Carol C Pope v. Est of Joe C. Simmons ( 2019 )


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  •                               STATE OF WEST VIRGINIA
    SUPREME COURT OF APPEALS
    FILED
    In re Estate of Joe C. Simmons                                               April 16, 2019
    released at 3:00 p.m.
    EDYTHE NASH GAISER, CLERK
    No. 17-0560 (Greenbrier County 16-AA-06(D))                                 SUPREME COURT OF APPEALS
    OF WEST VIRGINIA
    MEMORANDUM DECISION
    Watha Wakando Simmons and Joe C. Simmons were married for approximately
    seventy years when Mrs. Simmons filed for divorce in 2008. Mrs. Simmons died in April
    of 2009 before the divorce was finalized, so the Family Court dismissed the divorce action.
    Mr. Simmons then died in 2015. Petitioner Carol C. Pope1 filed two creditor’s claims
    against his estate, one on her own behalf and one as executrix of Mrs. Simmons’s estate.
    The Greenbrier County Commission denied Ms. Pope’s personal claim outright. It denied
    the estate’s claim, as well, except for a small sum for Mrs. Simmons’s interest in the
    couple’s jointly-owned household goods and furnishings. Ms. Pope appealed the County
    Commission’s resolution of both claims, and the circuit court affirmed the County
    Commission’s order. This appeal followed.
    Ms. Pope argues that the lower courts erred in denying her two creditor claims
    against Mr. Simmons’s estate because: (1) the objections to her claims filed by Respondent
    Kyle P. Simmons, executor of the estate of Mr. Simmons,2 were not valid “counter
    affidavits,” as required by West Virginia Code § 44-2-6 (2014); (2) the estate of Mrs.
    Simmons was entitled to equitable distribution of the Simmons’s marital estate under West
    Virginia Code § 48-1-233 (2015); and (3) Ms. Pope was not barred from seeking
    reimbursement from Mr. Simmons for settlement and mediation costs of an earlier
    litigation, undertaken on Mrs. Simmons’s behalf.
    Upon consideration of the standard of review, the briefs, the record presented, and
    oral argument,3 the Court finds no substantial question of law and no prejudicial error. For
    these reasons, a memorandum decision affirming the order of the circuit court is
    appropriate under Rule 21 of the West Virginia Rules of Appellate Procedure.
    1
    Ms. Pope is represented by Robert P. Martin, Esq.
    2
    Kyle Simmons is represented by Christine Stump, Esq.
    3
    Counsel for Kyle Simmons did not participate in oral argument.
    I.     Factual and Procedural Background
    We begin with a discussion of Mr. and Mrs. Simmons’s divorce proceeding. Mrs.
    Simmons sued Mr. Simmons for divorce in the Family Court of Greenbrier County in
    November of 2008. On January 30, 2009, the family court entered a temporary order that
    required that “[a]ll marital property be placed into a constructive trust.” Mrs. Simmons
    died approximately three weeks later, on February 22, 2009. Two months later, Ms. Pope
    sought to be named a party to the divorce action. The family court denied Ms. Pope’s
    request and found that Mrs. Simmons’s death required the dismissal of the divorce action.
    Ms. Pope appealed that dismissal order to the circuit court, which denied her appeal in
    April of 2010. This Court refused Ms. Pope’s appeal later that year.4
    Mrs. Simmons left the couple’s marital home before filing for divorce in 2008, and
    eventually moved into a nursing home. After she died in 2009, Shenandoah Manor, the
    owner of the nursing home where Mrs. Simmons had lived, filed a civil action against Mr.
    Simmons and Ms. Pope, seeking payment of $23,140 owed for Mrs. Simmons’s care. Ms.
    Pope filed a cross-claim against Mr. Simmons requesting judgment against him for
    payment of all claims, alleging that he had agreed to pay Mrs. Simmons’s bill as part of
    the divorce action. The parties mediated, and it is undisputed in the record that Ms. Pope
    paid Shenandoah Manor and the mediator $7,600 to settle the case.5 The circuit court then
    dismissed the matter with prejudice—including Ms. Pope’s cross-claim—by order entered
    on February 7, 2013.
