Boyd L. Hughes v. Curtis E. Hughes, Of The Estate Of Lucille C. Luttrell

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedSeptember 8, 2011
DocketE2010-02600-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Boyd L. Hughes v. Curtis E. Hughes, Of The Estate Of Lucille C. Luttrell (Boyd L. Hughes v. Curtis E. Hughes, Of The Estate Of Lucille C. Luttrell) 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
Boyd L. Hughes v. Curtis E. Hughes, Of The Estate Of Lucille C. Luttrell, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT KNOXVILLE August 17, 2011 Session

BOYD L. HUGHES ET AL. v. CURTIS E. HUGHES, EXECUTOR OF THE ESTATE OF LUCILLE C. LUTTRELL

Appeal from the Chancery Court for Hamilton County No. 07-0426 W. Frank Brown, III, Chancellor

No. E2010-02600-COA-R3-CV-FILED-SEPTEMBER 8, 2011

This is a will contest case in which the plaintiffs attempt to invalidate the will of Lucille C. Luttrell due to her supposed lack of testamentary capacity. The executor of Ms.Luttrell’s estate filed two motions for summary judgment. The first one was denied; the second one was granted. The court ultimately held that the affidavits of medical doctors who evaluated the testator’s mental faculties approximately six months before she signed her will do not create a genuine issue of fact regarding her testamentary capacity at the time she signed the will. The plaintiffs appeal. We vacate the order granting summary judgment and remand for further proceedings

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Chancery Court Vacated; Case Remanded

C HARLES D. S USANO, J R., J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which D. M ICHAEL S WINEY and J OHN W. M CC LARTY, JJ., joined.

Jimmy W. Bilbo, Cleveland, Tennessee, for the appellants, Boyd L. Hughes and Doris R. Hughes.

Robin L. Miller, Chattanooga, Tennessee, for the appellee, Curtis E. Hughes, Executor of the Estate of Lucille C. Luttrell.

OPINION I.

Lucille C. Luttrell died May 15, 2006. Shortly thereafter, her nephew, Curtis E. Hughes, offered for probate a last will and testament (“the Will”) Ms. Luttrell had signed on September 27, 2004. The Will named Curtis E. Hughes (“the Executor”) as the executor of Luttrell’s estate. Boyd L. Hughes and his wife, Doris R. Hughes (“the Plaintiffs”), filed this action against the Executor alleging, among other things, that Ms. Luttrell lacked the testamentary capacity on September 27, 2004, to make a will. In September 2007, the Executor filed a motion for summary judgment asking the court to determine, as a matter of law, that Luttrell possessed the necessary testamentary capacity to execute the Will. The motion was supported by several affidavits, including the affidavit of the attorney who prepared the Will. The Plaintiffs responded with affidavits of their own, including those of Dr. Stephen Montgomery and Dr. Jon Huebschman, and “sworn” medical reports of the treatment each of these doctors rendered. In reply, the Executor filed the affidavit of Dr. Terry A. Melvin. Dr. Melvin was Ms. Luttrell’s treating physician from April 2004 until her death in May 2006. Dr. Melvin testified in her affidavit that Ms. Luttrell was competent to make a will in September 2004.

After assessing the evidence before it, the trial court denied the motion, stating:

. . . [T]here are genuine issues of material fact in regard to Ms. Luttrell’s testamentary capacity on the date she signed the contested will. Both parties have submitted conflicting evidence as to whether Ms. Luttrell possessed the requisite testamentary capacity to execute a will on September 27, 2004. Such conflicting evidence requires the court to weigh the relative credibility of the evidence to make a decision regarding Ms. Luttrell’s testamentary capacity. However, under the require- ments of Rule 56 of the Tennessee Rules of Civil Procedure, the court cannot weigh the credibility of evidence at the summary judgment stage. Rather, the court may only do so at trial. Thus, the court cannot determine that Ms. Luttrell possessed the requisite mental, testamentary capacity to duly execute the contested will at this juncture.

