IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
AT JACKSON
May 18, 2005 Session
IN RE ESTATE OF JEWELL TURNER, Deceased
JOHN LECORNU
v.
DOLORES ARCHIE AND FREDE CLEMENTS
An Appeal from the Probate Court for Madison County
No. 03-12852 Christy R. Little, Judge
No. W2004-02123-COA-R3-CV - Filed August 30, 2005
This is a will contest. In May 2002, the decedent had a stroke at age ninety-five. She had no
children, and the plaintiff nephew and the defendant niece and defendant nephew took over her care.
The three parties established a conservatorship, became co-conservators, and placed the decedent
in a local nursing home. Later, the parties agreed to move the decedent to a nursing home closer to
the defendants. Soon after the move, without informing the plaintiff, the defendants brought a
lawyer to the decedent so that she could draft a last will and testament. In October 2003, the
decedent died. The decedent’s will left her $550,000 residuary estate to the defendants, and left only
two pieces of furniture to the plaintiff. The plaintiff filed the instant petition to contest the will,
alleging that the decedent was unduly influenced by the defendants. After a bench trial, the trial
court upheld the will, concluding that the burden of proving undue influence had not been met. The
plaintiff now appeals. We affirm, finding that the evidence supports the trial court’s finding that the
decedent received independent advice in the drafting of her will.
Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Probate Court is Affirmed
HOLLY M. KIRBY , J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which W. FRANK CRAWFORD , P.J., W.S.,
and DAVID R. FARMER , J., joined.
Larry A. Butler and Lisa A. Houston, Jackson, Tennessee, for the appellant, John LeCornu.
Jesse H. Ford, III, Jackson, Tennessee, for the appellees, Dolores Archie and Frede Clements.
OPINION
Jewell Turner (“decedent”), the decedent involved in this action, is the aunt of
Plaintiff/Appellant John LeCornu (“LeCornu”) and Defendants/Appellees Dolores Archie (“Archie”)
and Frede Clements (“Clements”) (collectively, “defendants”). Sometime before May 2002, when
she was ninety-five years old, the decedent suffered a stroke which resulted in dementia. Since the
decedent had no children of her own, the parties in this action assumed responsibility for her care.
The decedent was then moved from her home in Jackson, Tennessee, to a nursing home in Jackson.
On May 14, 2002, plaintiff LeCornu and the defendants jointly filed a petition in the general
sessions court to establish a conservatorship for the decedent. In the general sessions proceedings,
the decedent was held to be incompetent, and LeCornu and the defendants were appointed as her co-
conservators.
Soon thereafter, a dispute arose among the co-conservators regarding where the decedent
should reside. LeCornu lives in Annapolis, Maryland, and the defendants live in Greenfield,
Tennessee. The defendants wanted to have the decedent moved from the Jackson nursing home to
a nursing home in Martin, Tennessee, which was closer to the defendants. LeCornu objected to
moving the decedent unless her physicians approved of the move. The decedent’s physicians
initially said that moving the decedent to another nursing home would not be in her best interest.
LeCornu and the defendants continued to disagree, so a guardian ad litem was appointed to
determine whether moving to the Martin nursing home would be in the decedent’s best interest. The
guardian, Charles Exum (“Exum”), found that the move would not be detrimental to the decedent,
that it would place her closer to the defendants, and that it would be less expensive. Later, the
decedent’s physicians changed their positions and decided that the move would not be harmful to
the decedent. Eventually, the parties all agreed to move the decedent to the nursing home in Martin.
Soon after the move, on December 24, 2002, Archie wrote LeCornu an e-mail suggesting that
the decedent’s conservatorship be terminated, expressing concern that the cost involved would “eat
up [the decedent’s] savings.” She felt that dissolving the conservatorship would make it easier on
all of them, and suggested that they all “just agree to share [in her estate] equally.” LeCornu opposed
dissolving the conservatorship, so no such agreement was reached.
Subsequently, without LeCornu’s knowledge, the defendants hired an attorney, Susan Collins
(“Collins”), to meet with the decedent in the nursing home in order to help the decedent make her
Last Will and Testament ( “Will”). Collins required that the defendants obtain a medical statement
verifying that the decedent had the testamentary capacity to make a Will. On February 11, 2003, a
psychologist, Tony Franklin, Ph.D. (“Dr. Franklin”), conducted a mental status examination of the
decedent, and he opined that she was capable of making decisions on her own behalf. On March 14,
2003, a psychological examiner, Gary Smithson (“Smithson”), also conducted a mental examination
of the decedent and opined that she was competent and of sound mind. These examinations were
performed without LeCornu’s knowledge, though he was still a co-conservator for the decedent.