    Mr. Simmons died on April 23, 2015. Six days later, Kyle Simmons was appointed
    executor of his father’s estate and Mr. Simmons’s will was presented and admitted to
    probate. In October of 2015, Ms. Pope, individually and as executrix of the estate of Mrs.
    Simmons, filed two creditor’s claims against Mr. Simmons’s estate. First, Ms. Pope
    claimed that she was entitled to reimbursement in the amount of $7,600 for payments she
    made to settle the Shenandoah Manor litigation. Second, she claimed that Mrs. Simmons’s
    estate was entitled to the value of one-half of all real and personal property owned or
    possessed by Mr. and Mrs. Simmons as of February 22, 2009, when Mrs. Simmons died.6
    4
    West Virginia Rule of Appellate Procedure 5(h) was amended effective December 1,
    2010 to provide that properly prepared appeals from a circuit court’s final judgment or
    other appealable order in a civil or criminal case will be reviewed on the merits, except for
    the limited circumstances provided for in Rule 5(h)(3). Before that amendment, appeals to
    this Court were granted at our discretion.
    5
    Mr. Simmons also paid Shenandoah Manor $7,000.
    6
    Ms. Pope also claimed on behalf of Mrs. Simmons’s estate interest and income from the
    personal property from February 22, 2009, to the present.
    2
    In November of 2015, Kyle Simmons filed objections to both of Ms. Pope’s
    creditor’s claims. These objections were signed by his counsel. While those objections
    were not verified, the circuit court’s order affirming the County Commissioner refers to
    “two copies of verifications to the objections.” The estate was referred to a fiduciary
    commissioner for settlement of claims and a hearing was conducted on April 25, 2016.
    The fiduciary commissioner issued her report and recommendation in August 2016.
    After conducting a hearing on August 24, 2016, the County Commission accepted
    the fiduciary commissioner’s recommendation on September 7, 2016. The County
    Commission’s final order denied both of Ms. Pope’s claims, except that it granted the estate
    of Mrs. Simmons one-half the value of the household goods and furnishings jointly owned
    by Mr. and Mrs. Simmons, which totaled $4,481.04. Finding that Ms. Pope previously
    received household goods and furnishings valued at $1,971, the County Commission ruled
    that Mrs. Simmons’s estate was entitled to $269.52 as the estate’s remaining share of one-
    half of the value of the household goods and furnishings (($4,481.04 ÷ 2) - $1,971).
    In September of 2016, Ms. Pope appealed the County Commission’s order to the
    circuit court. The circuit court rejected Ms. Pope’s contention that Kyle Simmons’s
    objections to the creditor’s claims were defective because they were not verified when filed
    and ruled that “there is no requirement that a counter affidavit filed in response to a properly
    filed claim against the estate of a decedent be verified,” citing both the plain language of
    West Virginia Code §§ 44-2-5 and -6 and this Court’s decisions in In re Estate of Hardin7
    and In re the Estate of McIntosh.8 The circuit court also noted that the record included two
    copies of general verifications to objections, which were filed before the hearing held by
    the fiduciary commissioner.
    As for Ms. Pope’s argument that the estate of Mrs. Simmons was entitled to one-
    half of the marital estate at the time of her death according to West Virginia Code § 48-1-
    233, the circuit court concluded that “equitable distribution of marital property as discussed
    in West Virginia Code Chapter [48] governing domestic relations . . . is irrelevant.” The
    circuit court cited our earlier decisions in Bridgeman v. Bridgeman,9 and Zikos v. Clark,10
    where we found that the property rights of parties who were granted a divorce before death
    were enforceable, and distinguished this case from Bridgeman and Zikos on the grounds
    that the divorce abated when Mrs. Simmons died.
    7
    
    158 W. Va. 614
    , 
    212 S.E.2d 750
     (1975).
    8
    
    144 W. Va. 583
    , 
    109 S.E.2d 153
     (1959).
    9
    
    182 W. Va. 677
    , 
    391 S.E.2d 367
     (1990).
    10
    
    214 W. Va. 235
    , 
    588 S.E.2d 400
     (2003).
