Wayne Shorter v. Darien Cherry ( 2023 )


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  •                                             COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA
    UNPUBLISHED
    Present: Judges Causey, Raphael and Senior Judge Clements
    Argued at Loudoun, Virginia
    WAYNE SHORTER
    MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY
    v.     Record No. 1904-22-4                                   JUDGE STUART A. RAPHAEL
    NOVEMBER 21, 2023
    DARIEN CHERRY, ET AL.
    FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY
    Angela L. Horan, Judge
    Warner F. Young, III (Mahdavi, Bacon, Halfhill & Young, P.L.L.C.,
    on briefs), for appellant.
    Joseph W. Thelin (von Keller Thelin, on brief), for appellee Selena
    Daniel.
    No brief or argument for appellee Darien Cherry.
    Wayne Shorter appeals the trial court’s decision admitting a 2002 will to probate instead of
    a 2021 will that named him as the primary and sole beneficiary. He argues that the trial court erred
    by finding the 2021 will invalid. He also challenges two evidentiary rulings. He contends that the
    testator’s sister is an “interested party” under the Dead Man’s Statute, Code § 8.01-397, and that the
    trial court therefore erred by admitting her uncorroborated testimony. He adds that the trial court
    should not have permitted her to testify about Shorter’s reputation for dishonesty. Finding that
    Shorter failed to preserve those evidentiary challenges and that the evidence supported the trial
    court’s finding that the 2021 will was invalid, we affirm.
    *
    This opinion is not designated for publication. See Code § 17.1-413(A).
    BACKGROUND1
    JoAnne Cherry executed a will on January 24, 2002, naming her children as beneficiaries:
    Darien Cherry, Selena Daniel, and Ryan Cherry. Ryan died in June 2014. The parties agree that
    Cherry’s will was validly executed. Cherry told her son Darien that the will was in her safe; he
    found it there and read it before her death. Cherry died on October 27, 2021. After Cherry’s death,
    Darien found the 2002 will in the same place in the safe.
    Sometime after 2002, Cherry moved to Virginia, where she met Wayne Shorter. Except for
    a few years, Cherry and Shorter lived together from the mid-2000s until Cherry’s death.
    Shorter alleges that Cherry drafted a will in 2021 using his computer. Cherry had her own
    computer and her own Legal Zoom account, to which Shorter had access. But he claims to have
    seen her create the will on his computer. The 2021 will named Shorter as Cherry’s primary
    beneficiary and executor, erroneously stating that Cherry had no children.
    On March 4, 2021, Cherry, Shorter, and Cherry’s sister, Sherry Johnson, went to a UPS
    store. Shorter claimed that the purpose of that visit was to execute and notarize the 2021 will and an
    advance medical directive. Johnson testified, however, that Cherry had asked her to witness only an
    advance medical directive.
    At the UPS store, Cherry presented the papers to the store’s notary, Marvin Ventura, who
    reviewed them and returned them to her. Cherry and Johnson produced identification, and their
    information was logged into a notebook. Shorter claimed that, after Ventura “logged the
    handbook,” Cherry signed and initialed the documents. Ventura then “gathered the documents” and
    presented them to Johnson, who also purportedly signed the will and advance medical directive.
    After Johnson signed, she returned the documents to the notary, who presented them to another UPS
    1
    We state the facts in the light most favorable to Darien Cherry and Selena Daniel, who
    prevailed below. Glynn v. Kenney, 
    77 Va. App. 70
    , 73 (2023).
    -2-
    employee, Matthew Chavez. Chavez then signed the documents and Ventura notarized them.
    Ventura did not place Cherry, Johnson, or Chavez under oath, despite his notarized self-proving
    affidavit asserting that they all had been placed under oath. After the papers were signed and
    notarized, they were returned to either Cherry or Shorter. The documents were then kept in
    Shorter’s office in a file cabinet.
    After Cherry’s death, her children petitioned the circuit court to admit the 2002 will to
    probate. Shorter petitioned the court to admit the 2021 will, instead. In November 2022, the parties
    appeared before the trial court on their petitions. The children offered the 2002 will into evidence
    without objection. In support of his cross petition, Shorter introduced the 2021 will.
    At trial, neither Ventura nor Chavez could independently recall Cherry or Johnson’s signing
    the will or advance medical directive. But relying on their habit and custom in witnessing and
    notarizing documents, they confirmed Cherry and Johnson’s signatures on the will. Ventura and
    Chavez also identified their own signatures on the will and advance medical directive in their
    capacities as notary and witness. Relying on his seal, Ventura agreed that he notarized the
    “self-proving affidavit” that purportedly bore the names and signatures of Cherry, Johnson, and
    Chavez. Ventura conceded, however, that it was possible he was not given the entire will and that
    the self-proving affidavit could have been the only page presented to him. Ventura agreed that he
    acted improperly by notarizing the signatures on Cherry’s advance medical directive when that
    document contained a blank signature block above the notary page. He also acknowledged that,
    despite swearing in the self-proving affidavit that he had administered oaths to Cherry and the
    witnesses, he “never” administered oaths when notarizing documents.
