In re: Rhoda Armster

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedOctober 25, 2001
DocketM2000-00776-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of In re: Rhoda Armster (In re: Rhoda Armster) 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: Rhoda Armster, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE November 8, 2000 Session

IN RE: RHODA BELLE HUDSON ARMSTER

Appeal from the Chancery Court for Lawrence County No. 9501-99 Robert L. Holloway, Chancellor

No. M2000-00776-COA-R3-CV - Filed October 25, 2001

This appeal involves a conservatorship action and an effort to set aside a will and related documents. Mrs. Armster executed a living trust, in which she named herself as the beneficiary during her life time. She also executed a will, which devised her entire estate to the trust and named The Bible Hygiene New Direction Training Center as beneficiary of the trust upon her death. Appellant, a child of Mrs. Armster, filed suit in Chancery Court and sought to: (1) have a conservator appointed for his mother to manage her legal and financial affairs; (2) have the trust and will set aside on the basis that his mother did not have sufficient mental capacity to execute the documents; and (3) have the will set aside because it was obtained as a result of undue influence. The trial court did not appoint a conservator and found that Mrs. Armster had the requisite mental capacity to execute the documents. Further, the court found that the will was valid as it was not the result of undue influence. We affirm the decisions of the trial court.

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

PATRICIA J. COTTRELL , J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which BEN H. CANTRELL , P.J., M.S., and WILLIAM C. KOCH , JR., J., joined.

Tom W. Moore, Jr., Columbia, Tennessee, for the appellant, Robert L. Armster, Jr.

Jane M. Jennings, Lawrenceburg, Tennessee, for the appellee, Shirley Nixon, Trustee and The Bible Hygiene New Direction Training Center Trust.

OPINION

Rhoda Belle Armster is the appellant’s 78 year old mother. She and her deceased husband, Robert L. Armster, Sr., had four surviving children. The couple was drawn to health and evangelistic work and, once they had educated their children, they pursued the ministry and eventually moved to Tennessee. Shirley Nixon joined the Armsters’ ministry in 1978 as a volunteer and became significantly more involved both personally and professionally with the Armsters over the years. Ms. Nixon began living with the Armsters in 1988. Some of the Armster children resented her involvement.1

In 1990, Mrs. Armster suffered a head injury in an auto accident which caused a subdural hematoma. According to the children, Ms. Nixon’s role in the household grew even greater after Mrs. Armster’s injury. Ms. Nixon was responsible for the cooking and cleaning of the house and generally cared for Mr. and Mrs. Armster.

The Armsters bought a farm in Lawrence County in 1993 and formed the Bible Hygiene New Direction Training Center, where, with Ms. Nixon’s help, they sold nutrition supplements and gave lectures and seminars. Ms. Nixon also helped with management of the farm. In 1998, after learning he had cancer, Mr. Armster met with an attorney and arranged for the preparation of several documents for Mrs. Armster and himself. On September 10, 1998, Mr. and Mrs. Armster executed multiple documents. The first document executed created a trust, The Bible Hygiene New Direction Training Center Trust (“The Bible Hygiene Trust” or “Trust”), which was funded by assets transferred to it by the Armsters and which benefitted the grantors2 during their respective lifetimes. The second set of documents executed were three warranty deeds signed by both Mr. and Mrs. Armster which transferred their interest in four3 tracts of property to The Bible Hygiene Trust. The third document executed was a durable power of attorney, signed by Mrs. Armster that gave Mr. Armster, and in the event of his inability, Ms. Nixon power of attorney.4 The fourth document was a living will signed by Mrs. Armster.5 The fifth document executed was the last will and testament of Mrs. Armster, which devised her entire estate to The Bible Hygiene Trust.

1 The trial court found, “The four children appear to have great concern about the ro le Ms. N ixon gradu ally undertook with the Armster family. They felt that she was trying to displace Mrs. Armster and to assume roles that should have been Mrs. Arm ster’s. As stated earlier, Mrs. Nixon ap pears to be acting in the best interest of both M rs. Armster and the ministry. The feelings of the children, although understandable from the standpoint that Mrs. Nixon lived with their parents for years, and assumed more and more responsibility as to the ministry and the farm, is not supporte d by the testimo ny of numero us witnesses who were arou nd the farm a nd close to the Armsters .”

2 Mr. and M rs. Armster we re both grantors. All net income from the trust was to be d istributed to the grantor(s) or for their benefit du ring their lifetimes, or as the grantor(s) might designate. Any net income not needed by the grantor could be used to further the purposes of the trust as set out. After the death of the grantors, all income was to be used for the benefit of those persons whom the ministry and the trust were designed to help.

3 One of the warranty deeds transferred interests in two separate tracts of land.

4 The power of attorney signed by Mrs. Armster gives M r. Armster or Ms. N ixon power and control over M rs. Armster’s property a s well as power to provide for Mrs. Armster’s medical needs. The power of attorney gives her attorney, the power to “employ and compensate medical personnel . . . deemed by my Attorney needful for [Mrs. Armster’s] proper care,” and the power to “authorize any and all kind s of medica l procedu res and treatm ent . . . to obtain the use of me dical equip ment . . . deem ed by my A ttorney need ful for [Mrs. A rmster’s] pro per care.”

5 The living will provided that she authorized the withholding or withdrawal of artificially provided food, water, or nourishm ent or fluids. T he appe llant has not cha llenged the va lidity of this docum ent.

-2- The document that established The Bible Hygiene Trust stated the purpose of the trust was “to benefit the Grantor throughout the remainder of the Grantor’s life,” and after the Grantor’s death to provide “spiritual and physical care and training for all those who are poor, sick, and/or afflicted, and in need of such spiritual and physical care and training, and who submit themselves to the principles, health code, dress code, and Sabbath code established by the Bible Hygiene New Direction Training Center all to the glory of God.”

The trust document named Mr. Armster as Trustee and gave him broad authority to manage and distribute the income and assets. The document further provided, “In the event of the death, resignation, or inability of Robert Armster, Sr. to act as Trustee, Shirley Nixon of Lawrence County, Tennessee is hereby named Successor Trustee to act with all the powers and discretion given herein to the original Trustee.” The document named several other individuals to act in Ms. Nixon’s stead in the event of her death or resignation, none of whom were the Armster children.

On October 19, 1998, Mrs. Armster executed a codicil to the September 10, 1998, will. After expressing her love for each of her children, she again devised her entire estate to The Bible Hygiene Trust. Her lawyer testified that it was his practice to name the children in wills affecting their rights and that their names had inadvertently been omitted in the initial will.

Mr. Armster, Sr., died in March 1999. Several weeks later, his son, Robert Armster, Jr., (“Appellant”) filed the underlying action, in which he (1) sought a temporary restraining order which would prohibit Ms. Nixon from acting on behalf of The Bible Hygiene Trust; (2) requested the appointment of a guardian ad litem to represent Mrs.

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