Denzil Russ Partin v. Mary Ava Partin

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedApril 20, 2011
DocketE2010-01662-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Denzil Russ Partin v. Mary Ava Partin (Denzil Russ Partin v. Mary Ava Partin) 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
Denzil Russ Partin v. Mary Ava Partin, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT KNOXVILLE March 9, 2011 Session

DENZIL RUSS PARTIN v. MARY AVA PARTIN, ET AL.

Appeal from the Chancery Court for Campbell County No. 08-092 Billy Joe White, Chancellor

No. E2010-01662-COA-R3-CV - Filed - April 20, 2011

This lawsuit arose out of two transfers of real property. Denzil Russ Partin (“Husband”) sued Mary Ava Partin (“Wife”) and Hazel Walden (“Mrs. Walden”), seeking declaratory relief that the two properties Wife transferred to Mrs. Walden, Wife’s mother, were held in trust for Husband, Wife, and their son, Courtney Partin. The Trial Court found that title to the real property at issue was vested in Mrs. Walden, that no resulting trust had been created, and, that, in any event, the statute of limitations had run on Husband’s action. Husband appeals. We hold that although the Trial Court erred in stating that the statute of limitations had run on Husband’s claim, the Trial Court did not err in declining to impose a resulting trust on the real property at issue. We affirm the judgment as modified.

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

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

J. Stephen Hurst, LaFollette, Tennessee, for the appellant, Denzil Russ Partin.

Mark R. Orr, LaFollette, Tennessee, for the appellees, Mary Ava Partin and Hazel Walden. OPINION

Background

Husband and Wife were married in the 1970s. Husband and Wife purchased a piece of real property (“Lilac”) located on what is now Lilac Road in Campbell County, Tennessee. In 1990, Husband and Wife divorced. Pursuant to that divorce proceeding, Wife was awarded ownership of Lilac as her separate property. Although Husband and Wife later reconciled and remarried, Wife remained the sole owner of record of Lilac until she later transferred title to Mrs. Walden.

In the 1990s, after Husband and Wife reconciled, Mrs. Walden and her husband James Walden (“Mr. Walden”) deeded a piece of real property at 7286 Stinking Creek Road, Pioneer, Tennessee (“Stinking Creek”) to Wife. Wife then deeded an interest in Stinking Creek by quitclaim deed to Husband and their adult son, Courtney Partin, so that the three of them were the owners of record. The house on Lilac subsequently burned down, leaving it bare real estate.

Husband was involved in an armed standoff with law enforcement officers that led to a number of criminal charges against Husband. Husband sustained injuries during the incident and was hospitalized. Courtney Partin also was charged with a related criminal offense. Husband, represented by attorney Tim Irwin, was convicted of multiple felonies as part of a plea agreement.

While incarcerated, Husband executed a Power of Attorney to Wife. The parties dispute the purposes that Husband contemplated in creating the Power of Attorney. Wife, utilizing her Power of Attorney, transferred Stinking Creek to Mrs. Walden and Mr. Walden 1 on May 23, 2002. Mrs. Walden and Mr. Walden borrowed twenty-six thousand six hundred sixty dollars and twenty-seven cents ($26,660.27) to fund the purchase of Stinking Creek, and this money was used to hire attorney Doug Trant to represent Courtney Partin. On September 22, 2004, Wife transferred Lilac to Mrs. Walden. Wife included Husband’s name on the quitclaim deed for Lilac to Mrs. Walden.

On July 1, 2008, after Husband was released from prison, Wife filed for divorce. Husband counterclaimed, averring that Wife had improperly transferred Stinking Creek and Lilac to Mrs. Walden. On August 1, 2008, Husband filed this suit against Wife and Mrs. Walden in the Chancery Court for Campbell County, asking the Court to declare that Stinking Creek and Lilac were held by Mrs. Walden in trust for Husband, Wife, and

1 Mr. Walden subsequently died and his interest in Stinking Creek passed to Mrs. Walden.

-2- Courtney Partin. Wife and Mrs. Walden, in their Answer, asserted that Husband instructed Wife to raise money to hire an attorney for their son, Courtney Partin. Wife and Mrs. Walden contended that, lacking sufficient credit to take out a loan herself, Wife sold Stinking Creek to Mrs. Walden and Mr. Walden who in turn borrowed money which, in keeping with Husband’s instructions to Wife, was used to hire counsel for Courtney Partin. Husband maintained that Wife transferred both Stinking Creek and Lilac in order to keep the properties out of the marital estate.

On March 16, 2010, the parties appeared in Chancery Court and disputed the status of the properties at issue. Husband, Wife, and Mrs. Walden testified. Exhibits that pertained to the disputed issue of Mrs. Walden’s ownership of Stinking Creek were entered, including: tax receipts on Stinking Creek in Mrs. Walden’s name; receipts for insurance paid on Stinking Creek in Mrs. Walden’s name; and copies of checks written by Mrs. Walden for the mortgage on Stinking Creek. In turn, Husband entered documents revealing that, on April 10, 2008, Wife made a two thousand dollar ($2,000) payment on the Stinking Creek loan. Wife acknowledged making that one payment, but testified that all other payments were made by Mrs. Walden. Wife testified that she transferred Stinking Creek to Mrs. Walden and Mr. Walden without any expectation of getting Stinking Creek back.

The parties contested what Husband wanted Wife to do with the Power of Attorney. Husband contended that he asked Wife to raise money to hire an attorney for him and, if any money remained, to hire an attorney for Courtney Partin. Husband stated:

I said to get me a lawyer first and if there is any left to get a lawyer for my son, and my brother would have to pay Tim Irwin. When she got the money borrowed she would have to pay my brother back. And that letter was wrote in March of 2002.

Wife disputed this version of events and claimed that Husband instructed her to raise money in order to hire an attorney for Courtney Partin, their son.2 Wife produced letters Husband wrote to Courtney Partin while he was incarcerated. In a letter dated October 2, 2002, Husband wrote: “I will always help you my son. We may have to sell our place to do that. But I will do whatever it takes.” In a letter dated October 9, 2002, Husband wrote:

You ask the judge to appoint you an appeals attorney.(If you do not like him we will try to get another lawyer for you by Jan. 2003. We will just have to get a lawyer we can afford. But we will get you a lawyer if you

2 Courtney Partin was represented originally by attorney Charles Herman, but Mrs. Walden later paid Doug Trant to represent Courtney Partin with money raised from Stinking Creek.

-3- do not like the court appointed one … I know it is a lot to pay for a lawyer but you needed a good lawyer. Now you can fire Hermon. We do not need that backstabber.

Husband in turn introduced a letter he wrote to Wife dated March 20, 2002, wherein he asked for a lawyer but did not mention raising money from the properties at issue.

Regarding Lilac, Wife and Mrs. Walden introduced a copy of the final judgment of Husband and Wife’s divorce from 1990 wherein Wife was awarded sole ownership of Lilac. Husband nevertheless testified that he had an interest in Lilac based on a verbal representation made by Wife.

Wife testified that she was paid eight thousand dollars ($8,000) for Lilac by Mrs. Walden and that she used the money to hire Herb Moncier to represent Husband and Wife in a civil suit. Husband denied that Moncier represented him. However, Wife introduced a letter from prison dated August 16, 2004, in which Husband wrote to Courtney Partin:

MANSOUR [sic] my lawyer came down on August 12, 2004 to get me to sign some papers against Campbell County.

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