Toronto Star

Fight over Franklin’s estate deepens

Hundreds of millions of dollars could be hanging in the balance

- BEN SISARIO AND STEVE FRIESS THE NEW YORK TIMES

At Aretha Franklin’s funeral in Detroit a year ago, members of her family, dressed in crisp black and white, filled an aisle in the Greater Grace Temple as they walked together toward her coffin — a solemn image of unity after the death of their matriarch.

That harmony seems all but lost now, as some of Franklin’s closest kin — including her four sons — jockey for control of her estate and trade barbs in court over matters as serious as each other’s competence and as minor as who gets to drive Franklin’s Mercedes-Benz.

Hanging in the balance is an estate some experts estimate could be worth hundreds of millions of dollars — if the family can manage it properly.

“In the business of estate management, everybody in a family has to be on board and move together in a supportive, co-operative manner,” said Jeff Jampol, who manages the estates of Janis Joplin, Otis Redding and the Doors, “or they will tear the fabric of the legacy asunder.”

Family squabbles over celebrity estates are not rare, as infighting over the estates of Prince, James Brown and Tom Petty has made clear. But Franklin’s case is especially complex because determinin­g how she wanted her assets distribute­d involves decipherin­g whether any of the three handscrawl­ed documents found in her home three months ago — one of them under the couch cushions — should be considered her will.

When Franklin died at age 76, her family believed she had no will. Under Michigan law, that meant her estate would be divided equally among her sons. With that understand­ing, the sons approved the appointmen­t of a cousin, Sabrina Owens, as the estate’s personal representa­tive or executor.

But if any will is accepted by the probate judge overseeing the estate, that formula for the distributi­on of assets would be upended, with far-reaching consequenc­es for Franklin’s sons, whose earnings could change — perhaps drasticall­y, depending on which will is declared legitimate. Owens’ status as executor would also be in jeopardy.

“The wills changed everything,” Charlene Glover-Hogan, a lawyer for Kecalf Franklin, the singer’s youngest son, said at a court hearing Aug. 6.

Like their mother, Franklin’s sons for decades have largely kept family matters private. Three of her sons — Clarence, the oldest, along with Kecalf and Edward — were raised together in the Detroit area and for years formed a tight-knit unit, according to the Rev. James Holley, a confidant of Franklin’s who spoke at her funeral. But that connection began to break down once Clarence, who according to court papers has been diagnosed with mental illness, moved into a series of assisted living facilities. He now resides in a group home outside Detroit.

Another son, Ted White Jr., was largely raised by the family of his father, Ted White, Franklin’s former manager, to whom she was married in the 1960s, Owens said.

All four sons, now middleaged adults, have tried to pursue music careers. Kecalf performed as a Christian rapper under the name Kecalf Cunningham to sometimes harsh reviews. Ted White Jr. played guitar for his mother under the name Teddy Richards. Edward Franklin tried to establish himself as a gospel singer.

Clarence, who was born when Franklin was in her early teens, has written a number of songs, including some recorded by his mother. His current condition is unclear. In Franklin’s March 2014 will, the last of three she drafted, she instructed her other sons to check on Clarence’s welfare weekly and “oversee his needs.” But Mildred Gaddis, a radio fixture in Detroit who was a friend of Franklin’s, called Clarence “quite aware, without question,” and added: “There’s this perception out there that he is intellectu­ally deficient. None of that is true.”

Clarence’s court-appointed guardian, Jon Munger, declined to comment on his client’s health, but he has argued that neither the 2014 will, nor two earlier drafts dated in 2010, can be authentica­ted and that they contain contradict­ory instructio­ns and are at points illegible. If Franklin is found to have died without a will, Clarence would receive a onefourth share, like the other sons. But the 2014 will does not even list him as a beneficiar­y, except to the extent that the other sons follow their mother’s written dictate to take care of him.

Kecalf, who favours the 2014 will, has been the most aggressive in court filings. His lawyers complained in court papers that, although the estate has catalogued some assets, it has taken too long to present a complete inventory.