The Executor took Dr. Melvin’s deposition and filed it in support of a “supplemental” motion for summary judgment. In her deposition, Dr. Melvin agreed with Dr. Montgomery’s diagnosis of dementia as of February 19, 2004, the date on which Dr. Montgomery performed an independent examination ordered by a court in a conservatorship action; however, Dr. Melvin testified that Ms. Luttrell nevertheless possessed testamentary capacity

-2- in September 2004. Her reasons for disagreeing with Dr. Montgomery include (1) Ms. Luttrell’s condition responded to treatment and she was in a better condition in September 2004 than she was in February 2004; (2) Ms. Luttrell became less agitated in the time frame that Dr. Melvin saw her and this improved her mental acuity; (3) Dr. Montgomery only saw the patient one time and was not able to adequately factor into his opinion the ups and downs that are natural to a dementia patient; and (4) Ms. Luttrell discussed her plans with Dr. Melvin and acted in accordance with those plans.

The Plaintiffs took the deposition of Dr. Montgomery a few days following Dr. Melvin’s deposition. By the time the second motion for summary judgment was heard, the court had before it the Plaintiffs’ medical expert evidence, i.e., the deposition of Dr. Montgomery as well as the affidavits of both Dr. Montgomery and Dr. Huebschman. The trial court summarized the proof mustered by the Plaintiffs as follows:

Dr. Jon C. Huebschman is board certified in internal medicine. . . . . He opined in paragraph 2 of his Affidavit that:

I was a personal physician of Lucille C. Luttrell from November 16, 1992 through August 18, 2003. During that period of time, Lucille C. Luttrell suffered from dementia, level II, which caused her to be easily confused and she was unable to handle her personal, financial, property and/or business affairs. It was my opinion that by July 1, 2003 that, because of the fact that Lucille C. Luttrell was incapable of handling any of her personal business affairs, a conservator was needed to handle any and all of her personal, financial, property and/or business matters.

Further, Dr. Huebschman stated in paragraph 3 of his Affidavit:

It is further my opinion within a reasonable degree of certainty that as of the last date I examined Lucille C. Lut[t]rell on August 18, 2003, Lucille C. Lut[t]rell would not have been capable of understanding that she was executing a will if she was executing a will, and she would not have been capable of understanding the consequences of her actions. Further, as of the

-3- last date I examined Lucille C. Lut[t]rell on August 18, 2003, Lucille C. Lut[t]rell would not have known or understood the nature and effect of her act, the property she possessed, and the manner in which her property would be distributed, if she was signing any purported will.

* * *

Dr. Montgomery is board certified in psychiatry and forensic psychiatry. He graduated from UT medical school in 1994 and has been on the faculty of Vanderbilt University Medical Center since January, 2002. Chancellor Jerri Bryant ordered on November 13, 2003, that Ms. Luttrell “[u]ndergo an independent medical evaluation for the two-fold purpose of evaluating the level of dementia and the efficacy of the medications presently prescribed . . . .”

Dr. Montgomery evaluated Ms. Luttrell on February 19, 2004 in Nashville. His opinion is expressed in paragraph 3 of his Affidavit as to the conservatorship issue. He added paragraphs 4 and 5 for the Will Contest issues. Those three paragraphs from Dr. Montgomery’s Affidavit of October 15, 2007 state:

It was my opinion that because of Lucille C. Luttrell’s level of dementia, she was incapable of hand[l]ing her own affairs and a conservator was needed . . . .

It was further my opinion that as of February 19, 2004 Lucille C. Lut[t]rell lacked the requisite soundness of mind and disposing memory to be capable of making a will or otherwise being capable of expressing testamentary intent with regard to disposition of her property.

It is further my opinion within a reasonable degree of certainty that on September 27, 2004, Lucille C.

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Boyd L. Hughes v. Curtis E. Hughes, Of The Estate Of Lucille C. Luttrell, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boyd-l-hughes-v-curtis-e-hughes-of-the-estate-of-l-tennctapp-2011.