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Thereafter, in April and May 2003, Collins met with the decedent on four occasions. At the
first meeting, the defendants introduced Collins to the decedent, and then Collins was left to speak
alone with the decedent. At the second meeting, the defendants were present and a draft of the Will
was read to the decedent, but the decedent did not sign the Will at that time. Later, the Will was
changed to name the defendants as the beneficiaries of her residuary estate, which was worth about
$550,000 at that time, or about eighty-five percent of the entire estate. The Will left LeCornu a
buffet and a gold-framed mirror. On May 2, 2003, the decedent executed the Will in the presence
of Collins and two witnesses, but not in the presence of the defendants.
On October 1, 2003, the decedent died. Two days later, the defendants filed the Will in the
Probate division of the General Sessions Court below. On November 17, 2003, the defendants filed
a Motion for Appointment of Co-Executors. On December 19, 2003, LeCornu filed the instant
complaint to contest the Will, alleging that it was procured by the defendants through undue
influence. On January 14, 2004, the trial court rejected the defendants’ petition to be appointed as
co-executors and instead appointed Charles Exum, the guardian ad litem appointed in the
conservatorship, as the personal representative of the estate.
On July 26, 2004, the trial court conducted a bench trial on LeCornu’s will contest. Prior to
trial, the defendants stipulated that they had a confidential relationship with the decedent. Much
evidence was submitted at trial on the issue of whether the decedent had the testamentary capacity
to execute the Will. Collins testified at trial. As background, Collins said that she became familiar
with the defendants by drafting a will for Archie’s mother, the decedent’s sister Stella. Archie told
Collins that the decedent was under a conservatorship, but Collins could not recall whether she was
told that LeCornu was a co-conservator. Before she would undertake the drafting of the decedent’s
Will, Collins required a letter from the decedent’s physician stating that she was competent. The
defendants gave her two letters, one each from Dr. Kenneth Carr (“Dr. Carr”), the medical director
of the Martin nursing home, and Dr. Franklin, both stating that the decedent had the requisite
testamentary capacity.
In order to draft and finalize the Will, Collins met with the decedent four times. Collins said
that, when she first met the decedent, both of the defendants were present, but that they left the room
when Collins and the decedent began to discuss the Will. The decedent was in a wheelchair and
used a hearing aid. To communicate with the decedent, Collins had to speak into a special hearing
device with a microphone. The decedent did not mention to Collins that she was under a
conservatorship. She commented that Archie and Clements “took care of her business,” but did not
mention LeCornu in that context. When Collins asked the decedent about her family, she identified
Archie as the daughter of her deceased sister Stella, LeCornu as the son of her deceased sister Mabel,
and Clements as the son of another of her sisters whose name Collins could not recall. The decedent
forgot the name of Archie’s son, but described him as the person who “worked for the IRS and . .
. had something wrong with his arm.” When asked about her assets, the decedent told Collins that
she had about $400,000 in CDs, a house in Jackson, Tennessee worth between $80,000 and $90,000,
and a house in Greenfield, Tennessee worth about $40,000. She noted that Clements took care of
the house in Greenfield for her.
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From her first meeting with the decedent, Collins testified, she was convinced that the
decedent had testamentary capacity, because she knew about her assets and could identify the
“natural objects of her bounty.” Archie had given Collins a list of assets, which Collins read to the
decedent. The decedent told Collins exactly what pieces of property she wanted to leave to which
beneficiaries. She devised to LeCornu a buffet and a mirror. She also asked that her late husband’s
clothes and books be given to her late husband’s nephew. Collins remarked that the decedent’s
memory was “[a]mazing. . . . I’m not sure I would have remembered as well what I have in my
house.” Next, the decedent told Collins that she wanted to give a cash bequest to the defendants.
Collins asked, “What about Mabel’s son John [LeCornu]?” The decedent responded, “I’ve already
left him something. . . . That’s it. That’s what I’m leaving him.” Collins testified that the decedent
told her that LeCornu had taken an unspecified amount of money from her in the past, and that “if
he turned up with a will . . . it was no good.”
