Paula Harris, Conservator For Saundra Richey v. Reuben "Royce" Richey

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedDecember 21, 2021
DocketM2021-00331-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Paula Harris, Conservator For Saundra Richey v. Reuben "Royce" Richey (Paula Harris, Conservator For Saundra Richey v. Reuben "Royce" Richey) 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
Paula Harris, Conservator For Saundra Richey v. Reuben "Royce" Richey, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

12/21/2021 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE Assigned on Briefs November 1, 2021

PAULA HARRIS, CONSERVATOR FOR SAUNDRA RICHEY v. RUEBEN “ROYCE” RICHEY ET AL.

Appeal from the Chancery Court for Williamson County No. 19CV-48682B Michael W. Binkley, Judge ___________________________________

No. M2021-00331-COA-R3-CV ___________________________________

This appeal arises from a divorce action, in which the wife’s conservator alleged that the husband had been dissipating marital assets and had withdrawn money from joint accounts. As a result, the trial court ordered the husband to deposit the withdrawn funds with the court’s clerk and master. The wife passed away before the trial court could adjudicate the divorce action. The husband filed a motion requesting that the court return the funds to him because the divorce action had abated upon the wife’s death. The trial court dismissed the suit but denied the husband’s motion and ordered the clerk and master to continue holding the funds until they could be transferred to the probate court upon the filing of a petition to probate the wife’s estate. The husband has appealed. Having determined that the trial court erred by exercising subject matter jurisdiction over the disposition of the funds after the divorce action had abated, we reverse the trial court’s decision to withhold the funds from the husband and retain them with the clerk and master.

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

THOMAS R. FRIERSON, II, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which W. NEAL MCBRAYER and KENNY W. ARMSTRONG, JJ., joined.

Robert H. Plummer, III, Franklin, Tennessee, for the appellant, Rueben “Royce” Richey.

Peggy S. Pulley, Ashland City, Tennessee, for the appellee, Paula Harris, Conservator for Saundra Richey. OPINION

I. Factual and Procedural Background

In May 2019, Saundra Richey (“Wife”) vacated the marital residence where she had lived with the respondent, her husband, Reuben “Royce” Richey (“Husband”), and was hospitalized as a result of dementia. The petitioner, Paula Harris, became Wife’s appointed conservator (“Conservator”) in August 2019. On September 3, 2019, Conservator filed a petition in the Williamson County Chancery Court (“trial court”) for legal separation on behalf of Wife, alleging, inter alia, that Husband and Christy Schrage, Husband’s daughter from a previous marriage, had removed $30,000.00 from a Wells Fargo joint checking account; $60,000.00 from a Regions joint checking account; sold $11,867.79 worth of joint stock; sold $87,519.11 of additional joint stock; and removed $144,658.96 from a joint Ameritrade account. According to the petition for legal separation, Husband made these withdrawals in July and August of 2019. Ms. Schrage alleged in a subsequent motion that Husband thought Conservator was “scheming to try to take his money” and that Conservator had told her that she had filed the petition for legal separation to protect Conservator’s children’s interest in Wife’s assets as beneficiaries named in Wife’s will.1

Conservator requested in the petition for legal separation that the trial court issue an ex parte emergency restraining order to protect Wife’s share of marital assets and enjoin Husband and Ms. Schrage from “transferring, utilizing, accessing, hiding or any way disposing of ANY marital property.” On September 3, 2019, the trial court granted Conservator’s request, entering a temporary restraining order, pursuant to Tennessee Code Annotated section 36-4-106(d) (2021), and an order to appear and show cause. The trial court also directed Husband to provide the court with a full accounting of “all funds removed by [Husband] and[/]or Ms. Schrage from each one of the accounts listed in the petition for legal separation.”

On September 19, 2020, Conservator filed a motion for civil contempt, alleging that Husband had violated the temporary restraining order by dissipating $856.34 of marital funds and failing to provide a full accounting of the withdrawn funds. In an order entered on September 20, 2019, the trial court found that Husband had failed to render the accounting. Consequently, Husband was ordered to submit the filing. In addition, the trial court directed that the temporary restraining order remain in “full force and effect” with the exception of Husband’s monthly income of $8,291.25, which Husband was permitted to use for living expenses. The court also ordered the remaining marital funds that had been withdrawn to be deposited into Wife’s attorney’s escrow account. However, once Husband and Ms. Schrage provided the court with a complete accounting and a check in

1 Conservator’s children are named as beneficiaries in Wife’s will and are identified as Wife’s grandchildren. Therefore, it appears that Conservator is a daughter of Wife from a previous marriage. -2- the amount of $179,340.23, the court instead determined that the funds should be deposited with the clerk and master in an interest-bearing account.

On October 8, 2019, Husband filed a counter-petition for divorce and an answer to Wife’s petition for legal separation. Before the trial court had the opportunity to adjudicate either Wife’s petition for legal separation or Husband’s counter-petition for divorce, Wife passed away on October 24, 2020. On November 4, 2020, Husband filed a motion to dismiss Wife’s petition for legal separation and requested that the court enter an order returning the funds being held by the clerk and master to him, arguing that the case had abated upon Wife’s death.

Conservator filed a response to Husband’s motion, acknowledging that Wife had died but contesting Husband’s request for immediate return of the funds held in the registry of the court. Conservator posited that although the funds had previously been owned by Husband and Wife jointly, the funds ceased to be held by the entirety when Husband placed the funds in an account solely in his name. Therefore, according to Conservator, the funds became “individually owned marital funds subject to division by the court,” and a portion belonged to Wife’s estate. Furthermore, Conservator contended that the executrix of Wife’s estate would be able to file “for a determination of the exact amount that should be released to each party.” Nonetheless, Conservator further alleged that the executrix’s attorney had indicated to her that the executrix would not be requesting that the trial court determine the amount that should be paid to Wife’s estate or seeking those funds on behalf of Wife’s estate.2 In turn, Conservator requested that the court not dismiss the instant action or, in the alternative, retain the funds held by the clerk and master “pending the outcome of any motions filed in the Probate Court.”

The trial court conducted a hearing to address Husband’s motion on November 19, 2020. The court entered an order on December 14, 2020, in which it, inter alia, continued the hearing to January 14, 2021; ordered Husband to file a suggestion of death and a death certificate evincing Wife’s death; determined that it would retain jurisdiction over the issue of payment of reasonable attorney’s fees from the funds maintained by the clerk and master; and determined that it would retain jurisdiction over the remaining funds held in the court’s registry “until such time as [Wife’s] estate is opened for probate and said funds can be transferred to the appropriate Probate Court.” Thereafter, Husband filed a suggestion of death and death certificate indicating that Wife had passed away on October 24, 2020.

2 Although Conservator does not name the executrix in her response, Wife’s Last Will and Testament lists Husband and Margaret O’Neal Dunn as co-executors of the will. Husband’s attorney in this matter, Robert H.

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Bluebook (online)
Paula Harris, Conservator For Saundra Richey v. Reuben "Royce" Richey, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/paula-harris-conservator-for-saundra-richey-v-reuben-royce-richey-tennctapp-2021.