Politics

Texas Supreme Court justice’s oversight of trust belonging to millionaire with dementia raises ethics concerns

In January 2022, Elvie Kingston’s dementia took a turn for the worse. The 76-year-old millionaire and longtime conservative activist was declared by a doctor to be partially incapacitated, after which she signed legal documents that removed her family’s right to make decisions about her health and finances. Two years later, those powers remain almost entirely…

man talking to judge in court room
Texas Supreme Court Justice John Devine listens to Douglas Alexander make oral arguments in the cases Abbott v. City of San Antonio, Abbott v. Jenkins, and Abbott v. Harris County on Feb. 22. 2023 in Austin. Photo Credit: Sara Diggins/Austin American-Statesman via REUTERS

Ethics concerns

Devine has for decades been a fixture of Texas’ conservative Christian legal movement. He has called church-state separation a “myth,” once fought to have the Ten Commandments posted in his courtroom and, in his 2011 bid for the Texas Supreme Court, claimed to have been arrested 37 times at anti-abortion protests before becoming a judge.

“Things got sour”

Documents provided by Hartman show that, in 2018, Kingston met with her longtime estate attorney to draft changes that apparently would have given full control of her will, estate and trust to Hartman and Hartman’s daughter in the event of her death — and supplanted Devine as successor trustee. Kingston paid the firm $3,250 for a consultation, but was refunded after deciding not to move forward with the changes, according to a note on the invoice. Kingston’s attorney did not respond to an interview request, and it’s unclear why she did not proceed with the plan.

A fast decline