Estate of Mary Reeves Davis

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedOctober 28, 2013
DocketM2012-00559-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Estate of Mary Reeves Davis (Estate of Mary Reeves Davis) 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
Estate of Mary Reeves Davis, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE May 7, 2013 Session

ESTATE OF MARY REEVES DAVIS, DECEASED

Appeal from the Circuit Court for Davidson County No. 99P1955 David Randall Kennedy, Judge

No. M2012-00559-COA-R3-CV- Filed October 28, 2013

Decedent passed away in 1999, and Husband filed a petition for an elective share and a year’s maintenance. Days before the trial was scheduled to begin in 2012 Husband discharged his attorneys and requested a continuance to find replacement counsel. The trial court permitted Husband’s attorneys to withdraw but denied Husband’s motion to continue. The trial court denied Husband’s petition for an elective share because Husband had already received the bequest Decedent left him in her will. The trial court also denied Husband’s request for a year of maintenance because Husband had transferred to himself over $250,000 from Decedent’s accounts shortly before her death, and the amount Husband transferred to himself exceeded the amount Husband sought as maintenance. Husband appealed the trial court’s judgment, and we affirm in all respects.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Circuit Court Affirmed

P ATRICIA J. C OTTRELL, P.J., M.S., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which A NDY D. B ENNETT and R ICHARD H. D INKINS, JJ., joined.

Christopher Robert Stanford, Manchester, Tennessee, for the appellant, William Terry Davis.

R. Horton Frank, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellees, Lani Thomas Arnold, et al.

Ames Davis, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellee, Ames Davis, Administrator C.T.A. of the Estate of Mary Reeves Davis.

OPINION

I. Background

Mary Reeves Davis (“Ms. Reeves Davis” or “Decedent”) died in November 1999, and the Estate of Mary Reeves Davis was opened the following month. The Decedent’s will dating from 1976 was offered and later admitted to probate. The will included a bequest to the Decedent’s husband, William Terry Davis, in the amount of $100,000. In August 2000 Mr. Davis filed a Petition for Elective Share, Year’s Support, Homestead, and Exempt Property (“Petition for Elective Share”).

While the Petition for Elective Share was pending, Mr. Davis filed a motion asking the court to authorize the administrator of the estate to pay him $100,000 pending further distribution of the estate. On February 1, 2001, the trial court issued an Order awarding Mr. Davis $50,000 “as an advancement against further distributions from the Estate.” Mr. Davis then filed another motion in June 2001 seeking an additional payment of $50,000 from the estate. On July 26, 2001, the trial court issued a second Order awarding Mr. Davis another $50,000.

In its July Order, the court recognized that in her Last Will and Testament Ms. Davis designated Mr. Davis to receive $100,000. The court wrote: “[I]t is reasonable and appropriate to authorize payment of the sum of $50,000 to W. Terry Davis as an advancement which he may be obligated to refund to the Estate pending the outcome of matters relating to the Estate’s administration and litigation.” Thus, the court ordered the administrator to pay $50,000 to Mr. Davis “as an advancement or credit against any bequest or additional distribution, if any, the Court determines W. Terry Davis is entitled to receive from the Estate.”

From July 2001 until January 2012 the parties litigated other estate issues including the interpretation of a trust instrument,1 a claim for reimbursement against the estate,2 the validity of an antenuptial agreement,3 and a holographic will.4 The trial court issued a scheduling order in October 2011 to address Mr. Davis’s Petition for Elective Share. The court scheduled the trial to take place on January 23 and 24, 2012, and specified that the trial would not be continued “unless the party seeking a continuance demonstrates good cause for the continuance.”

By letter dated January 18, 2012, five days before his trial was scheduled to begin, Mr. Davis terminated his attorneys’ representation of him. Mr. Davis wrote:

1 Arnold v. Davis, 2004 WL 1372831 (Tenn. Ct. App. Nov. 29, 2004). 2 Davis v. Davis, 2004 WL 2951980 (Tenn. Ct. App. Dec. 17, 2004). 3 In re Estate of Mary Reeves Davis, 213 S.W.3d 288 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2006). 4 In re Estate of Mary Reeves Davis, 308 S.W.3d 832 (Tenn. 2010).

-2- Dear John,

I have great regard for you as a person, and cherish our long standing friendship, but the time has come for our business relationship to end.

For some time now our thinking on the strategy, the tactics, and the contract have been irreconcilable.

With deep regrets do I take this action.

Yours sincerely, Terry

On January 20, 2012, the trial court held a hearing to consider four pretrial motions: Mr. Davis’s attorneys’ motion to withdraw from representing Mr. Davis; Mr. Davis’s motion to continue the trial to permit him to obtain replacement counsel in the event the court granted his attorneys’ motion to withdraw; Mr. Davis’s motion for the judge to recuse himself; and a motion to intervene filed by Mr. Davis’s prior counsel who no longer represented him in this matter. The trial court granted Mr. Davis’s attorneys’ motion to withdraw and denied the three other motions.

The court set forth its ruling in open court at the conclusion of the hearing. With regard to Mr. Davis’s attorneys’ motion to withdraw and Mr. Davis’s motion for a continuance, the court explained:

While the Court is concerned about the timeliness of Mr. Davis having submitted a letter to his attorneys after 12 years of - - as he pointed out, 12 years of litigation, this really goes back to the conservatorship in 1995. So it’s really 16 years. After 16 years of this ever-evolving saga and having known that trial was set and having enlisted his sixth law firm to assist him and having them prepare for trial and to have him now elect to discharge counsel on the very eve of trial is certainly disappointing because it’s always difficult for someone to represent themselves.

But Mr. Davis can’t have it both ways. You can’t say, well, I’ve decided that I don’t want this lawyer who is my sixth law firm on the eve of trial and thereby gain the advantage of a continuance after the estate and the adversaries have already submitted their witness lists and, as pointed out by Mr. Frank, played their cards. It would be tantamount to being in the last go- round of a poker game and one side having laid all their cards down and the

-3- other side saying well, I didn’t like the five that were dealt me so I’m going to turn all five in and get a whole new hand.

But I understand the need for Mr. Price and Mr. Tidwell and Mr. Graves to be permitted to withdraw. . . . [T]his civil lawsuit that we have before us is one in which I believe is outside the Court’s discretion to require Mr. Davis to have an attorney. So I’m going to grant the motion to withdraw by Messrs. Price, Tidwell and Graves inasmuch as they have been discharged by Mr. Davis pursuant to his letter to them of just two days ago. . . .

I am not going to continue this case because I signed a previous order in October wherein the Court clearly set forth that the only way in which this trial would be continued would be for good cause shown. And in all due fairness to everyone here, there has been no evidence presented to the Court, nor any legal argument presented that would suggest that that matter should not go ahead and reach some degree of finality after all this time. So that motion is also denied.

The motion to intervene was filed by three of Mr. Davis’s former attorneys who had represented Mr.

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