In Re: Estate of Mary A. Grass

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJune 4, 2008
DocketM2005-00641-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of In Re: Estate of Mary A. Grass (In Re: Estate of Mary A. Grass) 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 Mary A. Grass, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE April 27, 2006 Session

IN RE: ESTATE OF MARY A. GRASS

Appeal from the Seventh Circuit Court for Davidson County No. 02P-1998 David Randall Kennedy, Judge

No. M2005-00641-COA-R3-CV - Filed: June 4, 2008

This appeal involves the probate of a will. On appeal, the appellant claims that the Probate Court did not have jurisdiction to extend the statute of limitations to elect against the will and that the Agreed Order extending the statute of limitations was not effective. The appellant also claims that the surviving spouse cannot elect against the will because he waived his right to elect by signing a waiver and accepting the benefits of the bequests to him under the will. Finally, the appellant claims that the Probate Court erred in calculating the award of exempt property, year’s support, homestead exemption, and elective share. Finding that the Probate Court did not err in extending the statute of limitations, that the surviving spouse did not waive his right to elect against the will and that the Probate Court correctly awarded the homestead exemption, but finding that the Probate Court erred in calculating the award of exempt property, year’s support, and the surviving spouse’s elective share, we affirm in part, reverse in part and remand to the Probate Court to make recalculations.

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

JERRY SCOTT , SR. J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which WILLIAM C. KOCH , JR., P.J., M.S., joined. WILLIAM BRYAN CAIN , J., not participating.

Thomas I. Bottorff, Brentwood, Tennessee, for the appellant, James E. McLendon

Paul A. Gontarek, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellee, Raymond G. Grass

OPINION

Facts

Mary Anne Grass (the “Decedent”) married Raymond G. Grass (the “Husband”) on April 16, 1975. They were married for over 27 years, until the Decedent’s death on October 31, 2002, at 82 years of age. The Decedent had two adult children from a prior marriage, James McLendon of Nashville, Tennessee and Lilly Diane McLendon of St. John, Newfoundland, Canada. Ms. Grass executed her Last Will and Testament (the “Will”) on May 20 or 21, 2002, by which she appointed her son, James McLendon as Executor (the “Executor”).1

Before the Decedent married her Husband in 1975 and until her death, the Decedent owned a house in her name alone at 140 Tusculum Road in Antioch, Tennessee. The house is located on nine acres and consists of four apartments. Three of the apartments in the house were rental apartments, and the fourth apartment was used by the Decedent and her Husband as their residence. Each apartment was fully furnished. The house and land were valued on the Tennessee Inheritance Tax Return at $292,100. The household furnishings were valued at $25,000.

In her will, the Decedent devised the property at 140 Tusculum Road to her son, James Earl McClendon. Two acres of the property is subject to a life estate for her daughter, Lilly Diane McLendon to “raise plants,” and the area for her to raise plants can be increased to five acres. Her husband, Raymond G. Grass was authorized to continue to use the home as long “as he can maintain it and would require it as his principal place of residence.” By the terms of the will, the income from the three apartments will continue to pay for all upkeep, maintenance, taxes, insurance and rental expenses with the reminder to be retirement income for her husband.

The Decedent also devised two townhouses to her daughter and two townhouses to her husband on McLendon Drive in Antioch. Finally, she bequeathed her interest in their depository accounts, certificates of deposit, motor home and any automobiles and/or trucks to her Husband, which they purchased jointly. The residue was to be divided equally between her Husband and her two children.

The value of the two, two-unit rental townhouses on McLendon Court was reported as $200,000 on the Tennessee Inheritance Tax Return. The Decedent and her husband owned a 1.16 acre unimproved lot on Bart Drive in Antioch valued by the Davidson County Assessor of Property at $5,800. The deed is not in the record. The tax notices were sent to her son, the Executor, at his home address.

The Decedent owned a 1992 Ford Taurus automobile and her Husband owned a truck. The motor home was valued on the Tennessee Inheritance Tax Return at $18,000. They also owned a substantial amount of lawn equipment, which was valued on the Tennessee Inheritance Tax Return at $8,000.

Before the Decedent died, she and her Husband had a joint bank account with a balance of $260,000. The Decedent withdrew $160,000 from the account and placed the money in two pay on death accounts payable to her children, James and Dianne McLendon. The Husband withdrew $100,000 from the account and gave the money to his children from his prior marriage.

1 The printed text of the will recites its date as May 20, 2002 in two places, but Ms. Grass wrote May 21, 2002 as the date of her will. 2 After the Decedent’s death, her Husband signed a form giving his consent for James McLendon to be appointed Executor without bond and waived the statutory requirement of the Executor filing an Inventory or Accounting with the Clerk.2 On December 4, 2002, the Executor filed his sworn Petition to Probate the Decedent’s Will and to be appointed Executor without bond.

On April 24, 2003, the Decedent’s Husband signed a document entitled “Receipt and Waiver” for the Executor. It is not known who prepared the document. The document states:

I, RAYMOND G. GRASS, a residuary beneficiary of this estate, pursuant to Tennessee Code Annotated, section 30-2-601, do hereby acknowledge and state to this Court that I am a distributee of this estate pursuant to the duly probated Will of the decedent, and that I waive any and all requirements that the personal representative make any accounting to the Court in this cause. I further acknowledge and state to the Court that I have now received all funds and assets bequeathed to me in the Last Will and Testament of the decedent, and I hereby acknowledge receipt of same. Finally, I hereby release the personal representative of this Estate from any and all further liability and/or responsibility as personal representative thereof, both now, and in the future.

When the document was signed, the Husband was not represented by an attorney. Two days before the Husband delivered the “Receipt and Waiver” to the Executor, the Executor signed an “Executor’s Deed,” which stated that title to the property located at 140 Tusculum Road was transferred by the deed and conveyed by the Executor to himself personally pursuant to the provisions set forth in the Will, including a life estate for Raymond G. Grass “as long as he can maintain it and would require it as his usual place of residence” and quotes the language of the will as to the use of the rental income for its maintenance with the remainder payable to the Husband. The Executor’s Deed was recorded on April 24, 2003, the same day that the Husband signed the Receipt and Waiver.

On July 30, 2003, counsel for the Executor and counsel for the Decedent’s Husband prepared, signed and submitted an Agreed Order to the Probate Court extending the time period for the Husband to petition for his elective share, year’s support, exempt property and homestead an additional 60 days beyond the nine months statutory period. In the decretal paragraph, the Agreed Order gave the Husband until October 31, 2003, to file a petition for his elective share, year’s support, exempt property and homestead. The Order was filed on July 30, 2003.

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In Re: Estate of Mary A. Grass, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-mary-a-grass-tennctapp-2008.