IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
AT NASHVILLE
September 8, 2008 Session
JAMES D. YOUNG, ADMINISTRATOR, ESTATE OF ALVA L. YOUNG, v.
JERE R. YOUNG
Direct Appeal from the Chancery Court for Smith County, Probate Division
No. P-859 Hon. C.K. Smith, Chancellor
No. M2007-02452-COA-R3-CV - Filed October 31, 2008
In this Estate, the Executor sued a legatee for a debt owing the Deceased. The parties settled that
action by an Order stating that the indebtedness owed to the Decedent by the legatee at the time of
death would be treated as an advancement to the legatee in the distribution of the Estate. In the final
accounting by the Special Master, the Master found that the legatee defendant owed the Estate
$45,942.64. This finding was concurred in by the Trial Court and, on appeal, we affirm the Judgment
of the Trial Court.
Tenn. R. App. P.3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Chancery Court Affirmed.
HERSCHEL PICKENS FRANKS, P.J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which D. MICHAEL SWINEY ,
J., and SHARON G. LEE, S.J., joined.
Gary D. Copas, Nashville, Tennessee, for Appellant, Jere R. Young.
Randy Wakefield, Carthage, Tennessee, for Appellee, James D. Young.
OPINION
This action arises from a dispute over the final accounting in the Estate of Alva L.
Young.
Background
Alva L. Young died testate on October 17, 1998 and her Will and Codicil were
admitted to probate without objection on November 9, 1998. James D. Young, one of her four sons,
and Randy Wakefield, her attorney, were appointed Co-Executors. Executor Young filed a
Complaint against his brother Jere R. Young (Appellant herein) to collect an indebtedness Jere had
owed decedent and now her Estate. Several promissory notes, deeds of trust and cancelled checks,
which were referenced “for loan”, were attached to the Complaint, and Jere raised the defense that
the Complaint was barred by the statute of limitations in a Motion to Dismiss.
The suit was settled between the parties and an Agreed Order was entered by the
Probate Court on February 8, 2002. The Order set forth the following:
1. All indebtedness owed the Decedent by the defendant at the time of her death
shall be treated as an advancement to the defendant in the plaintiff’s
administration and distribution of her Estate.
2. The Clerk & Master is hereby appointed Special Master by virtue of this
order and an order of reference. The Special Master shall under the below
stated conditions make the following determinations and report to the Court,
to-wit:
a. The total indebtedness owed by the defendant to the Decedent at the
time of death.
b. All credits which have been given by the plaintiff to the defendant
against such indebtedness through the plaintiff’s receipt of “mineral
rights” royalties or other payments due the defendant since the
Decedent’s date of death.
c. The determination and report shall be made without a hearing in the
taking of evidence unless the Special Master deems a hearing to be
necessary within the purview of the Special Master’s power and
authority under TRCP Rule 53.
d. The parties shall lodge and file with the Special Master on or before
February 22, 2002, all papers and documentation which each party
deems material and relevant to the determinations herein above
ordered to be performed.
3. All other matters, including all interest issues accruing after date of death, are
reserved pending the filing of the Special Master’s report.
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On the date of the entry of that Order, Jere withdrew his Motion to Dismiss. He now
claims that he withdrew the defense under the statute of limitations “[i]n accordance with the
settlement”.1
The Special Master reported on the Order of Reference which stated that Jere’s
indebtedness to the Estate was $194,857.43 after giving defendant credit for $26,325.00 in mineral
rights royalty payments against one of his loans which he owed the Estate. Jere filed an objection
to the Master’s report objecting to the amount of total indebtedness the Master found because it
included interest that accrued after the time of the Decedent’s death based on the language in the
Agreed Order that specified that the Master was to determine the total indebtedness at the time of
death. Jere’s calculation of the total indebtedness at the time of death was $162,770.53. Jere also
objected to the Master’s calculation of credit applied to the indebtedness from defendant’s share of
mineral royalties because the Master determined the total credit applied to the loans from the
royalties both before and after the Decedent’s death. The Agreed Order instructed the Master to
determine the credit give by the Executor to the debt since the Decedent’s date of death. Jere,
however, objected to the Master’s report because she omitted a determination of credit existing at
the time of Decedent’s death.