    3
    Regarding Ms. Pope’s claim for reimbursement of the payments she made to settle
    the Shenandoah Manor matter, the circuit court found that Ms. Pope was barred by
    collateral estoppel from seeking recovery against Mr. Simmons’s estate, since that issue
    was finally adjudicated in 2013. And, the circuit court found that the fiduciary
    commissioner followed the proper procedure in determining ownership of the property at
    issue. The circuit court noted that Ms. Pope failed to cite to any authority to support her
    contention that the constructive trust from the divorce action survived the dismissal of that
    action, or to counter the County Commission’s finding that equitable distribution under the
    domestic relations statute was not applicable to her claim. Finally, the circuit court rejected
    Ms. Pope’s claim that Mr. Simmons’s estate was unjustly enriched.
    II.     Standard of Review
    This Court reviews the circuit court’s final order and ultimate disposition under an
    abuse of discretion standard. We review challenges to findings of fact under a clearly
    erroneous standard; conclusions of law are reviewed de novo.11
    III.   Discussion
    On appeal, Ms. Pope challenges the circuit court’s rejection or denial of (1) her
    arguments regarding the alleged procedural defects in Kyle Simmons’s counter-affidavit,
    filed in opposition to Ms. Pope’s claims on Mr. Simmons’s estate; (2) her claim on Mr.
    Simmons’s estate on behalf of Mrs. Simmons’s estate; and (3) her claim on Mr. Simmons’s
    11
    Syl. Pt. 1, Haines v. Kimble, 
    221 W. Va. 266
    , 
    654 S.E.2d 588
     (2007) (affirming circuit
    court order upholding county commission’s order that, inter alia, denied petition to remove
    executrix).
    4
    estate on her own behalf. We first address Ms. Pope’s procedural argument—that Kyle
    Simmons’s counter-affidavit was defective under West Virginia Code §§ 44-2-512 and -6.13
    12
    West Virginia Code § 44-2-5 provides:
    Every claim against the estate of a decedent shall be itemized,
    verified by affidavit, accompanied by proper vouchers and
    shall state the character of the claim, whether open account,
    note, bond, bill, writing obligatory, judgment, decree or other
    evidence of debt and the amount thereof and from what date
    and on what items interest runs and at what percent per annum
    and stating further that the claim is just and true and that the
    creditor, or any prior owner of the claim, if there was one, has
    not received any part of the money stated to be due or any
    security or satisfaction for the same, except what is credited.
    The voucher for a judgment or decree shall be an abstract
    thereof; for a specialty, bond, note, bill of exchange, writing
    obligatory or other instrument, shall be the instrument itself, or
    a true copy thereof, or proof of the same in case the instrument
    be lost; and for an open account, an itemized copy of the
    account. This section does not apply to taxes.
    13
    West Virginia Code § 44-2-6 provides:
    Every claim so itemized, so accompanied by proper vouchers,
    and so verified, shall be taken to be proved, and shall be
    allowed, unless before the commissioner shall make up his
    report of claims the personal representative or a distributee, or
    a legatee, or, in the case of estates that appear to be insolvent,
    a creditor, shall file before the commissioner a counter
    affidavit, denying the claim in whole or in part; and when said
    counter affidavit is so filed the commissioner shall fix a time
    and place for hearing evidence for and against such claim and
    give reasonable notice of such time and place to the claimant,
    the party objecting, and the personal representative. If the
    commissioner, having held such hearing, does not allow any
    such claim, the claimant shall pay the expense of having the
    testimony adduced at such hearing recorded and/or transcribed.
    The commissioner, in the exercise of his sound discretion, may
    require that the claimant post a bond or other security sufficient
    to pay the estimated cost of having such testimony recorded
    and transcribed as a condition precedent to holding such
    5
    Ms. Pope offers the same arguments to this Court as she did to the lower courts
    regarding the alleged procedural faults in Kyle Simmons’s objections. For much the same
    reasons as the circuit court, we reject those arguments.
    As an initial matter, Kyle Simmons correctly observes that Ms. Pope did not argue
    the alleged lack of verification during the hearing before the fiduciary commissioner. So,
    the circuit court improperly went outside of the record in addressing this argument.14 For
    that reason alone, Ms. Pope’s first assignment of error fails.
    Even if she had properly argued and preserved the issue for appellate review, Ms.