The decedent considered making a bequest to two churches. When discussing a possible
devise to the churches, the decedent asked Collins how much the churches would get if they shared
in the residuary estate. Collins told her that, depending on how long she lived, they might get very
little, or they might get hundreds of thousands of dollars. Collins said that the decedent “understood
that the specific beneficiaries would come in before the residue.”
Collins said that two assistants in her office, Beverly Parham (“Parham”) and Winniford
Vowell (“Vowell”), went with her to the second meeting with the decedent, in order for them to
witness the execution of the Will. Archie and Clements were present at this meeting. Collins said
that she normally prefers to have only the testator in the room, but the decedent told her that the
defendants could stay. Because the decedent could not see well enough to read the draft Will,
Collins read it aloud to her. Archie asked the decedent if she understood what Collins was saying
and what she was signing. Collins’ “gut feeling was that she was not totally comfortable,” that
perhaps she was nervous. Collins felt that the decedent was not ready to sign the Will on that day.
Therefore, Collins, Parham, and Vowell left to return another time.
After that first reading of the Will, Collins testified, the decedent made a number of changes
to it. She changed the amounts that she was leaving to certain persons, added a bequest to the animal
shelter, and added other churches as beneficiaries. Collins described it as a “detailed” Will.
Significantly, on April 30, 2003, the decedent made the defendants the residuary beneficiaries of her
estate. Thereafter, on May 2, 2003, Collins and her assistants visited the decedent, and at that time
she executed the Will. The defendants were not present at this final reading of the Will. The final
version of the Will included a “handful of specific charitable bequests,” and the rest of the estate
went to the defendants. At that meeting, the decedent asked Collins to keep her Will in her office
and to not let anyone know about it until after she had died. Although Collins normally charged
$150 per Will, she did not send a bill to the decedent’s co-conservators, because sending a bill would
have alerted the co-conservators that a will had been completed. After the decedent’s death, Collins
testified, she did not file a claim against the decedent’s estate because she had “become very fond
of Ms. Turner. If I never got paid, it would be all right. And I was much more concerned about the
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fact that I had an attorney/client relationship with her . . . . If it took not getting paid, then that’s
okay with me.”
Collins testified she had no concerns about whether the decedent was competent to execute
a will. She stated that the decedent “had a very good grasp of” what she owned and to whom she
was related, and that she asked appropriate questions. Collins observed that the decedent’s questions
to her regarding her residuary estate were clear and appropriate.
Vowell and Parham, Collins’s assistants, also testified at trial. They both said that the
decedent appeared competent to make a will. Vowell described the decedent as talkative, coherent,
and polite, and said that she discussed with them current events that she had learned of from
watching television. Vowell testified that she had no problem with the decedent’s competency.
Parham testified that she met with the decedent on three different occasions, and observed that the
decedent was “up, dressed, very alert, she was very nice to us.” She also commented that the
decedent talked about current events, and said that she seemed to understand Collins’ explanations
to her. Parham believed that the decedent “knew what she wanted” and felt comfortable signing the
Will.
The trial court also heard testimony from Smithson, the psychological examiner who
conducted a mental examination of the decedent. Smithson testified that he met with the decedent
in March 2003 for about forty-five minutes to determine whether she was competent to make a will.
In that meeting, he evaluated her memory function and her ability to reason. He gave the trial court
examples of the questions he asked her and the tasks he asked her to perform. After the examination,
Smithson concluded that the decedent had the required testamentary capacity, and that her cognitive
abilities were intact.
The defendants proffered the testimony of Andrea McKnight (“McKnight”), the certified
nurse’s aide (CNA) who attended to the decedent in the nursing home. McKnight testified that she
took care of the decedent’s basic needs every morning. McKnight said that she talked with the
decedent on a daily basis, and that the decedent discussed her family, her former husbands,
McKnight’s family, and current events. McKnight said that the defendants called the decedent and
visited her, and that others sent flowers and cards. She stated that, in her observation, the decedent
had no memory problems.
Randy Stacy (“Stacy”), the pastor of Archie’s church, testified that he visited the decedent
in the nursing home. He said that, on their visits, they would talk in depth about politics, religion,
the war, and other subjects. Stacy thought that the decedent was a very enjoyable, “sharp” lady.
Another psychologist, Robert W. Kennon, Ph.D. (“Dr. Kennon”), also testified at trial. Dr
Kennon examined the decedent in May 2002 for the purpose of establishing the conservatorship.
