In re Estate of Calvert Hugh Fletcher

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMay 23, 2016
DocketM2015-01297-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of In re Estate of Calvert Hugh Fletcher (In re Estate of Calvert Hugh Fletcher) 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
In re Estate of Calvert Hugh Fletcher, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE March 1, 2016 Session

IN RE ESTATE OF CALVERT HUGH FLETCHER

Appeal from the Circuit Court for Putnam County No. 18589 Steven D. Qualls, Judge

________________________________

No. M2015-01297-COA-R3-CV – Filed May 23, 2016 _________________________________

This appeal stems from probate proceedings in the Putnam County Probate Court. During the course of the trial proceedings, an issue arose as to the ownership of a certificate of deposit titled in the decedent‟s name. Following an evidentiary hearing, the trial court entered an order concluding that the certificate of deposit was, in fact, the property of the decedent‟s estate. On appeal, the decedent‟s surviving wife argues that because the funds within the certificate of deposit were derived from a joint marital account, they should have been impressed as entireties property. We agree and conclude that the funds in the certificate of deposit passed to the surviving wife upon the decedent‟s death. The judgment of the trial court is accordingly reversed.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Circuit Court Reversed and Remanded

ARNOLD B. GOLDIN, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which J. STEVEN STAFFORD, P.J., W.S., and KENNY ARMSTRONG, J., joined.

Kenneth S. Williams, Cookeville, Tennessee, for the appellant, Nelda Karene (Kay) Fletcher.

Henry D. Fincher, Cookeville, Tennessee, for the appellees, Elaine Fletcher, Janet L. Fletcher Brady, Richard H. Fletcher, and Peter J. Fletcher.

Jerry Bowers, Appellee.1

1 Appellee Jerry Bowers did not file a brief or otherwise participate in this appeal. Carolyn Smith, Appellee.2

OPINION

Background

This case raises an interesting question regarding property classification and the manner in which a tenancy by the entirety in bank funds can be terminated. The pertinent background facts are fairly straightforward. On April 3, 2012, spouses Nelda Karene Fletcher (“Mrs. Fletcher”) and Calvert Hugh Fletcher (“Mr. Fletcher”) refinanced the mortgage on their home. With the proceeds from the refinancing, the Fletchers opened a joint checking account with rights of survivorship at FSG Bank in Cookeville, Tennessee. The initial deposit was over $100,000.00. According to the Fletchers‟ account agreement, only one owner‟s signature was required to make a withdrawal from the account.

In January 2013, Mr. Fletcher withdrew $100,000.00 from the FSG joint account in order to fund a certificate of deposit (“CD”) issued by FSG. The CD was titled solely in Mr. Fletcher‟s name and was used as security for a line of credit that was also solely in his name. It is undisputed that Mr. Fletcher never drew on the line of credit secured by the CD.

In February 2013, the Fletchers‟ joint account at FSG was closed, and following an extended illness, Mr. Fletcher died testate on September 6, 2013. Under his last will and testament, Mrs. Fletcher was to receive all of his tangible personal property. The remainder of Mr. Fletcher‟s estate was to be divided equally among his four adult children (“the Fletcher Children”).3 On November 22, 2013, Mrs. Fletcher filed a petition to probate her deceased husband‟s will in the Putnam County Probate Court. Shortly thereafter, on November 26, 2013, the trial court admitted the will into probate and appointed Mrs. Fletcher as executrix for the estate.

As the probate proceedings progressed, the classification of the CD became a point of contention. On March 25, 2014, Mrs. Fletcher filed an extensive inventory of the estate. Although the CD was listed among the assets included within the inventory, it was specifically identified as a non-estate asset. In a May 8, 2014 petition, Mrs. Fletcher contended that the CD should be treated as property that passed to her at Mr. Fletcher‟s death because the monies that funded the CD had been taken from a joint marital account. On 2 Appellee Carolyn Smith did not file a brief or otherwise participate in this appeal.

3 The Fletcher Children are the product of Mr. Fletcher‟s first marriage. Mrs. Fletcher, the Appellant in this case, was his second wife.

-2- February 16, 2015, the Fletcher Children filed an answer and counter-complaint to Mrs. Fletcher‟s May 8, 2014 petition. Therein, they denied that the CD was anything other than estate property.

On April 22, 2015, the trial court held a hearing to decide how the CD should be classified.4 In addition to receiving documentary exhibits into evidence, the trial court heard oral testimony from Mrs. Fletcher and two of the Fletcher Children. Although many topics concerning the CD were addressed at the hearing, much of the testimony related to a phone call that took place in April 2013, a time period during which Mr. Fletcher was ill with pneumonia. Because of Mr. Fletcher‟s illness, one of his daughters, Elaine Fletcher (“Elaine”), came to visit him and assist Mrs. Fletcher with financial issues. In pertinent part, Elaine sought to help Mrs. Fletcher find funds to pay back $10,000.00 owed on a loan to one of Mr. Fletcher‟s creditors. In the process of trying to locate funds for this purpose, both Elaine and Mrs. Fletcher talked to Howard Bilbrey, an officer at FSG Bank, by phone.5 Although there is no dispute that Mrs. Fletcher spoke with Mr. Bilbrey first and that Elaine spoke with him shortly thereafter, their respective testimony presents slightly different accounts of what Mr. Bilbrey related to them personally.

According to Mrs. Fletcher, Mr. Bilbrey never informed her that Mr. Fletcher had moved money from their joint account into a separate CD. She testified that she was under the impression that she could withdraw funds from the joint account as long as both she and Mr. Fletcher signed for a withdrawal. As she explained:

So I called Howard [Bilbrey]. And I said, “I need to draw down $10,000 on the money market fund that we have at your bank.” I didn‟t know that the account had been closed. I didn‟t know that it was in a CD. I‟m a total idiot in that point. I didn‟t know that. He didn‟t tell me that. I asked him if I could borrow from it. So, and he didn‟t indicate to me anything at all that had changed from the original time. And he agreed that I could take down the $10,000 at that point.

4 Although other issues remained pending in the case, they were reserved for future adjudication. 5 We note that during Elaine‟s testimony, Elaine stated that she could not recall if Mr. Bilbrey was the person to whom she spoke. Specifically, she testified as follows: “I spoke to a high bank official. The name has been provided by [Mrs. Fletcher].” There does not appear to be any dispute, however, that Elaine actually spoke with Mr. Bilbrey. The Fletcher Children‟s brief, for example, repeatedly references the phone conversation as having taken place with Mr. Bilbrey.

-3- After Mrs. Fletcher finished her phone call with Mr. Bilbrey, a conversation eventually ensued between Elaine and Mr. Bilbrey. As Mrs. Fletcher testified:

After I spoke with Howard Bilbrey and he agreed that we could pull down the money, I went into my kitchen. [Elaine] was sitting at the counter in my kitchen. And I related to her that Howard had said that I could get the money. And at some point, she said -- she asked me if there was a service fee or anything of that nature. And I said, “Well, I didn‟t ask. I don‟t know.” So she picks up the phone, and she calls him. And they chitchat. And the end result was, she said, “Well, we don‟t want to do that. We are not going to draw the money down because we don‟t want to do that. Because we don‟t want to pay a penalty.” And that‟s when the decision was made not to take the $10,000 from the account.

As is evident from the following exchange, Elaine testified that Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
In re Estate of Calvert Hugh Fletcher, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-calvert-hugh-fletcher-tennctapp-2016.