The Estate of Charles Thomas Mccraw v. JoAn Likins

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedFebruary 12, 2009
DocketW2008-00564-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of The Estate of Charles Thomas Mccraw v. JoAn Likins (The Estate of Charles Thomas Mccraw v. JoAn Likins) 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
The Estate of Charles Thomas Mccraw v. JoAn Likins, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT JACKSON October 23, 2008 Session

THE ESTATE OF CHARLES THOMAS McCRAW, Deceased v. JoAN LIKINS

Direct Appeal from the Chancery Court for Fayette County No. P-3-325 Allen W. Wallace, Chancellor

No. W2008-00564-COA-R3-CV - Filed February 12, 2009

This appeal arises from a decedent’s testamentary obligation to distribute his estate in accord with a marital dissolution agreement. The trial court determined that the decedent’s codicil obligated his estate to pay joint debts that the decedent incurred with his fiancè, and his estate could not seek contribution from fiancè for paying more than half of the debts. The trial court also determined that this distribution did not violate the marital dissolution agreement that decedent had negotiated with his ex-wife. We affirm the trial court on these two determinations. We, however, reverse the trial court’s finding that the estate was not required to reimburse fiancè for payments that she made on the debts after the decedent’s death and before the trial court ordered the estate to pay the debt.

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

DAVID R. FARMER , J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which ALAN E. HIGHERS, P.J., W.S., and J. STEVEN STAFFORD , J., joined.

Thomas M. Minor, Somerville, Tennessee, for the appellant, Beverly McCraw, Executrix of the Estate of Charles Thomas McCraw.

Lee S. Saunders, Somerville, Tennessee, for the appellee, JoAn Likins.

OPINION

Facts & Procedural History

Decedent Dr. Thomas McCraw (“Decedent”) and Executrix Beverly McCraw (“Ms. McCraw”) were married for approximately 36 years. In 1969, while they were married, Decedent executed a will (“Will”) leaving his entire estate to Ms. McCraw. The parties were divorced in 1994, and pursuant to their divorce, Decedent and Ms. McCraw executed a Marital Dissolution Agreement (“MDA”). The MDA provided that Decedent would redraft his 1969 will to give Ms. McCraw “an irrevocable life estate in all Husband’s realty, with fee vesting irrevocably in the parties’ children” and to give his personal property to the their children.1 The MDA also provided that the Decedent could only alter the terms and provisions of the revised will with Ms. McCraw’s signed approval. Upon entering a final decree of divorce, the trial court approved and incorporated the MDA into its order. On January 17, 1995, Decedent executed a typed codicil (“First Codicil”) to his will in conformity with the MDA and the court’s Final Decree of Divorce.2

Several years after his divorce, Decedent became engaged to JoAn Likins (“Ms. Likins”). At some point, Decedent purchased an ATV (four-wheeler). At that time, Decedent wrote on the inside of the front cover of the four-wheeler’s brochure (“Second Codicil”). The message stated “Happy Birthday. In case of my demise or incapacity this unit belongs to JoAn Likins, 5-22-99 /s/ Dr. Charles McCraw.” Since the date of purchase, Ms. Likins has retained possession of the ATV, and it was her understanding that she owned the ATV from the date it was purchased. Ms. Likins did not, however, receive possession of title to the four-wheeler, and she is not named in the financing documents.

Decedent and Ms. Likins also signed jointly for several loans. On May 24, 1999, Decedent and Ms. Likins received a $75,750.00 joint loan from the Bank of Mason and used it to purchase the real property next door to where Ms. Likins lives. This property contains two homes, which she rents out. Decedent and Ms. Likins also took out a $16,150.10 joint loan from the Bank of Mason on May 6, 2000. This loan was a combination of two smaller loans that Decedent and Ms. Likins owed jointly, and the additional money was used to do work on the rental property and dig a pond at Decedent’s home. We hereinafter refer to both the $75,750.00 and $16,150.10 loans as the parties’ “joint loans.”

1 The MDA states the following:

7. Husband’s Will. Husband agrees and contracts that he shall imm ediately re-draft and revise his Last Will and Testament (a copy of which is attached hereto as Exhibit A) to give Wife an irrevocable life estate in all Husband’s realty, with fee vesting irrevocably in the parties’ children, and that all Husband’s personalty shall be irrevocably transferred directly to the parties’ children. Husband shall provide Wife with a copy of his re-drafted and revised Will within 60 days of the entry of the Final Decree of Divorce in this cause. The parties acknowledge that this Marital Dissolution Agreement shall be sufficient to enforce the terms of Husband’s re-drafted and revised Will, as set forth hereinabove, in the event of Husband’s death, unless Wife has signed an agreement altering the terms and provisions of Husband’s W ill. The parties further agree that this provision of the parties’ Marital Dissolution Agreement is not effected by Tennessee Code Annotated § 32-1-201, Tennessee Code Annotated § 32-1-202, or any other law to the contrary.

2 Decedent’s First Codicial to his last will and testament states the following:

I hereby change my Will to give my former wife, Beverly M cCraw, a life estate only in realty owned by me at the time of my death with the remainder vesting in my children in equal shares. I further modify my Will to devise to my children all my personalty in equal shares.

-2- Before his death, Decedent gave Ms. Likins a sealed envelope addressed to Decedent’s attorney. The envelope stated, “JoAn give to Lee if I don’t make it. Yours forever /s/ Dr. Charles McCraw, P.S. Make copies of everything.” Inside the envelope was a letter dated June 30, 2000. Decedent wrote the letter (“Third Codicil”) on his professional letterhead; the letter stated, “Dear John Shelton and Lee: Please take care of JoAn and Johna: My kids and there [sic] Mother will not: Please know I love them with all my heart: Our LOANS are to be paid by my Estate: Thank you /s/ Dr. Charles McCraw.”

Decedent died on July 6, 2000, and upon his death, Ms. McCraw petitioned the trial court to establish a lost will and codicil. The trial court admitted the will and codicil as Decedent’s Last Will and First Codicil thereto. Subsequently, Ms. Likins sought to intervene and admit Decedent’s two handwritten letters as holographic codicils. Although Ms. McCraw filed a response that the letters failed to meet the requirements of Tennessee Code Annotated § 32-1- 101, et seq. and violated the MDA, the trial court admitted the handwritten codicils to probate on April 5, 2002. The trial court reserved the issue of whether the codicils violated the MDA. Ms. Likins filed a Motion for Declaratory Judgment and To Quiet Title in Real Property, and Ms. McCraw filed a Complaint to Contest Holographic Codicils, alleging undue influence and lack of testamentary capacity.

On July 26, 2002, the trial court held a hearing to determine whether the holographic codicils violated the MDA. The trial court entered an order on September 6, 2002, addressing whether the holographic codicils violated the terms of the MDA. The trial court found that the Second Codicil, written on May 22, 1999, was in violation of the MDA because it purported to bequeath personal property at Decedent’s death.3 The trial court also found, however, that the Third Codicil, written on June 30, 2000, did not violate the MDA; the estate, therefore, was obligated to pay any unpaid balance of the joint debts. The trial court held that by the terms of the Third Codicil Decedent’s estate had no right of contribution against Ms. Likins, but the court also found that the estate was not required to reimburse Ms. Likins for the payments that she made on the joint loan after Decedent’s death.

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