    Pope’s argument still falls short. It appears from the circuit court’s order that Kyle
    Simmons filed verifications before the hearing before the fiduciary commissioner. In sum,
    Ms. Pope has not shown any error in the circuit court’s rejection of her procedural
    argument.
    We next turn to Ms. Pope’s claim that she, as executrix of Mrs. Simmons’s estate,
    is entitled to half the value of the Simmons’s marital estate which existed at the time of
    Mrs. Simmons’s death. Again, the circuit court correctly affirmed the County
    Commission’s denial of this claim. Ms. Pope urges the Court to apply West Virginia Code
    § 48-1-233,15 asserting that the claim she filed on behalf of the estate of Mrs. Simmons was
    hearing. If such claim, having been disallowed by the
    commissioner, subsequently shall be allowed as a claim against
    the estate, the claimant shall be entitled to recover from the
    estate the expenses so paid. Claims for funeral expenses shall
    be made and determined in the same manner as any other
    claims.
    (Emphasis added).
    14
    Under West Virginia Code § 44-2-19 (2014), the appeal of an order of the county
    commission shall be “tried and heard in the circuit court. . .on the record made before the
    fiduciary commissioner and on order of the county commission.” See Haines v. Kimble,
    221 W. Va. at 275, 
    654 S.E.2d at 597
     (when reviewing an order from county commission,
    circuit court is limited to hearing determining and deciding appeal upon original record of
    proceeding before county commission.).
    15
    West Virginia Code § 48-1-233 (2015) provides, in pertinent part:
    The definitions of “marital property” contained in this section
    has no application outside of the provisions of this article, and
    the common law as to the ownership of the respective property
    and earnings of a husband and wife, as altered by the provisions
    of article 29 of this chapter and other provisions of this code,
    6
    specifically filed “for the enforcement of rights under this article,” that is Article 1
    (“General Provisions; Definitions”) of Chapter 48 (“Domestic Relations”) of the West
    Virginia Code. But that cannot be so because Mr. and Mrs. Simmons were never granted
    a divorce. As the circuit court reasoned,
    [t]he divorce action was dismissed and abated following the
    death of [Mrs. Simmons] by an Order of the Family Court
    Judge dated April 28, 2009. . . . At the time of [Mr.
    Simmons’s] death, he was a widower, therefore consideration
    of equitable distribution of marital property as discussed in
    West Virginia Code § 48-1-233 is not proper as that section of
    the Code “has no application outside the provisions of this
    article . . . except . . . for the enforcement of rights under this
    article.”
    In short, Mr. and Mrs. Simmons’s divorce had not been granted when Mrs. Simmons
    died in 2009. Following Mr. Simmons’s death in 2015, Mrs. Simmons’s estate was not,
    and could not have been, entitled to use the mechanism of equitable distribution to claim
    one-half of the Simmons’s marital estate (as valued as of the date of Mrs. Simmons’s death)
    because there was no “judgment of annulment, divorce or separation” entered in this
    matter.16 So, we find no error in the circuit court’s affirmance of the County Commission’s
    denial of Ms. Pope’s claim on Mr. Simmons’s estate for one-half the value of the marital
    estate, as of the date of Mrs. Simmons’s death.
    Ms. Pope also asserts that the circuit court erred by failing to recognize and apply
    any equitable principles of domestic relations or other law with regard to the equitable
    property interest of Mrs. Simmons in the marital estate.17 Ms. Pope claims that Mr.
    are not abrogated by implication or otherwise, except as
    expressly provided for by the provisions of this article as such
    provisions are applied in actions brought under this article or
    for the enforcement of rights under this article.
    16
    
    W. Va. Code § 48-7-101
     (2015) (“Except as otherwise provided in this section, upon
    every judgment of annulment, divorce or separation, the court shall divide the marital
    property of the parties equally between the parties.”) (emphasis added). Petitioner also
    argues that the determination of the marital property of the parties and, thus, the equitable
    distribution interests of Mrs. Simmons were established on November 3, 2008, the date the
    divorce proceeding was initiated. That argument fails under § 48-7-101 for the same
    reason. Indisputably, the family court never entered a “judgment or annulment, divorce or
    separation” in the 2008–09 divorce proceeding.
