Court Opinion

ID: 9896024
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-11-09 15:07:11.835975+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:13:53.999299
License: Public Domain

RENDERED: NOVEMBER 3, 2023; 10:00 A.M.
                       NOT TO BE PUBLISHED

               Commonwealth of Kentucky
                         Court of Appeals
                            NO. 2023-CA-0139-MR

TRACY NAPIER AND FAIRLEY
DEWAYNE NAPIER                                                   APPELLANTS

                 APPEAL FROM JACKSON CIRCUIT COURT
v.                HONORABLE OSCAR G. HOUSE, JUDGE
                        ACTION NO. 21-CI-00073

GREG COMBS, INDIVIDUALLY,
AND IN HIS CAPACITY AS
EXECUTOR OF THE ESTATE OF
SHARON ANN COMBS, DECEASED;
JOEY COMBS; AND SANDRA
COMBS TAYLOR                                                       APPELLEES

                                 OPINION
                                REVERSING
                              AND REMANDING

                                 ** ** ** ** **

BEFORE: COMBS, JONES, AND MCNEILL, JUDGES.

COMBS, JUDGE: Appellants, Tracy Napier and Fairley Dewayne Napier, appeal

the summary judgment of the Jackson Circuit Court that was entered on January 4,
2023, concerning the provisions of the joint will of Sharon Combs (the Napiers’

mother) and Buford Combs, her husband. After our review, we reverse and

remand.

             At the time of their marriage, each of the Combses had children from

previous marriages. Buford was 15 years older than Sharon. They agreed to

execute a joint will, which was drafted by an attorney, Phyllis L. Robinson, in

2013. In its entirety, provided as follows:

             We, Sharon Ann Combs and Buford Combs, being over
             18 years of age, being of sound mind and disposing
             memory, and realizing the natural objects of our bounty,
             do hereby make, publish, and declare this instrument of
             writing to be our Joint Will, hereby revoking any and all
             wills by us heretofore made and agreeing that this is a
             contract to make a will.

                                      ITEM 1

             We direct and nominate Greg Combs as Executor and he
             shall pay all our just debts and funeral expenses
             forthwith.

                                    ITEM ll (sic)

             We, Sharon Ann Combs and Buford Combs, in the event
             we die in a common disaster or so close in time as to
             make separate estates impractical, bequeath and/or
             devise, to the following named children, all monies,
             personal belongings, personal effects, life insurance, or
             any other personalty that we may own at the time of our
             respective deaths to our children to be divided by them.

             We devise our home in fee simple and with absolute
             ownership to them and with direction to sell and divide

                                         -2-
             the proceeds equally between Greg Combs, Sandra
             Combs Taylor, Joey Combs, Tracy Lee Napier, and
             Fairley Dwayne Napier.

Buford Combs died on October 12, 2020, at the age of 81. Based on a petition to

the court, an order dispensing with administration of his estate was entered in

Jackson District Court on November 17, 2020. The petition stated that Buford

Combs died intestate.

             Sharon Ann Combs died unexpectantly a couple of months later on

January 5, 2021. She was 67 years of age. The Napiers were appointed co-

administrators of her estate. In April 2021, Greg Combs filed a petition to probate

an unsigned copy of the joint will as a lost, misplaced, or destroyed last will and

testament. Following a hearing, Greg Combs was appointed executor of the estate,

and a copy of the unsigned joint will was admitted to probate.

             On June 29, 2021, Tracy Napier and Fairley Dewayne Napier filed a

declaratory judgment action in Jackson Circuit Court. Because Sharon Ann

Combs and Buford Combs had not died in a common disaster “or so close in time

as to make separate estates impractical,” the Napiers contended that their mother

died intestate.

             The Combs heirs answered the complaint and filed a counterclaim.

They contended that Sharon Ann Combs and Buford Combs intended to divide the

entirety of their estates equally among Greg Combs, Sandra Combs Taylor, Joey

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Combs, Tracy Lee Napier, and Fairley Dewayne Napier. They argued that the

court should interpret the will in conformity with that intention. In the alternative,

they contended that the trial court should reform the will by striking the clause “in

the event we die in a common disaster or so close in time as to make separate

estates impractical” as being “nonsensical.” The Napiers replied to the

counterclaim and denied that the will could be reformed.

             In January 2022, the Napiers filed a motion for judgment on the

pleadings. They argued that the provisions of the joint will were clear and

unambiguous and that neither event addressed by the provisions of the will had

come to pass. The Combses opposed the motion. They argued that language of

the will was ambiguous, nonsensical, and/or a result of scrivener’s error. They

attached to their response the sworn testimony of attorneys Phyllis Robinson and

Juliana Coffey, who testified before the district court in April 2021. The circuit

court denied the motion for judgment on the pleadings by order entered on March

8, 2022. The Napiers filed a motion requesting a final hearing.

             On March 25, 2022, the Combses filed a motion for summary

judgment. They again argued that the disputed provision was ambiguous,

nonsensical, and/or a result of scrivener’s error.

