Akins v. Edmondson

207 S.W.3d 300, 2006 Tenn. App. LEXIS 397
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJune 12, 2006
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 207 S.W.3d 300 (Akins v. Edmondson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Akins v. Edmondson, 207 S.W.3d 300, 2006 Tenn. App. LEXIS 397 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

OPINION

FRANK G. CLEMENT, JR., J.,

delivered the opinion of the court,

in which WILLIAM C. KOCH, JR., P.J., M.S., and WILLIAM B. CAIN, J., joined.

This is an action by a non-client of a law firm, contending she sustained pecuniary damages due to the acts and omissions of the law firm. The non-client, Margaret Akins, served as the attorney-in-fact for an aged, blind and infirm lady, Josephine Notgrass. In her capacity as attorney-in-fact, Ms. Akins engaged an accounting firm to render professional services for Ms. Notgrass, including tax services and estate planning. The accounting firm recommended the creation of a limited partnership as a vehicle for annual gifting, which the client approved; whereupon the accounting firm engaged the law firm to prepare a limited partnership agreement. Preparation of the partnership agreement was the only service for which the law firm was engaged, and the law firm had no communication or consultation with the client, Ms. Notgrass, or her attorney-in-fact, Ms. Akins. All communications went through the accounting firm. Ms. Not-grass died soon after the partnership agreement was executed, and only one annual gift had been perfected at the time of her death. Contending the inheritance she expected was substantially diminished by the law firm’s failure to suggest amending the will after the creation of the limited partnership, Ms. AMns brought this action. The trial court summarily dismissed the complaint finding Ms. Akins was not a client of the law firm and the firm owed no duty to Ms. Akins. We affirm in all respects.

*303 Ms. AMns’ relationship with Ms. Not-grass began in the 1970s when Ms. AMns was in high school. Ms. Notgrass was teaching high-school French and piano, and Ms. AMns was one of her students. While under Ms. Notgrass’ tutelage, Ms. AMns developed a close relationship with her and eventually followed in her footsteps by continuing her education and teaching music at Cumberland College in Lebanon, TN. After teaching, Ms. AMns earned her real estate license and eventually her law degree.

Ms. Notgrass’ husband passed away in 1989, after which, Ms. AMns began staying with and caring for Ms. Notgrass. Ms. AMns eventually moved in with Ms. Not-grass, and for the last few years of Ms. Notgrass’ life, Ms. AMns lived with Ms. Notgrass and was her primary caregiver.

In 1991, Ms. Notgrass had a codicil prepared for her 1989 will, and in the codicil she deleted and revised bequests to her family members. This codicil was followed by a will that Ms. Notgrass executed in 1994 in which Ms. Notgrass bequeathed her Monroe County dairy farm to Ms. AMns. Ms. Notgrass also had stock in Valley Bank and the Farm Bureau, which she devised to Ms. AMns. The 1991 codicil and the 1994 will were prepared for Ms. Notgrass by an attorney in Madisonville, Tennessee. The Madisonville attorney also prepared a general and durable power of attorney designating Ms. AMns as attorney-in-fact for Ms. Notgrass.

With the power of attorney in hand, Ms. AMns returned to Nashville. In 1996, when Ms. Notgrass was in declining health, Ms. AMns engaged the Nashville accounting firm of Marlin & Edmondson to provide various services for Ms. Notgrass, including income tax and estate planning services. Ms. AMns specifically requested the accounting firm examine and revise Ms. Notgrass’ federal income tax returns to minimize Ms. Notgrass’ taxable estate. Marlin & Edmondson designated Scott Shepard, an accountant working in its estate planning section, to provide the estate planning services for Ms. Notgrass.

As a method for reducing Ms. Notgrass’ taxable estate, Shepard recommended the creation of a limited partnership 1 in conjunction with a series of annual tax exempt gifts 2 of her interest in the limited partnership. Ms. AMns approved Shepard’s recommendations. To implement the plan, and with Ms. AMns’ consent, Shepard contacted attorney Beth Edmondson of the law firm of Gullett, Sanford, Robinson & Martin (collectively referred to as “Gul-lett”) and engaged the law firm on behalf of Ms. Notgrass to prepare the limited partnership agreement. Pursuant to Shepard’s recommended estate plan, Ms. Notgrass was to be the general partner, Ms. AMns was to be the only limited partner, and all of the assets of the partnership were to be provided by Ms. Notgrass. Ms. AMns’ initial interest in the partnership was to be a gift from Ms. Notgrass, and the estate plan called for Ms. Not-grass to make additional annual gifts of partnership interests to Ms. AMns in amounts not to exceed the annual gift tax credit.

Gullet prepared the Limited Partnership Agreement, the Certificate of Limited Partnership, and a quitclaim deed of Ms. *304 Notgrass’ farm to the partnership, and forwarded the documents for Ms. Not-grass’ approval and execution. The fee for Gullett’s services was paid from Ms. Not-grass’ funds. 3 Gullet did not provide any other services during Ms. Notgrass’ life. 4

Ms. Notgrass did not review the documents with Gullett, nor did Ms. Akins. Instead, Ms. Notgrass and Ms. AMns reviewed the documents with Ms. Notgrass’ Madisonville attorney. On July 3, 1996, in the presence of her Madisonville attorney, Ms. Notgrass executed all three documents. 5

Ms. Notgrass died four months later, on November 8, 1996. At the time of Ms. Notgrass’ death, Ms. Akins owned an 8.5% interest in the limited partnership and was the sole devisee of “the farm” in Ms. Notgrass’ last will and testament, the 1994 will. Unfortunately for Ms. Akins, Ms. Notgrass no longer owned the farm. The farm was an asset of, and thus owned by, the limited partnership due to the quitclaim deed signed by Ms. Notgrass four months earlier. As a consequence, the devise of the farm to Ms. Akins lapsed because it adeemed by extinction. 6

Ms. Akins attended to Ms. Notgrass’ post-death affairs, including paying for her funeral and other final expenses. While attending to Ms. Notgrass’ final affairs, Ms. Akins realized there may be a problem with her expectation of inheriting Ms. Not-grass’ farm, as devised to Ms. Akins in the 1994 will. Thus, Ms. Akins sought advice from an unnamed attorney regarding how to transfer assets of the limited partnership to herself. Ms. Akins testified that the unnamed attorney advised her the partnership agreement did not authorize her to transfer Ms. Notgrass’ interest to Ms. Akins. Hoping to find a way to transfer the balance of the farm to herself, Ms. Akins then sought the advice of Marlin & Edmondson, which in turn sought the advice of Gullet. Gullet recommended she consider a dissolution of the partnership. Marlin & Edmondson relayed this advice to Ms. Akins; however, Ms. Akins did not follow Gullett’s advice. Instead, Ms. Akins sought the advice of two other attorneys, both of which advised her not to follow the advice relayed to her by Marlin & Edmondson.

After realizing she would not inherit the farm from Ms. Notgrass, as provided in the 1994 will, Ms. Akins filed this action against Marlin & Edmondson and Gullet.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
207 S.W.3d 300, 2006 Tenn. App. LEXIS 397, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/akins-v-edmondson-tennctapp-2006.