    17
    Ms. Pope identifies this argument as her third assignment of error. We agree with Kyle
    Simmons that it is a repackaging of her second assignment of error, that is, the alleged
    7
    Simmons committed some form of wrongdoing and unjustly enriched himself by disposing
    of assets of the alleged marital estate following Mrs. Simmons’s death. She also argues
    that, following Mr. Simmons’s death, the circuit court should have imposed a constructive
    trust on the marital assets that remained in Mr. Simmons’s estate under Patterson v.
    Patterson.18
    As the circuit court found, there is no evidence to support Ms. Pope’s claims against
    Mr. Simmons or Kyle Simmons of unjust enrichment. In her testimony before the fiduciary
    commissioner, Ms. Pope did not present any proof that Mr. Simmons converted any of
    Mrs. Simmons’s assets. Additionally, Kyle Simmons testified that, as the executor of Mr.
    Simmons’s estate, he did not sell any property that was owned solely by Mrs. Simmons.
    The fiduciary commissioner’s report and recommendations contained detailed findings as
    to the ownership interests of the parties based on the evidence presented at the hearing.
    Other than vague references to applying the principles of equitable distribution as set forth
    in § 48-1-233, Ms. Pope does not provide any citation to the record or argument that those
    findings at issue were not supported by the evidence. For those reasons, we find no error
    in the circuit court’s rejection of this argument.
    Finally, Ms. Pope challenges the circuit court’s ruling that the 2013 settlement with
    Shenandoah Manor nursing home, in which she agreed to pay $7,600, and Mr. Simmons
    agreed to pay $7,000, bars her 2015 creditor claim for $7,600 against Mr. Simmons’s
    estate.
    Again, we find no error in the circuit court’s ruling that Ms. Pope is barred from
    attempting in 2015 to collect from Mr. Simmons’s estate the exact amount sought in her
    2013 cross-claim. Ms. Pope and Mr. Simmons settled Shenandoah Manor’s claims against
    them at mediation. That settlement included Ms. Pope’s cross-claim requesting judgment
    against Mr. Simmons for payment of all Shenandoah Manor’s claims. At the parties’
    request, the circuit court dismissed Shenandoah Manor’s claims and Ms. Pope’s cross-
    claim with prejudice. Ms. Pope’s 2015 creditor’s claim is identical to the cross-claim
    dismissed with prejudice in 2013, and lodged against a party in privity to Mr. Simmons,
    that is Mr. Simmons’s estate. Thus, the circuit court correctly concluded that the 2013
    voluntary dismissal with prejudice bars Ms. Pope’s 2015 creditor claim against Mr.
    Simmons’s estate.19
    failure of the lower courts to apply West Virginia § 48-1-233 and the principles of equitable
    distribution to her claim, on behalf of Mrs. Simmons’s estate, on Mr. Simmons’s estate,
    and so address Ms. Pope’s second and third assignments of error together.
    18
    
    167 W. Va. 1
    , 
    277 S.E.2d 709
     (1981).
    19
    Dan Ryan Builders, Inc. v. Crystal Ridge Dev., Inc., 
    239 W. Va. 549
    , 560–61, 
    803 S.E.2d 519
    , 530–31 (2017) (“‘The voluntary dismissal of the complaint does not preserve or
    8
    For these reasons, we affirm the May 23, 2017 order of the Circuit Court of
    Greenbrier County denying Petitioner Carol C. Pope’s appeal from the September 7, 2016
    order of the Greenbrier County Commission.
    Affirmed.
    ISSUED: April 16, 2019
    CONCURRED IN BY:
    Chief Justice Elizabeth D. Walker
    Justice Margaret L. Workman
    Justice Tim Armstead
    Justice Evan H. Jenkins
    Justice John A. Hutchison
    withhold it from the doctrine of res judicata; indeed, one of the underlying rationales for
    the doctrine is to prevent this type of ad infinitum claim splitting and piecemeal
    litigation.’”) (quoting Canterbury v. J.P. Morgan Acquisition Corp., 
    958 F. Supp. 2d 637
    ,
    648 (W.D. Va. 2013), aff’d sub nom. Canterbury v. J.P. Morgan Mortg. Acquisition Corp.,
    561 F. App’x 293 (4th Cir. 2014)).
    9