             The Napiers filed a response. They contended that the provisions of

the will were clear; i.e., that in the event the couple died simultaneously or nearly

                                          -4-
simultaneously, the children would share equally the couple’s estate. In light of

the substantial difference in the couple’s ages, the Napiers argued that it was

reasonable for the couple to have assumed that Buford likely would die first; that,

thereafter, the assets of the estate would be consumed entirely or largely in support

of Sharon Ann; and that, thereafter, Sharon Ann would dispose of her own estate at

the time of her death. But in the event that they died together or at nearly the same

time, the couple made provision for the estates that they would leave behind. The

Napiers argued that the court was not at liberty to consider the testimony of the

attorneys in order to vary the will’s plain meaning.

             Judgment was entered in the circuit court on January 4, 2023. The

court concluded that proceeds from the sale of the real property would be equally

divided among the parties; that the provision concerning the personalty was

“inconclusive and nonsensical”; and that it would rely upon extrinsic evidence in

order to ascertain the intent of Sharon Ann Combs. It concluded that there was no

better source than Phyllis Robinson, who drafted the instrument and testified that

Buford and Sharon Ann intended to divide their estates equally between Greg

Combs, Sandra Combs Taylor, Joey Combs, Tracy Lee Napier, and Fairley

Dewayne Napier. “This assertion is corroborated by Attorney Juliana Coffey, who

met with Sharon Ann Combs to discuss the estate of Buford Combs.”

                                         -5-
                The court concluded and ruled that Sharon Ann Combs did not intend

to die intestate; that the will did not clearly dispose of her property; and that

extrinsic evidence proved that she intended for her estate to be divided equally

among her children and stepchildren. The Napiers’ motion for a final hearing was

denied as moot. This timely appeal followed.

                On appeal, the Napiers argue that the circuit court erred by granting

summary judgment to the Combses. They argue that the language of the will is

plain and that the couple’s estate was to be divided among all five children if and

only if Buford and Sharon Ann died together or so close in time as to make

separate estates impractical. We agree that the language is unambiguous in support

of the Napiers’ contention.

                Summary judgment is properly granted where “the pleadings,

depositions, answers to interrogatories, stipulations, and admissions on file,

together with the affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any

material fact and that the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of

law.” CR1 56.03. Because summary judgment involves only questions of law and

not the resolution of disputed material facts, we do not defer to the trial court’s

decision. Goldsmith v. Allied Building Components, Inc., 833 S.W.2d 378 (Ky.

1
    Kentucky Rules of Civil Procedure.

                                           -6-
1992). Instead, we must review the decision de novo. Cumberland Valley Contrs.,

Inc. v. Bell County Coal Corp., 238 S.W.3d 644 (Ky. 2007).

             The will of a testator is, without exception, the last word concerning

disposition of his estate. Huffman v. Payne, 300 S.W.2d 785 (Ky. 1957). “When

his lips are sealed, the courts must be very careful not to make a redistribution of

his property on the basis of parol proof that he had a different intention from that

expressed, or because it would be more beneficial to one of the objects of his

bounty if a different disposition was made.” Id. at 786-87. “If verbal declarations

of a testator were admissible in interpreting a will, it can be readily seen that the

proof of such declarations might result in an entire change of the intentions of the

testator as expressed in the will . . . .” Martin v. Palmer, 193 Ky. 25, 234 S.W.

742, 743 (1921). “[I]t is a universal principle that, where there is no ambiguity

arising from the language of the will as to the subjects of devise or the objects

thereof, extrinsic testimony is not admissible for the purpose of showing that it was

the intention of the testator to refer to a different object than the one named in the

will . . . .” Violett’s Adm’r v. Violett, 217 Ky. 59, 288 S.W. 1016, 1018 (1926). “It

is only where the language of a will is uncertain and doubtful, or contains a latent

ambiguity, that extrinsic evidence may be admitted for the purpose of explaining

the will, the situation of the testator, and the facts and circumstances surrounding

                                          -7-
him at the time of the execution of the will.” White v. Ponder, 180 Ky. 386, 202

S.W. 867, 869 (1918).

             The couple’s joint will provides for the disposition of their estates

only where they either died in a common disaster or so close in time as to make

separate estates impractical. If either of these two events had occured, the will

directed that their personal property be bequeathed and their real property devised

in fee simple to their five children. However, where neither of these events

occurred, the will did not dispose of any part of their estates.

             Providing for such a contingency is not uncommon; their decision to

do so was entirely reasonable. The will is clear on its face; it specifically

designates its purpose. It is short, definite, and wholly unambiguous. A reading of

its provisions is not “inconclusive,” nor are its provisions “nonsensical.” Instead,

its meaning is plainly expressed by the words used. Consequently, reference to

extrinsic evidence was not only unnecessary but wholly impermissible under the

circumstances of this case.

             The summary judgment of the Jackson Circuit Court is reversed, and

this case is remanded for entry of judgment consistent with this Opinion.

             ALL CONCUR.

                                          -8-
BRIEF FOR APPELLANT:    BRIEF FOR APPELLEE:

Darrell A. Herald       Ross E. Murray
Jackson, Kentucky       McKee, Kentucky

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