Later, Jere filed another objection to the Master’s Report regarding a claimed
miscalculation of interest. He attached an affidavit from another brother, William H. Young, who
stated that it was his belief that the only loan from his mother to Jere still in existence was a
$95,000.00 loan made in June of 1990 and that the other loans charged to Jere’s portion of the Estate
were in error.
The Trial
The Chancellor heard argument and entered an Order on June 16, 2003,
confirming the Master’s report that declared the sum of $194,857.43 as an advancement to Jere
Young, as of the date of the report. The Court also ruled that Jere Young was not to receive double
credit but full credit for all mineral royalties kept by the administrator under his duty as administrator
of the Will.
Jere, appearing pro se, filed a Motion to set aside the Court’s Order arguing that
under Tenn. Code Ann. § 32-3-101 “a will speaks and takes effect as of the date of death, such date
is October 28, 1998." He reasoned that all claims accruing after that date (such as interest on the
debt owed by defendant) are not valid under the statute and the Master’s report should be amended
accordingly.
The Trial Court rejected defendant’s Motion stating that: “the Court finds that the
Order was entered by agreement and that it would not be proper to modify or re-consider same
pursuant to the demand made.”
1
There is no agreement with the Executor to that effect in the record.
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On September 7, 2007 the Executor presented to the Court a Final Accounting for
approval. Jere Young filed an objection to the Final Accounting because it showed that he owed the
Estate $45, 942.64, and argued that he “owed the estate nothing under such indebtedness after the
date of death.”
Subsequently, the Trial Court entered an Order approving the Final Accounting. Jere
Young appealed and raised these issues:
A. Whether appellant’s indebtedness was correctly treated as an advancement
as agreed by the parties and ordered by the Court?
B. Did the Executer incorrectly treat the mineral rights as property passing
through the administration of the Estate instead of property that should pass
directly to the devisees?
The record before us consists of the technical record of the Probate Court which
contains the Last Will and Testament of Alva L. Young and a Codicil to the Will. The Will and
Codicil provide for the payment of all debts and expenses related to the funeral and administration
and closing of the Estate be paid out of the funds of the decedent, and that all property, except
mineral rights, be sold by the Executor. The Will also provided for several legacies in the amount
of $12,800.00 and provided for an equal division of the remainder of the Estate between the four
sons of the Deceased.
Item Eleven of the Will is at issue on appeal and provides:
In the event any beneficiary, whether a direct beneficiary under my will or a
beneficiary of any trust which I may establish, is indebted to me at the time of my
death, I direct such indebtedness be computed, with interest, and such amount of debt
be paid to my estate. I direct my Executor to compute the amount of interest at an
annualized rate of four and one-half (4 ½ ) percent with annual compounding from
the date of the loan to the date for recovery of the debt unless a written loan
agreement provides for use of a different rate of interest. I direct my Executor to
collect any such amount of debt owed to me in full from the indebted beneficiary
using such means as appropriate or by a withholding of funds or mineral rights from
the indebted beneficiary’s share of my estate . . . . Furthermore, I direct that my
Executor shall not excuse any beneficiary’s debt even if said debt should no longer
be deemed legally collectable because of bankruptcy or statute of limitations or for
other reason. (Emphasis added).
Article14 added by the Codicil addresses the handling of the income from the
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mineral rights:
In respect to distribution of any income from mineral royalties and to administration
of other matters relating to the mineral rights which I have bequeathed, I designate
my son, James Daniel Young, to handle all such matters. . . . It shall be the
Executor’s discretion whether to sell or retain mineral rights to disperse to the heirs
and trusts.
“. . . The standard of review in cases of this nature is de novo upon the record with
a presumption of correctness as to the findings of fact,2 unless the preponderance of the evidence is
otherwise. . . . Questions of law are reviewed de novo with no presumption of correctness.” Bowden
v. Ward, 27 S.W.3d 913, 916 (Tenn. 2000) (citations omitted).
