Kevin Arnold v. Beatrice Fowler

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJanuary 8, 2021
DocketM2020-00608-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Kevin Arnold v. Beatrice Fowler (Kevin Arnold v. Beatrice Fowler) 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
Kevin Arnold v. Beatrice Fowler, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

01/08/2021 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE November 16, 2020 Session

KEVIN ARNOLD ET AL. V. BEATRICE FOWLER

Appeal from the Chancery Court for Franklin County No. 20408 Melissa T. Blevins-Willis, Chancellor

No. M2020-00608-COA-R3-CV

This is an action to set aside a quitclaim deed. The sole issue on appeal is whether the grantor delivered the deed to the grantee with the intention that it be an effective conveyance. After the grantor signed a quitclaim deed transferring title to a 42-acre tract to the grantee, the grantor’s mother, the grantee took possession of the deed. Later that day, the deed was placed in a lockbox maintained for the grantee’s benefit but co-owned by the grantor and her sister. Approximately three years later, while the deed remained in the lockbox, the grantor died. Shortly thereafter, the mother instructed the surviving daughter to bring the deed to her, which she did, and the mother recorded the deed. Upon learning of the recording of the deed, the grantor’s husband and children commenced this action to set aside the deed for failure of delivery arguing the deed remained in the grantor’s possession and control from the time she executed it until her death. Following a bench trial, the court found that the grantor delivered the deed to her mother with the intention that it be an effective conveyance and held that the conveyance was valid. We affirm.

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

FRANK G. CLEMENT JR., P.J., M.S., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which ANDY D. BENNETT and W. NEAL MCBRAYER, JJ., joined.

Robert S. Peters, Winchester, Tennessee, for the appellants, Kevin Arnold, Keith Arnold, and Calvin Arnold.

Gregory M. O’Neal, Winchester, Tennessee, for the appellees, Carolyn Mason and Eddie Fowler.

OPINION

The deed at issue in this appeal was one of six quitclaim deeds that were executed at the offices of Sovereign Title on June 16, 2014, as part of an unorthodox estate plan orchestrated by Beatrice Fowler, the mother of three adult children, Linda Arnold, Carolyn Mason, and Eddie Fowler.

Prior to June 16, 2014, Mrs. Fowler hired a surveyor to divide a large tract of real property she owned in Franklin County, Tennessee into three separate tracts. She then retained Sovereign Title to draft three deeds pursuant to which she would convey a separate tract to each of her children, and three additional deeds pursuant to which each child would contemporaneously reconvey the same tract to Mrs. Fowler.

The closing occurred at the offices of Sovereign Title on June 16, 2014, at which time Mrs. Fowler executed three quitclaim deeds, each conveying one of the three tracts to each of her children while retaining a life estate in each. Contemporaneously, each child executed a quitclaim deed conveying the same tract back to Mrs. Fowler. The deed at issue in this appeal purportedly conveyed a 42-acre tract from Linda Arnold to Mrs. Fowler.

The three deeds conveying property to the children were promptly recorded; however, none of the deeds conveying the property back to Mrs. Fowler were recorded. Instead, on the afternoon of the closing, Mrs. Fowler and her two daughters took the unrecorded deeds to Regions Bank and stored them in a lockbox co-owned by Mrs. Arnold and Mrs. Mason as joint tenants with right of survivorship but maintained solely for Mrs. Fowler’s benefit.

Linda Arnold died in a car accident on April 10, 2017, while all three unrecorded deeds remained in the lockbox.1 Following Mrs. Arnold’s death, Mrs. Fowler instructed her other daughter, Mrs. Mason, to retrieve the Arnold deed from the lockbox, and upon receiving it, Mrs. Fowler recorded the deed. After learning of the recording of the Arnold deed, Linda Arnold’s husband, Calvin Arnold, and sons, Keith and Kevin Arnold, (“Plaintiffs”) commenced this action in Franklin County Chancery Court against Mrs. Fowler, seeking to set aside the deed from Mrs. Arnold to Mrs. Fowler. Plaintiffs alleged the deed was in a lockbox owned by Linda Arnold at the time of her death, and thus, Mrs. Arnold never delivered the deed to Mrs. Fowler.

Mrs. Fowler timely filed an answer denying Plaintiffs’ allegations. She claimed Mrs. Arnold delivered the deed to her at the Sovereign Title office, and shortly following, the deed was stored in a lockbox that Mrs. Arnold and Mrs. Mason acquired for the sole benefit of Mrs. Fowler. Thus, Mrs. Fowler contended she maintained possession and control of the deed from the date Mrs. Arnold executed it.

Mrs. Fowler died on December 9, 2019, and her attorney filed a Suggestion of Death in January 2020. Plaintiffs filed a Motion of Substitution of Parties, which the court

1 Mrs. Arnold died intestate. -2- granted, substituting the co-executors of the estate, Carolyn Mason and Eddie Fowler, as the defendants.

The case was tried on February 20, 2020. Calvin Arnold and Carolyn Mason were the only witnesses. After reviewing the testimony and other evidence admitted at the trial, the court made the following findings from the bench:2

What the facts show . . . is that on June 16th, 2014, there were a series of deeds that were prepared. Ms. Fowler executed deeds with the apparent intention to give property to each of her children but to retain control over that property in some mechanism, or at least possession during her life by retaining a life estate. But to take it a step further, at the same time these deeds were executed in June, Ms. Fowler for -- I won’t say that she directed it, but I’ll say . . . the facts are that the children at the same time signed deeds back over to their mom, to Ms. Fowler. And based on the testimony that’s not been refuted, those deeds were then given to Ms. Fowler, which under the current State of Tennessee law would constitute delivery. And whether or not she directed the deeds be . . . placed one place or another or whether or not she recorded the deeds are not the issue for the Court today, but it’s simply whether or not the deeds were delivered. And so I make a finding that . . . after the deeds were prepared in June of 2014, they were subsequently delivered to Ms. Beatrice Fowler. And so as such, she had title to the property at that point in time to do with as she chose.

Based upon these and other findings of fact and conclusions of law, the court denied Plaintiffs’ request to set aside the conveyance.

This appeal followed.

STANDARD OF REVIEW

“In all actions tried upon the facts without a jury, the court shall find the facts specially and shall state separately its conclusions of law and direct the entry of the appropriate judgment.” Tenn. R. Civ. P. 52.01. If the trial court makes the required findings of fact, appellate courts review the trial court’s factual findings de novo upon the record, accompanied by a presumption of the correctness of the findings, unless the preponderance of the evidence is otherwise. Kelly v. Kelly, 445 S.W.3d 685, 692 (Tenn. 2014) (citing Tenn. R. App. P. 13(d)). “For the evidence to preponderate against a trial court’s finding of fact, it must support another finding of fact with greater convincing effect.” State ex rel. Flowers v. Tennessee Trucking Ass’n Self Ins. Grp. Trust, 209 S.W.3d 595, 599 (Tenn.

2 The written order entered on March 23, 2020, incorporated the court’s oral ruling immediately following the trial. -3- Ct. App. 2006). Our review of a trial court’s determinations on issues of law is de novo, without any presumption of correctness. Lind v.

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Bluebook (online)
Kevin Arnold v. Beatrice Fowler, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kevin-arnold-v-beatrice-fowler-tennctapp-2021.