A jury has been selected in Michigan in a dispute over the estate of music superstar Aretha Franklin. Before that, a judge narrowed the issues, saying the only task at trial is to decide whether a 2014 document handwritten by the Queen of Soul can be accepted as a valid will. Franklin died in 2018 at age 76. But five years later, her estate remains unsettled. A son, Ted White II, believes a 2010 handwritten will should mainly control the estate. But two other sons, Kecalf Franklin and Edward Franklin, are in favor of a 2014 document. Both were discovered months after she died.