Floyd Gabriel v. Anna Hubbs

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedSeptember 27, 2002
DocketE2001-03102-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Floyd Gabriel v. Anna Hubbs (Floyd Gabriel v. Anna Hubbs) 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
Floyd Gabriel v. Anna Hubbs, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT KNOXVILLE September 27, 2002 Session

FLOYD GABRIEL v. ANNA FAYE HUBBS, ET AL.

Appeal from the Chancery Court for Union County No. 3748 Billy Joe White, Chancellor

FILED DECEMBER 23, 2002

No. E2001-03102-COA-R3-CV

This is a will contest. Floyd Gabriel (“the contestant”) filed this action contesting the validity of the purported last will and testament of his grandfather, Floyd A. Harmon (“the decedent”) on the grounds of incapacity and undue influence. Following a bench trial, the court below declared the will invalid. Anna Faye Hubbs (“Hubbs”), the decedent’s caretaker and the primary beneficiary under the will, appeals, arguing that the trial court erred in finding that she exercised undue influence over the decedent. In the alternative, Hubbs argues that any presumption of undue influence arising out of her relationship with the decedent was overcome by the clear and convincing proof that the decedent received independent advice before executing his will. We affirm.

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

CHARLES D. SUSANO, JR., J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which HOUSTON M. GODDARD , P.J., and D. MICHAEL SWINEY, J., joined.

Craig J. Donaldson, Knoxville, Tennessee, for the appellant, Anna Faye Hubbs.

Michael L. DeBusk, Knoxville, Tennessee, for the appellee, Floyd Gabriel.

OPINION

I.

The decedent was married to Artie Harmon. Each had children from a previous marriage. On June 25, 1979, the decedent and his wife executed reciprocal wills, which bequeathed their respective estates to the other. The wills provided that if the testator’s spouse did not survive the testator’s death, the testator’s estate would pass one-half to the children of the testator, in equal shares, and one-half to the spouse’s children, again in equal shares. In 1992, the decedent’s wife was suffering from Alzheimer’s disease and was a patient in a Maynardville nursing home. During her stay there, she came under the care of Hubbs, an employee of the nursing home. The decedent became unhappy with the care his wife was receiving and brought her home sometime in late 1992. Later, the caretaker who was caring for the decedent’s wife at their home, decided the job was too much for her, so she contacted Hubbs to see if Hubbs would be interested in the position. Hubbs began working for the decedent in January, 1993. At that time, Hubbs’ duties consisted primarily of caring for the decedent’s wife, who was virtually bedridden; occasionally, however, Hubbs helped the decedent pay his bills by check.

In June, 1999, the decedent suffered a heart attack. When the decedent returned home from the hospital, Hubbs began caring for both the decedent and his wife. Following his heart attack, the decedent was physically ill and quite weak; whereas he had previously been able to assist Hubbs somewhat in the care of his wife, the decedent now was physically unable to do so. At least three witnesses testified at trial that the decedent’s mental condition also began deteriorating around this time. Several witnesses testified that the decedent became increasingly fearful that he would die before his wife and that his primary concern was that his wife be properly cared for after he was gone.

The decedent and his wife reached the point where they both required around-the-clock care. Hubbs hired other individuals to assist her, including a woman by the name of Betty Sharp (“Sharp”). At trial, Sharp testified for the contestant. She stated that the decedent told her that Hubbs wanted the decedent to put his money in Hubbs’ name so the decedent could be assured that his wife would be taken care of after he died. Sharp further testified that Hubbs asked Sharp to talk to the decedent on her behalf and to encourage him to put his money in Hubbs’ name. Sharp stated that she, Sharp, talked to the decedent about the money “[j]ust about every night [she] worked” and that she told the decedent “[t]hat he needed ... to put the money in [Hubbs’] name so that [the decedent’s wife] would be taken care of because the children wouldn’t take care of her because that’s what [Hubbs] had told me, and I believed it.” Sharp also overheard Hubbs talking directly to the decedent, telling him “that time was running out, and he needed to do something with the money so that [his wife] would be taken care of.”1

Several witnesses testified at trial that the decedent believed Hubbs had very little money. One of the decedent’s distant relatives, who did not stand to inherit anything under the decedent’s earlier will, testified as to the decedent’s feelings toward Hubbs:

He said he felt sorry for her, said that she had took him by her home, and he said ... it wasn’t fit for a dog to live in and that he felt sorry for [Hubbs], that she didn’t have nothing; said she had a hard time.

1 Hubbs denies that she influenced the decedent to change his will. The trial court, however, did not find her testimony to be believable, choosing instead to believe Sharp.

-2- Sharp testified that Hubbs did not want the decedent to know she operated her own nursing home, and Hubbs directed Sharp not to tell the decedent or his relatives about the nursing home. According to Sharp, Hubbs, in an effort to prevent the decedent from learning that Hubbs owned a new van, told the decedent it belonged to her neighbors. The contestant testified that when the decedent’s wife died, he, the contestant, stayed at Hubbs’ house. He described his reaction when he first saw the house:

A. I was kind of surprised actually to tell you the truth to drive up and see a nice house like that, and a Mustang sitting in a driveway for a son that hadn’t even got his driver’s license yet, a van sitting there, and another car sitting there.

Q. Why were you surprised?

A. Because I didn’t actually – because I had an opinion of [Hubbs] as being someone that lived on a trail or up on a mountain somewhere.

Q. Why did you have that opinion?

A. That’s the opinion I got from her and from [the decedent].
Q. All right. And that was untrue?
A. Yes.

Sometime after the decedent’s heart attack, the decedent had Hubbs added to his bank signature card, authorizing Hubbs to sign checks drawn on his checking account. In July, 1999, Hubbs and Sharp took the decedent to the bank, where he proceeded to transfer $100,000 of his funds into certificates of deposit in Hubbs’ name. These funds were previously in certificates over which he apparently had control; his grandchildren were the survivor beneficiaries of these earlier certificates. Sharp testified that the decedent told the bank employee who was assisting him that “these girls are wanting me to do something with my money.” Sharp further stated that after they left the bank, the decedent said he wished he “had never bothered the money.”

In August, 1999, the decedent met with bank officials to discuss changing his earlier will. The bank officials provided the decedent with the names of three attorneys. The decedent selected an attorney from that list. He then met with the attorney and explained that he wanted his wife to be properly cared for if he predeceased her and that he wanted any remaining money to go to Hubbs. The attorney then prepared a new will, as well as a special needs trust. The new will, executed on August 26, 1999, provided that if the decedent’s wife survived him, his entire estate would pass into the special needs trust, executed the same date, for the benefit of his wife. In the event his wife predeceased him, the decedent’s entire estate would go to Hubbs, who was named as a beneficiary

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Bluebook (online)
Floyd Gabriel v. Anna Hubbs, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/floyd-gabriel-v-anna-hubbs-tennctapp-2002.