Kellie Renee Johnson and Christopher Aaron Johnson v. Vickie Amanta Johnson ( 2022 )


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  •                                              COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA
    Present: Judges AtLee, Friedman and Raphael
    UNPUBLISHED
    Argued at Lexington, Virginia
    KELLIE RENEE JOHNSON AND
    CHRISTOPHER AARON JOHNSON
    MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY
    v.     Record No. 0059-22-3                                  JUDGE RICHARD Y. ATLEE, JR.
    OCTOBER 11, 2022
    VICKIE AMANTIA JOHNSON, INDIVIDUALLY AND
    IN HER FORMER CAPACITY AS CO-EXECUTOR
    OF THE ESTATE OF HAZEL CARTER JOHNSON,
    KEVIN RAY JOHNSON, INDIVIDUALLY AND
    IN HIS FORMER CAPACITY AS CO-EXECUTOR
    OF THE ESTATE OF HAZEL CARTER JOHNSON,
    ALEXIS RENEE KELLY, ALYSSA RENEE MOSES,
    KAYLA JOHNSON, MELISSA LONG, AND
    BRANDON O. NESTER, IN HIS CAPACITY AS
    COURT-APPOINTED ADMINISTRATOR OF
    THE ESTATE OF HAZEL CARTER JOHNSON
    FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF BEDFORD COUNTY
    James W. Updike, Jr., Judge
    John S. Koehler (Justin Steele; Harry F. Bosen, Jr.; Law Office of
    James Steele, PLLC, on brief), for appellants.
    John S. Edwards (Edwards Law Firm, on brief), for appellees
    Vickie Amantia Johnson and Kevin Ray Johnson.
    No brief or argument for appellees Alexis Renee Kelly, Alyssa
    Renee Moses, Kayla Johnson, Melissa Long, and Brandon O.
    Nester, in his capacity as court-appointed administrator of the
    estate of Hazel Carter Johnson.
    This case concerns the construction and effect of various wills and codicils, executed by
    Hazel C. Johnson (“Hazel”), prior to her passing. The parties are primarily Hazel’s descendants.
    *
    Pursuant to Code § 17.1-413, this opinion is not designated for publication.
    The appellants are Hazel’s daughter, Kellie,1 and grandson (Kellie’s son), Christopher Aaron
    (“Aaron”). The appellees are two of Hazel’s other children, Vickie and Kevin, as well as Hazel’s
    grandchildren2 and the court-appointed administrator. The appellants challenge the circuit court’s
    ruling that several documents executed prior to Hazel’s passing failed to revive an earlier revoked
    will, and thus Hazel died intestate. For the following reasons, we affirm.
    I. BACKGROUND
    Hazel and her husband, Gerald, had five children.3 Gerald passed away in 2013. On March
    18, 2015, Hazel executed a will drafted by an attorney, Candace Rivers (“the first will”). The first
    will made specific real and personal property bequests to Kellie, Aaron, Alyssa, and Kevin. It
    directed that any other real property was to be sold and the proceeds divided equally among Kellie,
    Vickie, and Kevin. The will directed that any residue of Hazel’s estate should be sold and the
    proceeds divided equally among her children and grandchildren.4 The first will named Kellie as
    executor, with Alexis as a replacement. It was properly executed, witnessed, and notarized.
    On July 12, 2018, Hazel was admitted to the hospital for heart and kidney failure.
    Following Hazel’s admission, discord arose between Hazel’s children with respect to her estate and
    the division of her personal property. The following events all took place while Hazel was
    hospitalized, where she remained until her death on July 31, 2018.
    1
    Since the decedent and most of the parties share a common surname, we identify each by
    their given name.
    2
    These include Kellie’s other children, Alexis and Alyssa, and Kevin’s daughter, Kayla.
    Kevin passed away during the pendency of this appeal. Melissa Long, the daughter of Steven
    (who predeceased his mother Hazel), is also a named appellee.
    3
    Two of Hazel and Gerald’s five children predeceased their parents.
    4
    Article 1, section A of the first will also provided that Hazel may leave a “written
    statement or list identifying a person or persons to receive one or more items of my tangible
    personal property,” and Hazel signed such a document on October 21, 2015. See Code § 64.2-400.
    -2-
    On July 23, 2018, Vickie and Kevin presented a document, titled the “Last Will and
    Testament of Hazel Carter Johnson,” to Hazel for her signature (“the second will”5). The document
    was a standard form obtained from RocketLawyer.com. Crucially, it “revoke[d Hazel’s] former
    Wills and Codicils” and “declare[d] this to be my Last Will and Testament.” In the portion
    covering “disposition of property,” the spaces left for designating specific bequests, distribution of
    tangible personal property, and distribution of the residuary estate were all left blank. The only
    completed portions of the second will named Vickie and Kevin as co-executors, with Kellie as a
    replacement in the event of their inability to perform the task. The document was signed by Hazel
    and two witnesses.
