Clements issued the check to Mr. Clements in
    early 2000 and that the proceeds therefrom were used to purchase
    the Pharmakon shares in his name only.       Our Supreme Court has
    held that where the owner or purchaser of shares of stock has
    3
    Factual determinations concerning Mrs. Clements’ abilities
    during various time periods in order to make conclusions on her
    capacity and legal competency at these times may be important in
    determining the owner of the Pharmakon shares as of 2004 and
    also resolving certain issues raised in Defendants’ motions to
    dismiss, e.g., the tolling of the applicable statutes of
    limitations and the availability of the defenses of equitable
    laches and estoppel.
    -20-
    the certificate issued in the name of another, and so registered
    on the books of the corporation, the transaction is regarded as
    a gift completed by constructive delivery.                 Buffaloe v. Barnes,
    
    226 N.C. 313
    , 318, 
    38 S.E.2d 222
    , 225 (1946).                         Regarding the
    trial court’s conclusion that Mrs. Clements “did not intend to
    relinquish all her control over the funds[,]” the court’s order
    does not reflect any conduct on Mrs. Clements’ part at the time
    that she gave her husband the $400,000.00 check indicating that
    her   intent   was    something      other    than   to   make    a     gift   to   her
    husband.   Rather, the trial court’s order points to statements
    and actions made by Mrs. Clements and her attorney at later
    times to conclude that there was no genuine issue with respect
    to whether she intended to continue exercising control over the
    $400,000.00 and the subsequently purchased Pharmakon shares at
    the time she issued the check to Mr. Clements.                        Therefore, we
    believe that there is evidence from which a jury could infer
    that, at the time that she wrote the check to Mr. Clements and
    the   Pharmakon      shares   were    purchased      in   his    name    alone,     she
    intended to confer a gift upon her husband, and that she may
    have changed her mind regarding the gift only after the fact.
    See Courts v. Annie Penn Mem’l Hosp., 
    111 N.C. App. 134
    , 141,
    
    431 S.E.2d 864
    , 868 (1993) (holding that once a gift of shares
    -21-
    of stock is completed, the law will not recognize any “after-
    the-fact” conditions placed on the transaction by the donor).
    Additionally, as the trial court found in its order, there
    was evidence presented that Mr. Clements – and not Mrs. Clements
    - reported the passive income derived from the Pharmakon shares
    for tax purposes, evidence from which a jury could infer that
    Mrs. Clements viewed Mr. Clements as the owner of the Pharmakon
    shares.     Further,     her   handwritten        November    2001   letter    to
    Pharmakon is evidence from which a jury could infer that she
    intended the $400,000.00 check to be a loan – rather than a gift
    - to Mr. Clements, that she assumed no risk in the fortunes of
    Pharmakon   but   that   it    was   Mr.     Clements   who    had   made     the
    investment “at his own peril,” and, therefore, any claim that
    Mrs. Clements might have against Mr. Clements would have been
    for repayment of a $400,000.00 loan.              We believe that this same
    inference   could   be   drawn   from       the   December    2001   Quitclaim
    Agreement, in which Mrs. Clements acknowledges that Mr. Clements
    was the record owner of the Pharmakon shares, that it was Mr.
    Clements who made the capital contribution of $400,000.00 to
    acquire the shares, that she claimed no interest in the shares,
    and that she quitclaimed any interest she might otherwise have
    in the shares to Mr. Clements.
    -22-
    In sum, we believe that there remain a number of factual
    issues which must be resolved by a jury before any conclusion
    can be drawn as to whether Mr. Clements or Mrs. Clements was the
    owner    of     the    Pharmakon    shares.      Many     of    these   same   factual
    issues    –     such    as   Mrs.    Clements’    competency       -    may    also   be
    relevant to resolve other issues, such as Defendants’ defenses
    based on the statute of limitations and equitable laches.