He said that, at the time he saw her, she was not capable of managing her own affairs. She had
expressive language difficulties and experienced some confusion problems. He stated that, typically,
in that circumstance, it would be easier to influence a stroke victim. He opined that, although a
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stroke patient can recover physically over the first nine months after a stroke, the deep-brain mental
faculties affected by the stroke are much less repairable. Dr. Kennon reviewed the mental status
examinations performed by Smithson and Dr. Franklin. Dr. Kennon questioned whether Smithson
could perform an appropriate evaluation in forty-five minutes, although he admitted it was possible.
It concerned Dr. Kennon that Smithson stated that he found no hearing deficiency, because the
decedent’s hearing deficiency was severe. Dr. Kennon observed that Dr. Franklin’s evaluation was
more in depth. However, in order to believe Dr. Franklin’s report, Dr. Kennon stated, one would
have to believe that the decedent had made a miraculous recovery from May 2002.
Two friends of the decedent, Pam Bain (“Bain”) and Evelyn Johnsey (“Johnsey”), testified
on behalf of LeCornu. Bain indicated that the decedent was very close to Mabel, LeCornu’s mother,
and said that they were like twins. Bain said that the decedent talked about LeCornu a lot, but
mentioned Archie only once or twice. Bain said that the decedent talked about Archie’s son who
became a doctor, and that she mentioned Clements because he took care of her house in Greenfield.
Bain testified that the decedent was proud of LeCornu because of his accomplishments. Like Bain,
Johnsey testified that the decedent talked about LeCornu on a regular basis, but never mentioned
Archie. She recalled that the decedent spoke of a nephew who took care of her house in Greenfield.
Johnsey testified that, when Bain called her about the decedent’s stroke, she immediately called
LeCornu, who “took over from there.” She said that, after the decedent’s stroke, Archie and
Clements went to see her at the hospital the next day. When Johnsey spoke to Archie, Archie asked
her if the decedent had a will.
LeCornu also testified at trial. He said that he was born and raised in Nashville, and later
served twenty-eight years in the Marine Corp. After his years in the Marine Corp., LeCornu said,
his family stayed in Annapolis. At the time of trial, he was working as a prosecutor in Maryland in
the state attorney’s office. LeCornu said that he had had a very close relationship with the decedent
and that he loved her very much. He noted that the decedent and her husband had traveled with his
parents to his graduation from the naval academy in 1961, and also to his wedding in Washington
D.C. thereafter. LeCornu testified that the decedent and his mother, the decedent’s sister Mabel,
lived next door to each other. LeCornu commented that he tried to write to the decedent whenever
he could, particularly on occasions such as Mother’s Day, Thanksgiving, and Christmas. As the
decedent and his mother became older and more frail, LeCornu said, they required more involvement
from him, albeit from long distance. In 1998, he visited the decedent for ten days to two weeks when
she had surgery to treat colon cancer. The decedent recovered from her surgery at Mabel’s house,
and LeCornu helped get her situated and arranged to have sitters take care of the decedent. Despite
the decedent’s health problems, Mabel predeceased the decedent by two years.
When the decedent had her stroke in May 2002, LeCornu traveled to Tennessee to be with
her. He called the attorney who had helped him with his mother’s estate to assist him in setting up
a conservatorship for the decedent. Thereafter, LeCornu, along with the defendants, set up the
conservatorship, with the three of them designated as co-conservators. LeCornu said that,
regrettably, he did not visit the decedent again before her death in October of 2003. Between May
2002 and October 2003, he explained, his wife had back surgery, he was diagnosed with terminal
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cancer and was undergoing chemotherapy, and he had had a grandchild. Nevertheless, he said, he
sent the decedent cards, faxes, and called her on the telephone in order to stay in contact with her.
LeCornu testified that he had opposed moving the decedent to the nursing home in Martin,
and he and Archie had communications by e-mail on the subject. At the time, LeCornu thought that
the defendants had the perception that he was trying to fight the move to Martin for monetary
purposes. The decedent’s physicians, he said, initially opposed the move, which angered Archie.