    At trial, Johnson recalled only that her sister had asked that she witness Cherry’s advance
    medical directive; Cherry never mentioned a will. Johnson denied that she was presented with a
    will at the UPS store. She stated with “[o]ne hundred percent” certainty that the signature next to
    -3-
    her name on the self-proving affidavit was not hers. Johnson testified that she signed her name only
    twice at the UPS store. Based on the writing style and the fact that her name was misspelled,
    Johnson knew that the signature on the self-proving affidavit was not hers. Johnson did not know of
    any will executed by Cherry in 2021. What is more, she testified that Shorter had a reputation in the
    community for being dishonest.
    The children called Katherine Koppenhaver as a certified forensic document examiner with
    expertise in determining whether a signature is genuine. Koppenhaver testified “that the signature
    of Joanne Cherry” on the 2021 will was “not a genuine signature.” She added that Cherry’s
    purported initials on the 2021 will and her signatures on the self-proving affidavit and attestation
    clause were also not genuine. Koppenhaver had a “very high” level of certainty that those
    signatures were not authentic, and she said that her opinion would remain unchanged even if
    Johnson had identified her own signature on the attestation clause of the will. Koppenhaver studied
    multiple exemplars of Cherry’s and Johnson’s handwriting before forming her opinion. She noted
    that the signature of Cherry’s name was missing some letters, and the shape and spacing of the
    letters differed from those on the exemplars. Koppenhaver also noted that Johnson’s purported
    signature “contained tremor,” indicating that it was written slowly and marked by a “wobbling
    effect.” Koppenhaver explained that “tremor is indicative of non-genuineness.” She said that, even
    if a notary professed to have witnessed Cherry and Johnson’s signatures, Koppenhaver’s opinion
    that they were not genuine would remain unchanged.
    At the close of evidence, the trial court ruled that the 2021 will was not valid and admitted
    the 2002 will to probate. The court found that Johnson’s testimony was credible and that the UPS
    employees could not vouch for the document and failed to administer oaths. Shorter noted a timely
    appeal.
    -4-
    ANALYSIS
    A. Evidentiary Rulings (Assignments of Error 1 and 2)
    Shorter contends that the trial court erred by admitting Johnson’s testimony in violation of
    the Dead Man’s Statute, Code § 8.01-397. He also claims that the trial court erred by admitting
    Johnson’s testimony about Shorter’s reputation for being dishonest.
    An appellate court reviews a trial court’s decision about the admissibility of evidence,
    including witness testimony, for abuse of discretion. Preferred Sys. Solutions, Inc. v. GP
    Consulting, LLC, 
    284 Va. 382
    , 396 (2012). Although the trial court has discretion, it is not “free to
    simply act in any way it may deem desirable under the circumstances.” Lucas v. Riverhill Poultry,
    Inc., 
    300 Va. 78
    , 92 (2021). Rather, “the circuit court ‘has a range of choice, and . . . its decision
    will not be disturbed as long as it stays within that range and is not influenced by any mistake of
    law.’” 
    Id. at 93
     (quoting Landrum v. Chippenham and Johnston-Willis Hosps., Inc., 
    282 Va. 346
    ,
    352 (2011)).
    As Shorter’s counsel candidly acknowledged at oral argument, however, neither evidentiary
    objection presented on brief was preserved in the trial court. When the children argued that Johnson
    was not an “interested party” under the Dead Man’s Statute because she had no pecuniary interest in
    the litigation, Shorter offered no argument or explanation in response. Nor did Shorter object when
    Johnson was asked about “Shorter’s reputation for truth and veracity in the community,” and
    Johnson answered that Shorter had a “[r]eputation of being dishonest.” “One of the tenets of
    Virginia’s jurisprudence is that trial counsel must timely object with sufficient specificity to an
    alleged error at trial to preserve that error for appellate review.” Perry v. Commonwealth, 58
    -5-
    Va. App. 655, 666 (2011). Having failed to object contemporaneously, Shorter waived his
    evidentiary objections. See Rule 5A:18.2
    B. Sufficiency of the Evidence (Assignments of Error 3 through 6)
    Shorter also challenges the sufficiency of the evidence supporting the trial court’s finding
    that the 2021 will is invalid. “When a trial court renders judgment after a bench trial, we cannot set
    aside that judgment as contrary to the evidence ‘unless it appears from the evidence that such
    judgment is plainly wrong or without evidence to support it.’” Moncrieffe v. Deno, 
    76 Va. App. 488
    , 496 (2023) (quoting Code § 8.01-680). “When judges sit as factfinders, ‘no less than jurors,’
    we give their determinations ‘the highest degree of appellate deference.’” Id. (quoting Palmer v.
    R.A. Yancey Lumber Corp., 
    294 Va. 140
    , 158 (2017)). “We likewise ‘view the evidence and all
    reasonable inferences drawn from it in the light most favorable to . . . the prevailing party at trial.’”
    
    Id.
