Gerry Gallimore v. Reba Gallimore

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedApril 2, 2009
DocketW2008-00856-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Gerry Gallimore v. Reba Gallimore (Gerry Gallimore v. Reba Gallimore) 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
Gerry Gallimore v. Reba Gallimore, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT JACKSON ASSIGNED ON BRIEFS OCTOBER 30, 2008

GERRY GALLIMORE, ET AL. v. REBA GALLIMORE

Direct Appeal from the Chancery Court for Weakley County No. 20,269 William Michael Maloan, Chancellor

No. W2008-00856-COA-R3-CV - Filed April 2, 2009

This case involves a dispute between a decedent’s ex-wife and the decedent’s heirs. When the decedent and the ex-wife divorced, their marital dissolution agreement provided that the decedent would receive certain real property. When the decedent died four years later, the ex-wife had not executed a quitclaim deed conveying her interest in the property to the decedent. Therefore, the heirs filed this action to quiet title. The ex-wife claimed that the decedent wanted her to retain her interest in the property, and she claimed that the heirs were barred from seeking relief under the doctrines of laches and waiver. The trial court found in favor of the heirs, and the ex-wife appeals. We affirm.

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

ALAN E. HIGHERS, P.J.,W.S., delivered the opinion of the court, in which DAVID R. FARMER , J., and HOLLY M. KIRBY , J., joined.

Jeffery T. Washburn, Dresden, TN, for Appellant

James H. Bradberry, Dresden, TN, for Appellee

OPINION I. FACTS & PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Ronnie and Reba Gallimore were married from 1999 to 2003. During the marriage, Ronnie’s siblings executed a quitclaim deed conveying a parcel of property, consisting of a house and lot, to Ronnie and Reba as tenants by the entirety. When Ronnie and Reba divorced in 2003, they entered into a marital dissolution agreement (“MDA”) providing that Ronnie would retain sole ownership of the property, and Reba would execute the documents necessary to convey her interest in the property to Ronnie.

In 2007, Ronnie died suddenly due to a heart attack. Reba had not conveyed her interest in the property to Ronnie prior to his death. Ronnie’s heirs, who were his siblings, nieces and nephews, filed a complaint to quiet title to the property. They sought an order divesting Reba of title to the property or requiring Reba to execute a quitclaim deed conveying her interest in the property to the estate. Reba filed an answer asserting that the doctrines of laches and waiver barred the heirs from seeking relief, and she also claimed that Ronnie had expressed his desire not to remove her name from the deed. Reba maintained that she owned a one-half undivided interest in the property because the tenancy by the entirety was converted to a tenancy in common as a result of the divorce.

At trial, Reba testified that she and Ronnie had maintained a friendly relationship since the divorce, as they continued to work at the same office. She said Ronnie continued to send her Valentine’s Day gifts and flowers, and he still had a license plate on his truck that read “Ronnie and Reba.” Reba acknowledged that she was dating someone else, and that her boyfriend lived in the same house where she lived, but she said Ronnie knew she was dating another man. Reba said she had a key to Ronnie’s house and still had personal property there at the time of Ronnie’s death. She explained that she moved into a very small house after the divorce, and Ronnie allowed her to leave some things at his house in order to avoid paying storage fees. Reba’s daughter testified that she also had a key to Ronnie’s house because she had left some of her belongings there after she and Reba moved out.

Reba testified that three to four months after the divorce, she asked Ronnie if he wanted “to go and get a new deed drawn up to take [her] name off.” She said Ronnie told her no and that he was not worried about it. According to Reba, she then told Ronnie that whenever he wanted to go, she would go and sign the deed.

In September of 2004, nearly a year after the divorce, the City of Dresden needed an easement over and across the property in order to repair and maintain a storm water drain partially located in the front yard of the property. The City’s attorney prepared a document by which Ronnie and Reba would grant the easement to the City. Reba testified that Ronnie brought the document to work and told her that she needed to sign it because her name was still on the deed. Ronnie and Reba never discussed the deed again.

Reba testified that after Ronnie’s death, she learned that she was still listed as the beneficiary of his life insurance policy and his retirement account. In addition, her name was still listed on his

-2- checking account. Reba testified that she received over $50,000 from these accounts after Ronnie’s death, despite a provision in the MDA providing that Reba waived all right, title and interest in and to Ronnie’s property and estate, including insurance, contractual, and retirement benefits.1 Reba admitted that she was surprised that her name was still listed as the beneficiary of Ronnie’s retirement account when he died, and she also said she did not think she had an interest in his life insurance policy due to the provision in the MDA. Reba insisted that nothing prevented Ronnie from executing the documents necessary to remove her name from these accounts or the deed to the house. She claimed that Ronnie simply ignored the provisions of the MDA.

Gerry Gallimore, who was Ronnie’s brother and the executor of his estate, also testified at trial. Gerry testified that Ronnie moved into the house at issue in 1965 to live with their mother after their father died. Gerry testified that their mother left the property to Ronnie when she died, but her will was not probated, so he and his siblings executed the quitclaim deed to Ronnie and Reba. Gerry described Ronnie as a procrastinator and said he “wasn’t in a hurry” about getting things done. As an example, he pointed out that the electric bill at Ronnie’s house was still listed in Ronnie’s father’s name when Ronnie died in 2007, although Ronnie’s father died in 1963. Gerry testified that in sorting through Ronnie’s belongings and paperwork after his death, he found an unexecuted quitclaim deed which would convey Reba’s interest in the property to Ronnie. This deed, introduced as an exhibit at trial, states that it was prepared by an attorney in Martin. The dates listed in the document read, “this ___ day of January, 2007.”

Terry Gallimore, another one of Ronnie’s brothers, also testified that Ronnie was slow about getting things done and “just didn’t get in no hurry.” Terry testified that he would go with Ronnie when he would buy vehicles and “do the dealing” for him. Terry said that 99 percent of the time, someone had to be with Ronnie in order for him to get things done. Terry said that he and Ronnie discussed the deed to the property “from time to time” after Ronnie and Reba divorced, and that sometime around the beginning of 2007, Ronnie told him that he was “going to Martin to get that [taken] care of.”

The supervisor at the office where Ronnie and Reba worked testified that they were “always nice and friendly to each other,” and that he did not notice a change in their behavior after the divorce. He said Ronnie was a great employee, and he would not describe Ronnie as a procrastinator. However, the supervisor said he had no knowledge about Ronnie’s personal business because he was quiet and kept to himself. Another co-worker also testified that Ronnie and Reba “were still friends” after the divorce. This co-worker also said that Ronnie was not a procrastinator, but he said he was not surprised by the fact that Ronnie’s electric bill was still in his father’s name because “[Ronnie] had certain ways about him like that.”

Another employee, who worked in the finance department at Ronnie’s place of employment, testified as well. She said that Ronnie asked her, just a few months prior to his death, “do I have to

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Gerry Gallimore v. Reba Gallimore, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gerry-gallimore-v-reba-gallimore-tennctapp-2009.