    On July 29, 2018, Hazel signed three more documents, each provided to her by Kellie. The
    first is a handwritten document stating, “I Hazel Johnson would like to change exceutor [sic] of will
    back to Kellie Renee Johnson & Alexis Renee Kelley” (“the first codicil”).
    The second document (“the second codicil”), titled “Final Last Will Codicil to Last Will
    Codicil of Hazel Carter Johnson,” states:
    I, Hazel Carter Johnson (the ‘Testatrix’) of Vinton, Virginia, declare
    this to be my FINAL codicil to my last will Codicil[6]:
    5
    No party argues on appeal that the second will was not valid for failure to evince
    testamentary intent (as it did not include any bequests or directions for the distribution of the estate).
    See Poindexter v. Jones, 
    200 Va. 372
    , 377 (1958) (“The court recognized and emphasized the
    settled doctrine that there must be indicia of testamentary intent on the face of the paper.”). This
    Court assumes without deciding that this characterization of this document is correct because,
    with respect to the questions before us, it unquestionably served as a valid revocation of the first
    will.
    It is not entirely clear which document, among the various documents at issue, the “Last
    6
    Will Codicil” refers to. Given that the second codicil modifies that “Last Will Codicil” to change
    the named executors from Vickie and Kevin, though, the most reasonable inference is it refers to the
    second will.
    -3-
    1. My Last Will Codicil will be modified as follows:
    My executor of my Last Will Codicil will be changed from
    “Vickie Lynn Johnson” to “Kellie Johnson of Goodview,
    Virginia”.
    2. My Last Will Codicil will be modified as follows:
    My executor of my Last Will Codicil will be changed from
    “Kevin Ray Johnson” to “Kellie Johnson of Goodview, Virginia”.
    3. I hereby confirm and republish my Last Will codicil in all respects
    other than those mentioned here.
    The third document (“the third codicil”) is a typewritten paragraph, stating:
    I, Hazel Johnson[,] deem all documents updated after the First Will
    written by Cand[a]ce Rivers naming Vickie Lynn Johnson and Kevin
    Ray Johnson as executors and trustees to be voided. All documents
    naming Vickie Lynn Johnson and Kevin Ray Johnson executor of
    estate to be null and void. All documents signed and dated on the
    29th of July 2018 are valid. All previous codicils deeming Vickie
    Lynn Johnson and Kevin Ray Johnson executors and trustees are null
    and void. The final codicil is naming Kellie Renee Johnson the sole
    executor of the estate and trustee is valid. Alexis Renee Kelley is to
    be the successor executor and trustee of the estate. This final codicil
    should make Article Four of the original will[7] valid with no
    additional executors of estate and trustees other than Kellie Renee
    Johnson and successor Alexis Renee Kelley.
    Each of these documents was signed by Hazel and two witnesses. The second was also notarized
    and includes a self-proving clause. Code § 64.2-452.
    Following Hazel’s death, Vickie and Kevin presented the second will for probate and
    qualified as co-executors. Kellie filed a complaint in the circuit court challenging the validity of the
    second will and Vickie’s and Kevin’s status as co-executors. At trial, much of the evidence
    concerned Hazel’s testamentary capacity at the time she signed each of the 2018 documents and
    7
    The referenced “Article Four of the original will” solely addresses naming the first
    will’s executors: “I nominate my daughter, KELLIE R. JOHNSON, as Executor and Trustee of
    any trust created herein. I nominate my granddaughter, ALEXIS R. KELLEY as Successor
    Executor and as Successor Trustee, if such be required. I hereby waive surety on the bond of any
    executor or trustee name herein.”
    -4-
    whether there had been any undue influence or coercion in procuring her signatures. The circuit
    court concluded that each of these documents was valid, that Hazel possessed testamentary capacity
    and intent when she signed them, and that they were not procured by undue influence or coercion.
    The parties do not contest these findings on appeal.
    The circuit court concluded that the second will expressly revoked the first will and that the
    subsequent codicils revoked the second will. Those codicils, however, did not revive the first will.
    Accordingly, the circuit court concluded that Hazel died intestate. It appointed a neutral third-party
    administrator of the estate. This appeal follows.
    II. ANALYSIS
    This matter serves as a cautionary tale of sorts, revealing the risks and unintended
    consequences that can result from hasty, uncounseled action. It seems evident that no one—
    including the parties—intended or wished for Hazel to die intestate.8 Nevertheless, we are bound
    by the express directions as they are conveyed by the plain language of Hazel’s signed wills and
    codicils. A key reason these written words have such power is because, invariably, we cannot
    ask the decedent what they intended. And so, with few exceptions not at issue here, we must
    assume that any document duly signed and witnessed expressed her wishes. Giving those words
    effect, we agree with the circuit court that no valid will was in place at the time of Hazel’s
    passing.