     (alteration in original) (quoting Palmer, 
    294 Va. at 159
    ). “In assessing whether the evidence
    supported the trial court’s decision, ‘our appellate review “is not limited to the evidence mentioned
    by a party in trial argument or by the trial court in its ruling.”’” 
    Id.
     (quoting Minh Duy Du v.
    Commonwealth, 
    292 Va. 555
    , 566 (2016)).
    “In a probate proceeding the burden is on the proponent to show by a preponderance of the
    evidence that the purported will was written and executed in the manner prescribed by statute.”
    Canody v. Hamblin, 
    295 Va. 597
    , 603 (2018) (quoting Wilroy v. Halbleib, 
    214 Va. 442
    , 447
    (1974)). Assuming that “the proponent of a will . . . prove[s] compliance with [the] statutory
    requirements for the execution of a will,” the burden shifts to the challenger to prove fraud. Id. at
    605. “The party alleging fraud [or forgery] bears the burden of proving it” by clear and convincing
    evidence. Id. at 603; see also Gulfstream Bldg. Assocs., Inc. v. Britt, 
    239 Va. 178
    , 183 (1990) (“A
    Shorter does not ask that we consider his argument under Rule 5A:18’s ends-of-justice
    2
    or good-cause exceptions, and “we will not invoke them sua sponte.” Williams v.
    Commonwealth, 
    57 Va. App. 341
    , 347 (2010).
    -6-
    finding of extrinsic fraud on the court must be supported by clear and convincing evidence.”);
    Martin v. Williams, 
    194 Va. 437
    , 445-46 (1952) (same). “[C]lear and convincing evidence is ‘that
    degree of proof which produces in the mind of the trier of facts a firm belief or conviction upon the
    allegations sought to be established. It is intermediate proof, more than a mere preponderance but
    less than proof beyond a reasonable doubt.’” Amstutz v. Everett Jones Lumber Corp., 
    268 Va. 551
    ,
    559 (2004) (quoting Oberbroeckling v. Lyle, 
    234 Va. 373
    , 379 (1987)).
    Whether a testator’s signature is genuine presents a “factual question.” Wilroy, 
    214 Va. at 447
    . When conflicting evidence is presented about the authenticity of a testator’s signature, the
    credibility of the witnesses and the weight to be attached to their testimony are questions to be
    resolved by the trial court in its role as fact finder. 
    Id.
     We will not disturb the trial court’s factual
    determinations unless they are “plainly wrong or without evidence to support [them].” Moncrieffe,
    76 Va. App. at 496 (quoting Code § 8.01-680).
    Shorter contends that he met his burden under Code § 64.2-403(C) to prove the validity of
    the 2021 will. He says that the evidence proved that the 2021 will was signed by Cherry in the
    presence of three competent witnesses and “[a]t least two of the witnesses subscribed the will in the
    presence of Ms. Cherry.” Shorter stresses that the UPS employees described their procedure for
    document signings. Based on their custom and habit, Shorter argues, the UPS witnesses established
    that “the will was properly signed by the testator and attested [to] and subscribed by the witnesses.”
    He asserts that, “[c]ontrary to the [t]rial [c]ourt’s ruling, the witnesses and notary are not required to
    read the will and no oaths are required.” Without identifying where in the record the trial court
    issued such a ruling, he contends that the trial court rejected the 2021 will because Johnson testified
    that she did not know what she was signing and because she denied seeing her sister sign it. Shorter
    argues that he carried his burden because he proved “two witness signatures on the will in the
    presence of the testator.”
    -7-
    Assuming without deciding that Shorter met his burden with respect to the statutory
    requirements for the 2021 will, there was enough evidence for the trial court to find by clear and
    convincing evidence that the signatures on the will by Cherry and Johnson were forged.
    Koppenhaver provided uncontroverted expert testimony that the signatures were not authentic, and
    Johnson denied that the signature on the self-proving affidavit was hers. She further testified that
    Cherry never asked her to witness a will on March 4, 2021, only an advance medical directive. And
    the trial court found Johnson’s testimony credible.
    Shorter presented no expert evidence to counter Koppenhaver’s opinion, relying instead on
    the testimony of the two UPS employees. But the trial court was entitled to place little weight on
    their habit-and-custom testimony. The UPS employees could not independently recall the will’s
    execution, and their description of that day depended solely on their typical practice when
    conducting document signings. They also admittedly failed to follow appropriate notary
    procedures. Thus, the trial court could reasonably discredit their testimony, crediting instead
    Koppenhaver’s opinion that Cherry’s signature was forged and Johnson’s certainty that the
    signature on the self-proving affidavit was not hers.3
    CONCLUSION
    Viewed as a whole, the record provided clear and convincing evidence to support the trial
    court’s decision that the signatures by Cherry and Johnson on the 2021 will were forged.
    Accordingly, the trial court did not err by rejecting the 2021 will and admitting the 2002 will to
    probate.
    Affirmed.
    3
    As we affirm the trial court’s judgment in favor of the children, we need not address the
    children’s assignment of cross-error that the trial court erred by denying their motion in limine.
    -8-
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 1904224

Filed Date: 11/21/2023

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 11/21/2023