Suzanne R. Vance v. Sally Ann Blue

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedNovember 28, 2022
DocketM2021-00064-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Suzanne R. Vance v. Sally Ann Blue (Suzanne R. Vance v. Sally Ann Blue) 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
Suzanne R. Vance v. Sally Ann Blue, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

11/28/2022 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE November 3, 2021 Session

SUZANNE R. VANCE v. SALLY ANN BLUE ET AL.

Appeal from the Chancery Court for Davidson County No. 18-772-IV Russell T. Perkins, Chancellor ___________________________________

No. M2021-00064-COA-R3-CV ___________________________________

Co-owners sought partition of their real property. They agreed that the property, a single- family home, could not be partitioned in kind. But they disagreed on the appropriate remedy. One owner asked the court to order a public sale and divide the proceeds between the parties. The other owner sought permission to buy out her co-owner’s interest. The court declined to order a sale. Instead, based on the equities, it directed one owner to buy out the other owner’s interest at a fixed price. Because the court’s decision contravened the partition statutes, we reverse in part, affirm in part, and remand for further proceedings.

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

W. NEAL MCBRAYER, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which ANDY D. BENNETT and CARMA DENNIS MCGEE, JJ., joined.

Roger A. Maness, Clarksville, Tennessee, for the appellant, Suzanne R. Vance.

Abby R. Rubenfeld, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellee, Sally Ann Blue.

OPINION

I.

A.

Sally Blue and Suzanne Vance were in a domestic partnership for about 15 years. For much of that time, they lived in a single-family residence at 107 South 12th Street in Nashville. They also owned and operated a Jimmy John’s franchise. Ms. Blue purchased the couple’s home with her own funds. At her direction, the property was deeded to “Sally Ann Blue and Suzanne R. Vance, tenants in common with rights of survivorship.” In 2010, the couple borrowed $180,000 from Regions Bank, secured by the residential property. They used the loan proceeds to renovate the franchise location and to pay off Ms. Vance’s credit card debt.

By 2011, Ms. Vance, who is an alcoholic, was exhibiting increasingly erratic behavior. At times, she was violent. And Ms. Blue sought, and obtained, multiple orders of protection against her. Ms. Vance only occupied the property intermittently between 2011 and 2015. The relationship ended in 2015 after a particularly violent episode. Ms. Blue obtained a five-year order of protection. And Ms. Vance pleaded guilty to criminal charges. Shortly thereafter, Ms. Vance moved to Illinois.

In 2016, the estranged couple obtained a business line of credit, secured by a second mortgage on the residential property. Ms. Blue used the proceeds from the line of credit— totaling $79,500—to buy new equipment and to pay various business expenses.

On July 13, 2018, Ms. Vance filed this partition action. She alleged that the couple had separated and their jointly-owned real property was not suitable for partition in kind. She asked the court to sell the property and divide the proceeds. For her part, Ms. Blue sought compensation for paying more than her share of property expenses. She also raised the defenses of abandonment and unclean hands. In her counterclaim for partition, Ms. Blue agreed that partition in kind was “not practicable or advisable.” But in lieu of a public sale, she asked the court for the opportunity to purchase Ms. Vance’s interest in the property.

B.

At the outset of trial, the parties stipulated to several key facts. Ms. Blue purchased the property in 2005. But it was titled to both parties as tenants in common with right of survivorship. Partition in kind of the single-family home was “not possible.” There were two deeds of trust encumbering the property. Since 2015, Ms. Blue had been in sole possession of the property.

According to Ms. Blue, she never intended to give Ms. Vance an ownership interest in the property. She added Ms. Vance to the title so that she would have a home if Ms. Blue died. Still, Ms. Blue conceded that in 2014 she swore in court documents that Ms. Vance had a 50% interest in the property as a co-tenant with right of survivorship.

Ms. Blue complained that Ms. Vance contributed nothing toward the purchase or maintenance of the property. Ms. Blue paid all property taxes, insurance premiums, and

2 mortgage payments for the property. And while Ms. Vance may have paid for some repairs, Ms. Blue paid the vast majority of those costs as well.

Ms. Blue made one thing clear; she wanted to keep the property. In her opinion, it was worth about $435,000. And she was willing to be responsible for the remaining mortgage debt. She believed that Ms. Vance had forfeited her interest in the property through her violent behavior and her failure to pay any property expenses.

Ms. Vance failed to come forward with any contrary evidence. She agreed that Ms. Blue paid all the mortgage payments. Yet she insisted that the payments were made from a business account. Otherwise, she either could not recall or did not know who paid specific property expenses.

C.

The court ruled that both parties had “an interest as tenants in common with right of survivorship in the subject real property.” Despite Ms. Blue’s protests, the court found evidence that she had given Ms. Vance an ownership interest in the property. But even if “the deed to the property d[id] not, for some reason, constitute a gift,” the clear language of the warranty deed established Ms. Vance’s ownership interest.

Either way, the court reasoned that “this gift . . . [wa]s subject to the financial obligations imposed on co-tenants and prevailing concepts of fundamental fairness and equity in the partition context.” Ms. Blue proved that she paid “all of the property taxes, interest, and maintenance, as well as for any improvements on the property.” She also paid all of the mortgage payments. And Ms. Vance paid nothing.1

In the court’s view, “it would be inequitable” to order the property sold “under the unique circumstances of this case.” Because Ms. Blue “paid for everything” and was forced to seek protective orders due to Ms. Vance’s violent behavior, the court determined that she should be allowed to purchase Ms. Vance’s interest in the property for $21,750, or roughly 5% of the property’s gross fair market value.2

The court directed that the property be partitioned “by means of [Ms. Blue] buying out [Ms. Vance’s] . . . ownership interest in the . . . real property by paying [Ms. Vance]

1 The court found insufficient proof to support Ms. Vance’s claim that she had been excluded from the property. Nor did Ms. Blue prove that Ms. Vance had abandoned the property. Under these circumstances, the court determined that it would be unfair to require Ms. Blue to pay Ms. Vance rent for the time she was in sole possession of the property. 2 The court’s buyout figure was based, at least in part, on its finding that Ms. Blue was entitled to “substantial” compensation for shouldering the financial burdens of property ownership.

3 the sum of $21,750.” It required Ms. Blue to pay the remaining mortgage debt. It also awarded Ms. Blue a monetary judgment as a sanction for Ms. Vance’s repeated failure to appear at a deposition.

II.

On appeal, Ms. Vance complains that the trial court erred in denying a pre-trial motion for a telephonic deposition. She also challenges the court’s decision to allow Ms. Blue to purchase her ownership interest in the real property at a fixed price.

Ms. Vance’s first issue stems from her efforts to avoid being deposed in Tennessee. Her efforts were due, in part, to certain unresolved “legal matters in Davidson County.”3 She resisted Ms. Blue’s attempts to schedule a deposition by agreement, resulting in Ms. Blue asking the court to require Ms. Vance to appear for a deposition. In response, Ms.

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Bluebook (online)
Suzanne R. Vance v. Sally Ann Blue, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/suzanne-r-vance-v-sally-ann-blue-tennctapp-2022.