Kellie Pickler is refusing to be steamrolled by her late husband’s parents in an increasingly tense legal fight over his belongings.

In new court documents filed March 28, the country singer asked a Tennessee judge to throw out what she calls an “improper” subpoena from Kyle Jacobs’ parents, Reed and Sharon Jacobs—a demand that includes everything from firearms to a grand piano.

Kellie Pickler looks somber as court documents reveal her calling her in-laws’ demands “absurd” in a heated estate dispute.

The legal dispute, first reported by In Touch, began after Pickler declined to take on the role of estate administrator following Kyle’s death in 2023. That duty fell to Reed and Sharon, who have since accused Kellie of holding on to personal property they believe belongs to them—items they say were owned by Kyle before his passing.

But Kellie’s court filing clarifies that she’s not handing anything over without a fight.

A Subpoena With Demands Kellie Calls Unsafe and Unreasonable

In her response, Kellie blasted the subpoena not just for being invalid but also for what it asked of her. The document reportedly ordered her to appear at a law office and bring with her a long list of large and dangerous items, including a gun safe, several firearms, and a Steinway grand piano. According to filings obtained by In Touch and The Blast, she called those expectations “unsafe and frankly absurd.”

Kellie’s legal team further argued that the subpoena wasn’t a formal court order and couldn’t be used as grounds to hold her in contempt. Instead, she insists that the entire dispute be resolved in civil court, where she has already filed a separate petition asking the court to determine the rightful ownership of the contested items.

Reed and Sharon Jacobs want a Rolex watch, a bin of baseball card albums, musical instruments, school awards, Kyle’s iPhone, and a hard drive containing personal materials returned. They also referenced a copy of Kyle’s prenuptial agreement to support their claim over specific assets.

But Kellie’s side says some of those items aren’t even in her possession—and that the ownership of others is very much in dispute. Her filing states that the list includes “items that [Kellie] either does not have in her possession or over which right, title and possession are disputed.”

The legal war comes a year after the tragic death of Kyle Jacobs, a respected Nashville songwriter who worked with country greats like Tim McGraw and Garth Brooks. He died in February 2023 at the age of 49 from a self-inflicted g#nsh#t wound.

Kellie and Kyle had been together since 2008 and married since 2011. After his passing, Kellie cooperated with Kyle’s parents and even allowed them into her home to collect some of his personal belongings. But the cooperation didn’t last.

Now, Reed and Sharon are accusing their former daughter-in-law of providing inconsistent information about what she has and where it is. They claim Kellie previously acknowledged keeping certain items, which she now says she doesn’t have.

Kellie, for her part, contends that her in-laws removed items from the home without providing a full inventory. That lack of documentation, she says, is part of why she’s now fighting to have the court settle who owns what.

With both a probate case and a civil case running simultaneously, the legal tangle is far from over. Reed and Sharon are still pushing for Kellie to be held in contempt for ignoring their subpoena. But unless a judge rules otherwise, Kellie says she’s under no legal obligation to comply—and she’s standing firm.

In Touch, which first broke the story, reports that neither side is showing signs of backing down. What started as a grieving family’s effort to recover personal belongings has turned into a courtroom standoff over what’s property—and what’s memory.