    A. Standard of Review
    The issues before us concern the construction and effect of Hazel’s various wills and
    codicils. These are matters of law, which we review de novo. Lane v. Starke, 
    279 Va. 686
    , 690
    (2010).
    8
    Presumably there was a fundamental misunderstanding among the parties of the role
    and “powers” of an estate’s executor that culminated in a scramble to be named as Hazel’s.
    -5-
    B. Hazel had no valid will in place when she died
    The crux of appellants’ argument is that, read together, the three July 29 codicils evince
    Hazel’s intent to revive her first will.
    “If a testator executes a will in the manner required by law or other writing in the manner
    in which a will is required to be executed that expressly revokes a former will, such former will,
    including any codicil thereto, is void and of no effect.” Code § 64.2-410(B) (emphasis added).
    To revive a previously-revoked will or codicil, Virginia provides that “[a]ny will or
    codicil, or any part thereof[,] that has been revoked pursuant to § 64.2-410 shall not be revived
    unless such will or codicil is reexecuted in the manner required by law.” Code § 64.2-411.
    “Such revival operates only to the extent that the testator’s intent to revive the will or codicil is
    shown.” Id. (emphasis added).
    Thus, by the plain language of Code § 64.2-411, the first will would need to have been
    “reexecuted in the manner required by law” in order to be revived. Among other things, this
    would require that it be signed by the testator and two witnesses. See Code § 64.2-403.
    Additionally, the reviving document must show “the testator’s intent to revive the will or
    codicil.” Code § 64.2-411. Appellants argue that the July 29 codicils reveal that Hazel intended
    to revive and reexecute her first will. We disagree.
    It is uncontested that the second will effectively revoked the first will, since it “revoke[d
    Hazel’s] former Wills and Codicils.” It is immaterial that the second will contained no specific
    bequests or instructions for distribution of Hazel’s estate. See Poindexter v. Jones, 
    200 Va. 372
    ,
    383 (1958) (explaining that a “declaratory revocation may assume the shape of a last will and
    testament” but that this is not necessary for a document to nonetheless effectively revoke a
    previous will).
    -6-
    The July 29 codicils expressly evince the intent to revoke the second will. Most evidently,
    the third codicil declares that “all documents updated after the First Will written by Cand[a]ce
    Rivers naming Vickie Lynn Johnson and Kevin Ray Johnson as executors and trustees [are] to be
    voided” and “[a]ll documents” and “previous codicils” “naming Vickie Lynn Johnson and Kevin
    Ray Johnson executor of estate [are] null and void.” Thus, the second will was effectively revoked.
    However, none of the July 29 codicils effectively revive or reexecute the first will. The
    revocation of the second will did not, without more, revive the first will. See Poindexter, 
    200 Va. at 381
     (noting that “after such revocation the destruction [or revocation] of the latter will does
    not have the effect of reviving the former, even though the testator so intends” (quoting Clark v.
    Hugo, 
    130 Va. 99
    , 106 (1921))). Although the third codicil “make[s] Article Four of the original
    will valid,” that provision concerns only the naming of executors—it has no bearing on the
    distribution of Hazel’s estate. The second codicil “confirm[s] and republish[es] my Last Will
    codicil in all respects other than those mentioned here.” But there is no reasonable way to conclude
    that the “Last Will codicil” refers to the first will.
    Appellants argue that, since the first codicil changes the executors “back” to Kellie and
    Alexis, we should infer that it expresses the intent to revive the entirety of the first will.
    Unfortunately, the plain language used in the codicils, which revived only Article Four of the first
    will, fails to support that argument. A codicil may revive an earlier will even if the testator does
    not realize that the earlier will has been revoked, but to do so, it is “essential” that the codicil
    show that the earlier will “still expresses the testamentary intention of the testator as of the time
    of the execution of the codicil, and to what extent the will still expresses that intention, whether
    to the extent of the whole will, and, if not, to what extent.” Gooch v. Gooch, 
    134 Va. 21
    , 35
    (1922).
    -7-
    The July 29 codicils undoubtedly demonstrate an intention to change the executors of
    Hazel’s estate. But the third codicil, by its express terms, only refers to Article Four of the
    original will. Given that, and the absence of any reasonably clear indication that the original will
    as a whole continued to express Hazel’s testamentary intention, we cannot conclude that there
    was an intent to revive the entirety of Hazel’s original will. Accordingly, since any valid wills
    were expressly revoked, and none were ever revived or reexecuted, Hazel died intestate.
    III. CONCLUSION
    We find no error in the circuit court’s decision and, therefore, affirm.
    Affirmed.
    -8-
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 0059223

Filed Date: 10/11/2022

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 10/11/2022