In one e-mail, Archie said that she was going to take the issue to court and bring Susan Collins to
court with her. This remark angered LeCornu, who had retained his own lawyer to set up the
conservatorship. Once Archie began making efforts to force a decision on the placement of the
decedent, LeCornu’s lawyer withdrew in order to avoid a conflict of interest. LeCornu described that
period as “a very tense and hectic time.” Later, he said, their relations “mellowed out.” LeCornu
recognized that the defendants were having to take on all of the “heavy lifting,” because he was in
Maryland. However, the parties attempted to cooperate in handling the decedent’s affairs.
In an e-mail message dated December 24, 2002, Archie proposed to LeCornu that they
dissolve the conservatorship and that each of them have a power of attorney instead. She said that
“[i]t would be much less expensive, and it would be much easier on us. I will keep the same
accounting of her finances . . . and if there is anything left when she passes on, we can just agree to
share it equally.” LeCornu objected to Archie’s proposal, particularly because of the safeguards
provided by a conservatorship. The conservatorship required that all major issues for the decedent
be decided by the consent of all three co-conservators, and LeCornu felt that the conservatorship
would be the best way to deal with important matters. In January 2003, LeCornu sent an e-mail to
Archie telling her that he was not comfortable with her proposal. In February 2003, Archie and
Clements instigated the procedures for having the decedent draft her Will, without informing
LeCornu.
LeCornu testified that he was surprised when he first learned of the existence of the Will, and
then when he learned of its contents. He said that, by devising the majority of her estate to the
defendants, the decedent completely cut out his family as well as the four children of Ted Ray
Clements, the defendant Clements’ deceased brother. When asked whether he doubted the
truthfulness of Collins’ testimony, LeCornu replied, “I have no reason not to believe Ms. Collins.
. . . I don’t doubt her professionalism or anything like that.” When asked the basis for his contention
that the decedent was not competent to make a will, LeCornu noted that the decedent had suffered
a stroke, was advanced in years, and had been declared incompetent in the conservatorship
proceedings. On cross-examination, he agreed that he had no proof that the decedent was
incompetent on the day she made the Will, other than the reports from the medical examinations that
were performed before the conservatorship was established. When asked about the basis for his
assertion of undue influence, LeCornu listed the circumstances on which he relied to support his
claim: the confidential relationship between the decedent and the defendants, the physical and
mental deterioration of the decedent, the defendants’ involvement in procuring the Will, the secrecy
of the existence of the Will, the decedent’s advanced age, and the unjust or unnatural nature of the
terms of the Will. That concluded the testimony presented to the trial court.
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On August 2, 2004, the trial court entered an order denying LeCornu’s claim of undue
influence. The trial court found that the decedent was competent when she made the Will, and that,
consequently, “the burden shifts to the person who contests the Will to show undue influence.”1 The
trial court considered the factors relevant to determine whether there has been undue influence, and
found that it had not been proven. The trial court stated that it based “the majority of” its ruling on
the testimony of Collins and others who made certain that the decedent “knew what she was doing”
and was comfortable executing the Will. The trial court noted that Collins “read the Will to the
[decedent] and took more pain and caution” than most lawyers would take in having the Will
executed by the decedent. Accordingly, the trial court concluded, “the undue influence burden has
not been met and the Will stands.” From that order, LeCornu now appeals.
On appeal, LeCornu argues that the trial court placed the burden of proving undue influence
on him and that, because the parties had stipulated that a confidential relationship existed, this
allocation of the burden was an error.2 Once a confidential relationship is established, followed by
a transaction in which the dominant party receives a benefit from the other party, then undue
influence is presumed, and the burden shifts back to the defendants to show the absence of undue
influence. Thus, LeCornu argues, the trial court applied an incorrect legal standard in its
determination of this case. LeCornu further argues that the defendants failed to submit sufficient
evidence to rebut the presumption of undue influence, and the trial court’s decision must be reversed.
Whether a will was procured by undue influence is a question of fact. Gibson v. Gibson, No.
W2004-00005-COA-R3-CV, 2004 WL 2464271, *3 (Tenn. Ct. App. Nov. 2, 2004). The trial court’s
factual findings are reviewed de novo on the record, presuming those findings to be correct unless
the evidence preponderates otherwise. Id.; Tenn. R. App. P. 13(d). Whether the proper legal
standard was applied to the case is a question of law, which is reviewed de novo, with no such
presumption of correctness. See In re Estate of Branch, No. W2004-01310-COA-R3-CV, 2005 WL
711962, at *2 (Tenn. Ct. App. Mar. 28, 2005).
