ORNL Federal Credit Union v. Estate of Helen D. Turley

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedApril 3, 2020
DocketE2019-00861-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of ORNL Federal Credit Union v. Estate of Helen D. Turley (ORNL Federal Credit Union v. Estate of Helen D. Turley) 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
ORNL Federal Credit Union v. Estate of Helen D. Turley, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

04/03/2020 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT KNOXVILLE February 18, 2020 Session

ORNL FEDERAL CREDIT UNION, ET AL. v. ESTATE OF HELEN D. TURLEY, ET AL.

Appeal from the Chancery Court for Anderson County No. 16CH8455 M. Nichole Cantrell, Chancellor

No. E2019-00861-COA-R3-CV

This appeal concerns a lawsuit between brothers over funds belonging to their late mother, Helen D. Turley (“Decedent”). Tim Turley, executor of Decedent’s estate (“the Estate”), deposited $138,605.14 from a Y-12 Federal Credit Union (“Y-12 FCU”) account owned by Decedent into an estate account at ORNL Federal Credit Union (“ORNL FCU”). An issue arose because William Dean Turley was named sole payable- on-death beneficiary on the Y-12 FCU account, and he asserted the funds were his. ORNL FCU filed a complaint for interpleader in the Chancery Court for Anderson County (“the Trial Court”) to determine the funds’ owner. In a cross-claim, Tim Turley and the Estate alleged that William Dean Turley exercised undue influence over Decedent and that Decedent was incompetent when she named William Dean Turley as the payable-on-death beneficiary on the account. William Dean Turley filed a motion for summary judgment, which the Trial Court granted. The Estate and Tim Turley appeal. We hold that William Dean Turley successfully demonstrated that the evidence at the summary judgment stage is insufficient to establish undue influence, fraud, or lack of mental competency, and there are no genuine issues of material fact for trial. We reverse the Trial Court’s judgment, however, to the extent it awarded attorney’s fees and expenses to William Dean Turley, as these fees and expenses were awarded in contravention of the American Rule. Otherwise, we affirm.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Chancery Court Affirmed, in Part, and Reversed, in Part; Case Remanded

D. MICHAEL SWINEY, C.J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which JOHN W. MCCLARTY and THOMAS R. FRIERSON, II, JJ., joined.

Gerald L. Gulley, Jr., Knoxville, Tennessee, for the appellant, Estate of Helen D. Turley, deceased. J. Stephen Hurst, LaFollette, Tennessee, for the appellant, Tim Turley. David A. Stuart, Clinton, Tennessee, for the appellee, William Dean Turley.

George Turley and Jon Turley, pro se appellees.1

OPINION

Background

On May 24, 2010, Helen D. Turley designated her adult son William Dean Turley sole payable-on-death beneficiary on her account at Y-12 FCU. In August 2013, she died. Tim Turley, another of Decedent’s four sons, was named executor of the Estate. In November 2014, Tim Turley opened an account for the Estate at ORNL FCU, and he deposited $138,605.14 into this account from Decedent’s Y-12 FCU account. William Dean Turley’s designation as payable-on-death beneficiary was discovered, which precipitated this litigation. Incidentally, William Dean Turley previously had served as co-executor of his father’s estate, a fact later highlighted by the Estate in support of its stance that William Dean Turley’s relationship with Decedent was confidential in nature.

In November 2016, ORNL FCU filed a complaint for interpleader in the Trial Court against the four Turley brothers and the Estate seeking a determination as to the rightful owner of the funds. That same month, William Dean Turley filed an answer and cross-claim asserting claims for conversion and violation of “the Tennessee Consumer Protection Law” against his brother, Tim Turley. William Dean Turley filed requests for admissions, as well. In January 2017, Tim Turley, individually and as Executor of the Estate, filed an answer and cross-claim alleging that his brother, William Dean Turley, had exercised undue influence on Decedent and that Decedent was not competent to designate William Dean Turley as beneficiary on her Y-12 FCU account. In March 2017, ORNL FCU was dismissed, its role in the case having come to an end.

In July 2018, William Dean Turley filed a motion for summary judgment. The motion was supported by a statement of undisputed material facts, a declaration under penalty of perjury, and transcripts of the depositions of William Dean Turley and Tim Turley, along with exhibits. Among the material facts William Dean Turley submitted were these:

9. Dean was present in the bank when the payable on death designation was made on May 24, 2010. However, he was unaware of it at

1 These parties have not filed briefs on appeal. -2- the time, having been asked to step away at one point while their mother was conducting business with the bank officer. ***

12. In his deposition testimony, Tim Turley admitted he had no idea what went on between his brother, William Dean Turley, and their mother, in connection with the decision to make equal distributions from their father’s estate, or whose idea it was to make equal distributions, with William Dean Turley having testified that he did what his mother wanted in connection with those distributions. 13. Their mother lived at home with their brother Jon until her final illness. 14. Although their mother had been hospitalized in psychiatric facilities in the 1990s and needed to take psychiatric medications, Tim Turley has no expert evidence of a lack of mental capacity or competence on her part at any material time. 15. William Dean Turley was unaware that he had been designated the payable on death beneficiary of the account in question until early in October, 2016, when he found an envelope with an account statement in it with his mother’s handwriting on the front saying that it was important and “for Dean.” The envelope and its contents were provided as late filed Exhibit 6 to his deposition. 16. William Dean Turley never had a discussion with their mother about giving him more money than his brothers, but there were many possible reasons she would have done so; their parents had previously paid off approximately eighty thousand dollars ($80,000.00) in student loans for him. 17. William Dean Turley never had a discussion with their mother in which there had been a suggestion that he would distribute the proceeds of the account designated payable on her death to him equally like she had told him to do with the proceeds of the father’s estate. 18. In May of 2010, their mother was cogent and looking for interesting and meaningful things to do, as she had done all her life, and she and Dean often talked over the phone; when he took her on the bank visits on May 24, 2010, she was in good condition and had no difficulty walking. 19. In 2010, William Dean Turley was living in Knoxville, and their mother lived at home with their brother, Jon, who helped care for her and provided most of her transportation. 20. In support of his motion for summary judgment, William Dean Turley has submitted a sworn declaration, filed contemporaneously herewith, which states that his mother was in good physical and mental -3- condition on the 24th day of May, 2010, that he did not influence her in any way in connection with the payable on death designation she made that day, that he did not know about the designation having been made until October, 2016, when he found late-filed Exhibit 6, that he was not in a fiduciary relationship with his mother at any time, that although they had a normal relationship of trust between a parent and child, there were no elements of dominance, influence, dependence or control in their relationship and it was accordingly not confidential in nature, and that he did not engage in any fraud, misrepresentation or deceit, or otherwise attempt to persuade or influence their mother in any way in connection with the conduct of her financial and business affairs.

(Citations omitted). In response, Tim Turley did not dispute or affirm each of William Dean Turley’s material facts. Tim Turley did file an affidavit, wherein he stated, in part:

2.

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Bluebook (online)
ORNL Federal Credit Union v. Estate of Helen D. Turley, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ornl-federal-credit-union-v-estate-of-helen-d-turley-tennctapp-2020.