
A $15 MILLION LEGAL BATTLE DISMANTLED HIS PHYSICAL ESTATE — BUT A DECADE OF COURTROOM WARS COULD NOT TOUCH THE VOICE THAT ONCE HEALED MILLIONS.
On June 5, 1993, Conway Twitty passed away suddenly from an abdominal aortic aneurysm at a hospital in Springfield, Missouri. The country music world lost a giant who had accumulated 55 number-one hits, but behind the scenes, a quiet oversight quickly transformed his historic legacy into a decade-long legal battle. The singer left behind an un-updated will that predated his marriage to his third wife, Delores “Dee” Henry, by several years.
Because the legal document had not been revised to reflect his current family structure, it triggered an immediate and bitter collision in the legal system. Under Tennessee law, a surviving spouse is entitled to an elective share of an estate regardless of what an old will dictates. This legal reality sparked a grueling dispute between the widow and Twitty’s four adult children—Michael, Joni, Kathy, and Jimmy Jenkins—over an estate estimated at roughly $15 million.
The battle stretched for years, moving through probate courts all the way to the Tennessee Court of Appeals. The courtroom war was not just a simple disagreement over liquid cash. Instead, it became a fight over the heavy weight of his very identity, involving high-stakes arguments over publishing royalties, name and likeness rights, and the future control of a massive musical catalog.
As the years dragged on, legal fees mounted into hundreds of thousands of dollars, and the conflict deepened. The financial strain eventually forced the family to make decisions that altered the landscape of the singer’s legacy. The physical manifestation of his life’s work began to crumble under the pressure of the litigation.
Twitty City, the sprawling 9-acre entertainment complex in Hendersonville, Tennessee, became the ultimate casualty of the war. Twitty had originally built the multi-million dollar property specifically to keep his children close—building homes for them on the grounds—and to give his dedicated fans a welcoming place to gather. In 1994, the gates were forced to close permanently. The property was auctioned off for $3.4 million to the Trinity Broadcasting Network, and priceless personal artifacts were scattered to the highest bidders.
The exact place designed to unify his loved ones was systematically dismantled by the gavel. The children watched as their childhood homes and their father’s dream complex were transformed into a religious broadcasting center.
Yet, his children refused to let their father’s name become nothing more than a legal case study found in law books. They fought through financial exhaustion and the emotional weight of public scrutiny to protect what mattered most. While the physical buildings were gone, the siblings worked together to eventually reclaim and manage the rights to his intellectual property, driven by a singular need to protect the authenticity of the man who raised them.
The court system successfully divided his assets, distributed his money, and sold his home, but it lacked the power to rewrite his contribution to American music. Long after the neon lights of Twitty City went dark and the property changed hands, the needle still drops on his classic recordings every single day. The enduring power of his music proved that a true artist’s spirit always outlives the heartbreak left behind in the courtroom.