Appellant argues that the parties to the Complaint filed by the Executor settled that
suit by agreeing that appellant’s indebtedness to the Decedent would be treated like an advancement
and that in consideration of this agreement, appellant agreed to waive his statue of limitations
affirmative defense and that this agreement was the basis of the Agreed Order entered by the Trial
Court on February 8, 2002. He then argues that the “Executor was thereafter judicially estopped
from denying such advancement treatment or otherwise taking an inconsistent position to such
agreement in the course of the administration proceeding.” Further, he claims the Executor failed
to treat the indebtedness like it had been an advancement because the Executor did not add the
indebtedness of $194,857.43 to the assets of $836,274.99 listed in the Final Accounting. Based on
his methodology, he claims he would be due $10,820.66 from the Estate rather than owing
$42,942.64.
The Final Accounting and its attachments are part of the technical record before the
Court, and its attachments demonstrate that the loan to Jere R. Young, totaling $199,406.36, was part
of the assets of $836,274.99 as listed in the Final Accounting. In fact, Jere’s indebtedness was almost
25% of the listed assets of the Estate. This issue is without merit.
It should be noted that in Tennessee, the doctrine of advancement does not apply to
wholly testate estates such as this Estate. See Tenn. Code Ann. § 31-5-101; Poss v. Turner, No.
M2005-01008-COA-R3-CV, 2007 WL 187811 at * 4 (Tenn. Ct. App. Jan. 24, 2007). The Poss
Court explained the doctrine of advancement as follows:
A gift, however, may also be deemed an advancement against one's anticipated
2
Findings of fact by the Master and concurred in by the Chancellor is reviewed under the
material evidence rule.
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inheritance, in which event the amount of the “advancement” may be offset against
the child's inheritance. See Tenn. Code Ann. § 31-5-101. An advancement is “a gift
by a parent of a portion or all of the child's share in [the] estate which would fall to
such child at the parent's death by the statute of intestate succession.” 2 Jack W.
Robinson, Sr. & Jeff Mobley, Pritchard on Wills and Administration of Estates §
839, at 485 (5th ed.1994) (citing Laman v. Craig, 206 S.W.2d 309 (Tenn. Ct.
App.1947); Johnson v. Patterson, 81 Tenn. 626 (1884)); see also Jones v. Jones, 163
Tenn. 237, 43 S.W.2d 205 (1931) (holding that an advancement is a gift by a parent
in anticipation of the child's share in the parent's estate).
Poss at * 4.
In this case, however, the agreement between Jere Young, the debtor, and James
Young, the Executor, to treat Jere Young’s debt to his mother as an advancement was part of the
settlement of the litigation brought by the Executor to collect the debt, as directed by the Will. The
agreement to treat the debt as an advancement was part of the Agreed Order of February 8, 2002 and
the Executor was obligated to treat the debt as if it were an advancement in an intestate Estate, which
the Executor did. The Tennessee Practice Series on Probate is instructive as to the method used
when a debt or gift is treated as an advancement:
If there are advancements which must be taken into account, the cases require that
the probate estate be grossed up by the amount of the advancements. The
advancements are valued at their value on the date of the advancement. Once the
probate estate is adjusted for the advancements, the personal representative calculates
the shares for each residuary beneficiary. The share of any beneficiary who received
an advancement will be reduced by the amount of the advancement. If the beneficiary
is still due something from the decedent's estate, the beneficiary will share based on
the portion of the beneficiary's share still to be paid. If the beneficiary's advancement
is more than the beneficiary's share, the beneficiary will be required to reimburse the
estate.
18 Tennessee Practice Series - Probate § 7:16.
We conclude the Executor followed the procedure for treating Jere Young’s
indebtedness like an advancement and the Trial Court did not err when it approved the final
settlement.
The remaining issue raised on appeal is regarding the treatment of mineral rights as
property passing through the administration rather than as real property rights that should pass
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directly to the heirs. The record before us does not demonstrate that this issue was raised in the Trial
Court and we decline to entertain it. See, In re Estate of Milam, 181 S.W.3d 344, 352 (Tenn. Ct.
App. 2005).
We affirm the Judgment of the Trial Court and remand, with the cost of the appeal
assessed to Jere Young.
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HERSCHEL PICKENS FRANKS, P.J.
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