“It is totally unacceptab­le that it has taken a year for the heirs to begin (to) find out what their mother owned on the date of her death,” his lawyers said in a filing.

Kecalf has taken particular aim at Owens, accusing her of mismanagem­ent and petitionin­g the court to take her place in running the estate. Last month, he accused Owens — a University of Michigan administra­tor who has been widely seen as a capable businesswo­man — of “self-dealing” by taking possession of a 2016 Mercedes-Benz sedan owned by Franklin and driving it around.

Owens, the daughter of Aretha’s sister Erma, denied wrongdoing. In court papers, her lawyers said Owens had transferre­d the title of the car to have it insured, not to own or use it, and in a pointed note, added that Kecalf had asked permission for his son to drive the vehicle.

David Bennett, the primary lawyer for the estate, has pulled no punches in attacking Kecalf’s petition, telling the judge, Jennifer Callaghan, that Kecalf lacks “the capability to be a personal representa­tive.” Bennett has also noted that the estate had advanced Kecalf money to pay his criminal lawyer for a drunken-driving arrest last year.

Edward Franklin largely sides with Kecalf about the wills, according to his lawyer, Craig Smith. Ted White Jr. has asked the judge to consider all three wills as representi­ng Franklin’s full wishes and has asked to be named personal representa­tive alongside Owens.

The judge has urged the family to settle its difference­s through a mediator. Under Michigan law, the family could bypass questions of the validity of the wills if all heirs can come to an agreement.

But lawyers connected to the estate said they didn’t expect such discussion­s to begin for months. Owens expressed frustratio­n with the delays.

“When you have to deal with court and court petitions,” she said, “it all takes away from the more positive work that can be done.”

Despite their legal tussles, the broader family is striving to hold together, said Cristal Franklin, another cousin. The Franklin brothers, she said, are on a private email list the family uses to vet the parades, tributes and other Aretha-related events that frequently come up — yet all those events, and the constant media attention, have not given the family “a chance to grieve as normal people.”

“When it comes down to it,” she added, “as a family we’re still sticking with each other, we’re still loving on each other. This has not been easy.”

In court, though, the sons remain apart. Two of them, Edward and Kecalf, attended a recent hearing, where the judge considered whether to allow a distributi­on of some personal items as keepsakes to the sons but also to people like Barack Obama, who Bennett said has asked for the elaborate silver bow hat that Franklin wore to his first inaugurati­on.

Edward and Kecalf sat separately throughout the proceeding. They did not speak to each other.

Although the Franklin estate would appear poised to take in considerab­le future earnings, in the short term it faces mounting financial challenges. Among them are a claim from the Internal Revenue Service for up to $8 million (U.S.) in unpaid taxes and penalties (the estate says it has paid $3 million of that already); a $160,000 civil suit over royalties for Franklin’s 1973 song “Angel”; and — filed this month by Franklin’s sisterin-law Earline — a $43,000 claim for caregiving during Franklin’s final months.

But the most serious financial issue is what impact the discovery of the wills may have on future business. According to Bennett, who represente­d Franklin for nearly 30 years, questions of who controls the estate have disrupted some of its biggest prospects, including an MGM biopic starring Jennifer Hudson and a season of Genius, a scripted series on the National Geographic Channel, that is to be devoted to Franklin.

To some extent, the seeds of the estate’s problems were planted by Franklin. Intent on running her own affairs, she cycled through numerous lawyers over the years and ignored their pleas to write a will — or at least to work with any of them in doing so.

“She was very private, very secretive,” said Dick Alen, her former agent, who added that he was not surprised she had written wills herself. “This was all very typical for her.”

 ?? OWEN SWEENEY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Aretha Franklin’s estate is complex because it involves decipherin­g whether any of the three hand-scrawled documents found in her home three months ago should be considered her will.
OWEN SWEENEY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Aretha Franklin’s estate is complex because it involves decipherin­g whether any of the three hand-scrawled documents found in her home three months ago should be considered her will.

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