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ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS
DIVISION II
No. CV-15-755
CLARRY FOSTER Opinion Delivered February 1, 2017
APPELLANT
V. APPEAL FROM THE SHARP
COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT
ESTATE OF DELETA E. COLLINS, [NO. PR-11-119]
ALPHALEDA VAUGHN, KENNETH
VAUGHN, BARRY WILKINSON,
BEVERLY WILKINSON, BARBARA HONORABLE PHILIP SMITH,
POORMAN, LARRY COLLINS, JUDGE
BARBARA COLLINS, AND TERA
WINELAND
APPELLEES AFFIRMED
PHILLIP T. WHITEAKER, Judge
Appellant Clarry Foster brings this appeal from an order of the probate division of the
Sharp County Circuit Court dismissing her claims on the basis of laches. We previously
ordered that the record be settled and supplemented and that a supplemental abstract, brief,
and addendum be filed. Foster v. Estate of Collins, 2016 Ark. App. 302 (Foster I). Foster has
satisfactorily addressed the deficiencies specified in that opinion. We therefore turn to the
merits of her argument, and we affirm.
We set forth the factual and procedural history of this case in detail in our previous
opinion, and we need not do so again here. In brief, however, Foster was injured in an
automobile accident in 1957; at that time, her father was appointed her guardian and entered
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into a settlement on her behalf. Foster alleged that her father used the proceeds of that
settlement to pay off the family farm, and when the farm was sold some years later, those
proceeds were used to fund two certificates of deposit (CDs) that were placed in the name
of Foster’s mother, Deleta Collins.
Foster alleged in her later-filed complaint that, after her father died in 1990, her
siblings, including appellees Alphaleda Vaughn and Larry Collins, obtained the CDs by fraud,
duress, undue influence, and breach of fiduciary duty. Contending that the CDs had been
funded by the proceeds of her 1957 settlement, Foster requested that the circuit court impose
a constructive trust by operation of law. After numerous proceedings, the circuit court
eventually dismissed Foster’s action on the basis of laches, reasoning that any claim arising
from the alleged misappropriation of funds in the 1950s was barred.1
On appeal, Foster argues that the circuit court’s dismissal of her claims on the grounds
of laches was in error. The issue of laches is one of fact. Royal Oaks Vista, L.L.C. v. Maddox,
372 Ark. 119, 124, 271 S.W.3d 479, 483 (2008). A reviewing court does not reverse the
circuit court’s decision on a question of fact unless it is clearly erroneous. Id. (citing Ark. R.
Civ. P. 52(a)).
1
The supplemental record and addendum that were filed following our opinion in
Foster I revealed that the proceedings below originated as a complaint filed by Deleta Collins
against several of her children in the small-claims division of the Sharp County District
Court. After having judgment entered against her there, Collins appealed to the Sharp
County Circuit Court. Following Collins’s death in 2011, the proceedings were consolidated
by agreement of the parties in the probate division of the Sharp County Circuit Court.
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We must affirm the circuit court’s decision. Foster’s brief is lengthy and somewhat
confusing. She begins by reciting the facts of the case and its procedural background, and she
addresses the deficiencies that we pointed out in Foster I, explaining why certain matters were
omitted from the record and addendum. She then summarizes the deposition testimony that
was introduced in this case as well as the arguments that were made before the circuit court.
She next provides us with a section entitled “Law.” Here, she begins with a citation
to the statutory rule against perpetuities.2 Foster suggests that her “interest was created in
1957 with the trust created from her settlement proceeds from her accident.” Aside from
citing the statute, however, she makes no compelling argument as to how this statute
compels reversal; moreover, the circuit court’s order did not rule on her rule-against-
perpetuities argument. The issue is therefore not preserved for our review. See Black v. Duffie,
2016 Ark. App. 584, at 33 (noting that, in order to preserve an issue for appellate review, an
appellant is obligated to obtain a specific ruling on it from the circuit court).
Next, Foster cites two cases for the proposition that the doctrine of laches is applicable
only where equitable relief is sought and that it is “not applicable to actions for . . . the
recovery of money or property fraudulently obtained.” Warford v. Union Bank of Benton, 2010
Ark. App. 635, at 5, 378 S.W.3d 239, 243; see also Anadarko Petroleum v. Venable, 312 Ark.
330, 850 S.W.2d 302 (1993). She does not go on to analyze how these cases are applicable
2
This statute, Arkansas Code Annotated section 18-3-101(a)(2) (Repl. 2015),
provides that a nonvested property interest is invalid unless, when the interest is created, it
is certain to vest or terminate no later than twenty-one years after the death of an individual
then alive.
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to her situation. That failure, however, is immaterial, because Foster never raised this specific
argument below. It is therefore not preserved for appellate review. See Young v. Welch, 2016
Ark. App. 614, at 3.
Foster then provides a series of numbered sections titled (1) “Principal and
Agent—Power of Attorney—Fiduciary Duty,” (2) “Constructive Trust,” (3) “Unjust
Enrichment,” (4) “Confidential Relation,” and (5) “Undue Influence.” These sections
consist of block quotes from caselaw. She concludes this portion of her brief with conclusory
statements that her siblings owed a fiduciary relationship to their mother, that her father
committed fraud when he converted her settlement in the late 1950s, and that her siblings
committed fraud when they converted Collins’s CDs. Foster makes no cogent legal argument
as to why any of these allegations should cause us to conclude that the circuit court’s findings
regarding laches were erroneous. It is a well-settled principle of appellate law that we will not
make a party’s argument for him or her. Running M Farms, Inc. v. Farm Bureau Mut. Ins. Co.
of Ark., 371 Ark. 308, 316, 265 S.W.3d 740, 745 (2007); Kinchen v. Wilkins, 367 Ark. 71, 238
S.W.3d 94 (2006); Ark. Dep’t of Human Servs. v. Schroder, 353 Ark. 885, 122 S.W.3d 10
(2003).
Finally, Foster concludes with two short paragraphs with no citation to authority. She
suggests that “if this court denies [her] claim for an implied or constructive trust, [she] claims
the CDs in the amount of $62,000 belong to the estate of Deleta Collins,” and “Alphaleda
Vaughn, as administrator or personal representative, has a duty to account for the assets of
the decedent while she, Vaughn, held a fiduciary position with her, including the rent for
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the mobile home she charged [Collins] for 20 years which was purchased with [Collins’s]
money.” This court “generally decline[s] to consider points that are incomprehensible and
lacking in convincing authority or argument. Watkins v. Paragould Light & Water Comm’n,
2016 Ark. App. 432, at 8, ___ S.W.3d ___, ___ (citing Howard v. Adams, 2016 Ark. App.
222, 490 S.W.3d 678). We therefore decline to address these final undeveloped issues that
Foster raises on appeal.
Affirmed.
HARRISON and KLAPPENBACH , JJ., agree.
Larry J. Steele PLC, by: Larry J. Steele, for appellant.
No response.
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