Lead Opinion
Aрpellant Bervie Lawrence brings this appeal following the trial court’s determination that her father, decedent Willie John Balentine, was a resident of Lee County, Arkansas, for purposes of the administration of his estate. For reversаl, appellant argues that the trial court erred in determining that the decedent was residing in Lee County at the time of his death. We reverse and remand.
The decedent executed a will in August 1997 in which he acknowledged that at that time he was a rеsident of Lexa, Arkansas (Lee County), and provided for the distribution of his estate equally among his three children, appellant Bervie Lawrence, appellee Delma Sullivan, and Hugh John Balentine. The will further provided that appellant be appointed executrix. The decedent was born in Stone County, but he moved to Lee County as a young man in 1945. Mr. Balentine raised his family in Lee County and owned a residence there. Due to his declining health, Mr. Balentine moved in with his daughter, appellee Delma Sullivan, at her Lee County home in March 1998. The relationship between Mr. Balentine and his daughter Delma soured during the year he lived with her, and by the spring of 1999, Delma insisted that he move in with appellant at her home in Stone County. He took оnly a few personal belongings with him because appellant’s house could not accommodate more. Also in the spring of 1999, Mr. Balentine deeded his acreage and house in Lee County to his three children, but he left his truck and the majority оf his personal belongings there. Mr. Balentine lived with appellant for more than three years, until he passed away in a Stone County hospital at the age of ninety-two on October 10, 2002.
Appellee filed a petition to probate their father’s will in Lee County and requested to be named the executrix of the estate. Appellant filed a petition to dismiss alleging that their father had not resided in Lee County since 1999 and that Lee County was not the proper venue. After hearing tеstimony on the matter, the trial court determined that Lee County was the proper venue because (1) Mr. Balentine would have returned to Lee County to live had his health permitted; (2) Mr. Balentine owned no real property in Lee County at his death, but he was to receive rental income from the property; and (3) Mr. Balentine’s household furniture, clothes, quilts, truck and personal bank account remained in Lee County. This appeal followed.
Appellant argues that the trial сourt failed to recognize the distinction between “residence” and “domicile” under Ark. Code Ann. § 28-40-102 (Repl. 2004). We must agree. Arkansas Code Annotated section 28-40-102(a)(l) (Repl. 2004) provides that the venue for the probate of a will and the administration of a decedent’s estate is the county where the decedent resided at the time of his or her death. Under our case law, the distinction between the terms “domicile” and “residence” is often subtle; however, our supreme court has consistently held that the terms are not synonymous. Leathers v. Warmack,
Venue refers to the geographic area, i.e., the county or district, where an action is brought to trial. Meny v. Norris,
Our supreme court explained in Goodwin v. Harrison,
Domicile is of broader meaning than residence. Missouri Pacific R.R. Co. v. Lawrence,
[A]n established abode, fixed permanendy for a time for business or other purpose, although there may be an intent existing all the while to return ... at some time or other to the true domicile; but so difficult is it found to provide a definition to meet all the varying phases of circumstance that the determination of this question may present, that the courts say, that, subject to the general rule, each case must be decided on its own state of facts.
Davis v. Holt,
As applied to the present appeal, Mr. Balentine may well have been domiciled in Lee County, but thаt is not the relevant query. The venue statute mandates that the probate action be heard where the decedent “resided at the time of his death.” The facts were not in dispute, such that there were no credibility determinations to be made. The dissenting judges’ reliance on Morris v. Garmon, supra, is misplaced given that Morris v. Garmon acknowledged that the decedent had changed her residence in order to accommodate her ill health, but had not effected a change in domicile. We agree with the dissenting judges that Morris v. Garmon, supra, is “factually akin” to the present appeal, but its holding supports reversal. We hold that Mr. Balentine may have had more than one residence, but he could only reside in one place at the time of his death, which was in Stone County.
We reverse and remand.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting. I disagree with the majority’s determination that, for purposes of the probation of his will and the administration of his estate, Willie John Balentine was a resident of Stone County at the time оf his death. As the majority states, Arkansas Code Annotated section 28-40-102(a)(1) provides that the venue for the probate of a will and the administration of a decedent’s estate is the county where the decedent resided at the time of his or hеr death.
A person’s “residence” is the place of actual abode, not a home that a person expects to occupy at some future time. Leathers v. Warmack,
In Smith v. Rudolph,
On the other hand, in Monis v. Garmon,
With respect to the second point, we cannot say the finding as to domicile was clearly erroneous. “To effect a change of residence or domicile, there must be an actual abandonment of the first domicile, coupled with an intention not to return to it, and there must be a new domicile acquired by actual residence in another place or jurisdiction, with the intention of making the last-acquired residence a permanent home.” The intent to abandon one’s domicile and take up another must be ascertained from all the facts and circumstances in any particular case.
Here, the decedent was a long time resident of Ft. Smith. After her fall there was no one to care for her in her home so she was moved to nursing homes, first to Oklahoma, then to Texas. While in the Ft. Worth nursing home, she fell again, prolonging her convalescence in Ft.Worth.
After Mrs. Morrison was moved to Oklahoma, and thereafter in the Texas nursing home, her home in Ft. Smith was kept in a state of readiness for her return. None of the furniture was removed, utilities were kept on, her car was parked in the carport and the yard was regularly maintained, all with her knowledge and approval. She maintained her membеrship in the First United Methodist Church of Ft. Smith and on numerous occasions expressed to her grandchildren and to neighbors a steadfast hope of returning to her home in Ft. Smith — to be with friends, and to engage in normal activities. Although there was evidence of a contrary intent, we cannot say the finding of the probate judge was clearly erroneous.
Our holding in Oakes v. Oakes, [219 Ark. 363 ,242 S.W2d 128 (1951)], is instructive. Mrs. Oakes, an Arkansas domiciliary, developed tuberculosis and entered a sanitarium in New Mexico in 1947. She took only her clothing, leaving her furniturе and household goods in her home in Arkansas. Her two children went to five with grandparents in Texas. She returned to Arkansas three years later to testify in the divorce case she had filed against her husband. She told the court she planned to return to the sanitarium for an indefinite duration. We found no evidence that Mrs. Oakes had acquired a new domicile and added: “A change of residence for the purpose of benefiting [sic] one’s health does not usually effect a change of dоmicile. Such a change is looked upon as temporary merely, even though the actual time spent in the new residence may be long.”
Morris v. Gannon,
In the instant case, the decedent did not take everything he possessed to Stone County as in Smith v. Rudolph, supra. He left Lee County not because he intended to make Stone County his residence, but because he could not cook or bathe himself, placing this case factually akin to Morris v. Garmon, supra. Prior to his move to Stone County, thе decedent did these things with the assistance of appellee until their relationship soured. Thereafter, from April 1999 until his death, the decedent was a boarder in appellant’s home in Stone County, Arkansas. The decedent took with him only a fеw of his belongings, including a few clothes, some pictures, his Bible, shotgun, phonebook, and fishing equipment. He left his home in Lee County in a state of readiness for his return. None of the furniture was removed and his car remained parked in front of his home. He even maintained a bank account in Lee County. Bearing these facts in mind, the decedent went to Stone County because of health concerns, and this move did not effect a change of his residency from Lee County.
I am authorized to state that Judge Gladwin joins me in this dissent.