    Although we have already held that the trial court erred in
    granting      Plaintiff’s      motion   for     partial       summary   judgment,     we
    nevertheless choose to address the trial court’s exclusion of
    Dr. Bellard’s testimony since this issue is likely to come up in
    a trial of this matter.               It is well established that a trial
    court’s ruling on the admissibility of expert opinion testimony
    is reviewable for abuse of discretion.                   State v. Ward, 
    364 N.C. 133
    , 139, 
    694 S.E.2d 738
    , 742 (2010) (citing Howerton v. Arai
    Helmet, Ltd., 
    358 N.C. 440
    , 458, 
    597 S.E.2d 674
    , 686 (2004)).
    “Abuse     of    discretion        results    where     the     court’s   ruling      is
    manifestly unsupported by reason or is so arbitrary that it
    could not have been the result of a reasoned decision.”                          State
    v. Hennis, 
    323 N.C. 279
    , 285, 
    372 S.E.2d 523
    , 527 (1988).
    Here,         both       Dr.    Colvin    and       Dr.     Bellard       performed
    “retrospective evaluations” of Mrs. Clements in order to form
    -23-
    their respective opinions concerning her competency – or lack
    thereof – during the early 2000’s.               However, only Dr. Bellard’s
    testimony was excluded as “not sufficiently reliable.”                         The
    trial court made its decision to admit Dr. Corvin’s testimony
    but exclude Dr. Bellard’s testimony, in essence, on grounds that
    (1) Dr. Corvin had met face-to-face with Mrs. Clements, though
    not until 2008, and interviewed others who knew her in the early
    2000’s; and (2) Dr. Corvin believed that Dr. Bellard’s methods
    were unreliable.        Although these bases for distinction may bear
    upon the weight accorded to the testimony by a jury, we find
    them    to    be   without   merit   to   base   a   decision   to   exclude    an
    opinion from the consideration             of a jury in this particular
    case.        Our Courts have explicitly rejected the notion that an
    expert witness must personally interview an individual in order
    to offer an opinion on that individual’s mental state, State v.
    Daniels, 
    337 N.C. 243
    , 271, 
    446 S.E.2d 298
    , 315 (1994); Harvey
    v. Raleigh Police Dep't, 
    85 N.C. App. 540
    , 547, 
    355 S.E.2d 147
    ,
    152 (1987); and we clearly cannot deem expert testimony properly
    excludible solely because an expert tendered by the opposing
    party denies its credibility.
    Careful scrutiny of the testimony offered by Dr. Corvin and
    Dr. Bellard further convinces us of the arbitrary nature of the
    -24-
    court’s decision to exclude only that of the latter.                          In support
    of his affidavit, Dr. Bellard submitted an extensively detailed
    report,    which     documents      Mrs.      Clements’         medical      history    and
    reflects    the     methodology        that    he        used    in   arriving    at    his
    conclusions concerning Mrs. Clements’ mental state.                          Dr. Corvin,
    on   the   other    hand,     provided      deposition          testimony     without    an
    accompanying       report    and    without        reviewing      all   of    Plaintiff’s
    available    medical        records.        Further,        as    stated      above,    Dr.
    Corvin’s    personal      interviews,         which       evidently     served    as    the
    trial court’s primary basis for elevating the reliability of Dr.
    Corvin’s    methods       over     those      of    Dr.     Bellard,      consisted     of
    interviewing       Mrs.   Clements,      who       was    legally     incompetent,      and
    Plaintiff’s two daughters, who have a stake in these proceedings
    as Mrs. Clements’ heirs-at-law.                    Under these circumstances, we
    believe that the trial court abused its discretion in excluding
    Dr. Bellard’s opinion from consideration.
    III. Conclusion
    For the foregoing reasons, we dismiss Defendants’ appeals
    from the trial court’s 13 July 2010 and 27 January 2011 orders
    denying their motions to dismiss and Defendants’ appeal from the
    trial court’s order denying their motion for summary judgment;
    -25-
    and   we   reverse   and   remand   the    trial   court’s   order   granting
    Plaintiff’s motion for partial summary judgment.
    DISMISSED IN PART; REVERSED AND REMANDED IN PART.
    Judges McGEE and McCULLOUGH concur.
    Report per Rule 30(e).