Kiefer v. Kiefer (In Re Estate of Kiefer)
2017 Ohio 6997
Ohio Ct. App. 9th2017Background
- Decedent John Kiefer died in July 2013 leaving assets (~$3.7M), including a multigenerational family farm. He was survived by his wife Kimberly (married 2010) and his only child, Jason.
- John executed a will in May 2009 leaving the real estate (including the farm) to Kim and small cash/govt bond bequests to Jason. After marrying Kim in January 2010, John changed beneficiaries on multiple investment accounts to Kim and executed a final will (March 31, 2010) identical to the 2009 will except for Kim’s married surname. He also executed financial and health-care powers of attorney naming Kim.
- Jason filed suit November 2013 contesting the 2010 will and post-marriage beneficiary changes, alleging lack of testamentary capacity and undue influence (and seeking to set aside beneficiary designations). A jury found the will and beneficiary changes valid; the probate court entered judgment May 2, 2016. Jason’s motion for a new trial was denied; he appealed.
- Jason argued the court should have instructed the jury that a confidential or fiduciary relationship between John and Kim would create a presumption of undue influence. He also sought a new trial based on alleged jury misconduct (a domineering juror who prompted one juror to leave deliberations).
- The probate court refused the requested presumption instruction and handled the juror incident by interviewing the juror and giving a modified Allen charge; Jason did not object at trial to the court’s handling.
Issues
| Issue | Plaintiff's Argument | Defendant's Argument | Held |
|---|---|---|---|
| Whether a confidential/fiduciary relationship between spouse and surviving spouse creates a presumption of undue influence that shifts the burden of proof | Kiefer: marital relationship plus powers of attorney and cohabitation created a confidential/fiduciary relationship, triggering a presumption of undue influence | Kim: marital relationship alone does not give rise to the presumption; no suspicious circumstances existed and powers of attorney were contemporaneous or post‑dated the dispositive decisions | Court: No presumption arises solely from marriage or from contemporaneous POAs; plaintiff needed additional "suspicious circumstances" and record lacked them — instruction properly refused |
| Whether juror misconduct required a new trial | Kiefer: a juror dominated deliberations, intimidated others, and caused a juror to leave — warrants a new trial | Kim: court properly investigated, questioned the juror, gave instruction (modified Allen), parties agreed on procedure; plaintiff failed to preserve any objection | Court: Plaintiff forfeited the claim by not objecting or requesting a mistrial at trial; denial of new trial affirmed |
Key Cases Cited
- Murphy v. Carrollton Mfg. Co., 61 Ohio St.3d 585 (Ohio 1991) (standard for when requested jury instructions should be given)
- AAAA Ent., Inc. v. River Place Community Urban Redevelopment Corp., 50 Ohio St.3d 157 (Ohio 1990) (abuse of discretion defined for appellate review)
- West v. Henry, 173 Ohio St. 498 (Ohio 1961) (elements of undue influence)
- Stone v. Davis, 66 Ohio St.2d 74 (Ohio 1981) (definition of fiduciary relationship)
- Krischbaum v. Dillon, 58 Ohio St.3d 58 (Ohio 1991) (when presumption of undue influence arises for attorney–client beneficiary)
- Lah v. Rogers, 125 Ohio App.3d 164 (Ohio Ct. App.) (blood relationships do not automatically create undue-influence presumption)
- In re Scott, 111 Ohio App.3d 273 (Ohio Ct. App.) (holder of power of attorney can have fiduciary relationship with principal)
- State v. Rogers, 143 Ohio St.3d 385 (Ohio 2015) (forfeiture/waiver explained: failure to timely object preserves no error on appeal)