A will contest can be based on the allegation that the testator lacked the requisite
testamentary capacity, or on the contention that the will was procured by undue influence. See In
re Estate of Maddox, 60 S.W.3d 84, 88 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2001). The burden-shifting framework in
will contests is set out in Maddox. The appellate court explained that the initial burden lies with the
proponent of the will to show that “the will was executed in compliance with all legal formalities.”
Id. Such proof “gives rise to the presumption that the testator was capable of making a will,” and
the burden shifts “to the contestants to prove that the testator was unduly influenced in making his
or her will.” Id.
1
The trial court had actually announced its determination that the decedent had the requisite testamentary
capacity to make the W ill before the conclusion of the proof. The trial court then stated, “Now we’re stepping back over
to the undue influence.”.
2
“A confidential relationship is one where confidence is placed by one in the other and the recipient of that
confidence is the dominant personality, with the ability, because of that confidence, to influence and exercise dominion
over the weaker or dominated party.” Iacom etti v. Frassinelli, 494 S.W .2d 496, 499 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1973).
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This Court has recognized that “[i]nvalidating a will because of undue influence is generally
not a simple undertaking.” Kelley v. Johns, 96 S.W.3d 189, 195 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2002). Undue
influence can be proven by either direct or circumstantial evidence. However, because direct
evidence is rarely available, most will contestants try to prove undue influence by establishing the
existence of suspicious circumstances that would tend to show that the testator’s will was not the
result of free or independent action. Id. Though courts “have refrained from prescribing the type
or number of suspicious circumstances necessary to invalidate a will because of undue influence,”
several suspicious circumstances have often been relied upon to prove undue influence: (1) the
existence of a confidential relationship between the testator and the beneficiary; (2) the testator’s
physical or mental deterioration; and (3) the beneficiary’s active involvement in procuring the Will.
Id. at 196 (citing cases). Other examples of suspicious circumstances include: (1) secrecy
concerning the Will’s existence; (2) the testator’s advanced age; (3) the lack of independent advice
in preparing the Will; (4) the testator’s illiteracy or blindness; (5) the unjust or unnatural nature of
the Will’s terms; (6) whether the testator was in an emotionally distraught state; (7) discrepancies
between the instrument and the testator’s expressed intentions; and (8) fraud or duress directed
toward the testator. Id.; Gibson, 2004 WL 2464271, at *3.
The party challenging the validity of a will bears the burden of proving the existence of
suspicious circumstances showing that the testator did not act freely and independently. Kelley, 96
S.W.3d at 196; Maddox, 60 S.W.3d at 88-89. Without direct evidence of undue influence, the will
contestant must establish more than one suspicious circumstance in order to make out a prima facie
case of undue influence. “Proof of a confidential relationship alone will not support a finding of
undue influence.” Kelley, 96 S.W.3d at 196; Maddox, 60 S.W.3d at 89. If a confidential
relationship is established, however, “together with a transaction that benefits the dominant party to
the relationship or another suspicious circumstance, a presumption of undue influence arises.”
Kelley, 96 S.W.3d at 196.
Once the presumption of undue influence arises, “the burden of going forward shifts back
to the will’s proponent to prove by clear and convincing evidence that the challenged transaction or
gift was fair.” Maddox, 60 S.W.3d at 89. Frequently, the will’s proponent will show that the
transaction or gift was fair by proving that the testator received independent advice. “[P]roof of
independent advice becomes necessary only when it would be difficult to show the fairness of the
transaction or the competency of the testator without it.” Id.
LeCornu argues that the trial court below improperly failed to shift the burden of proof to the
defendants, and therefore erred as a matter of law. The parties stipulated that a confidential
relationship existed between the defendants and the decedent. That fact, along with the other
suspicious circumstances such as the benefit to the dominant parties, the secrecy of the Will, the
defendants’ involvement in procuring the Will, and the decedent’s advanced age, triggered the
presumption of undue influence. Under these circumstances, LeCornu argues, the burden shifted to
the defendants to rebut the presumption of undue influence by clear and convincing evidence. See
Kelley, 96 S.W.3d at 196.
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To determine whether the trial court properly allocated the burden of proof, we examine the
trial court’s oral ruling, incorporated into its August 2, 2004 order. The trial court stated:
[I]nvalidating a Will because of undue influence is generally not a simple
undertaking. While undue influence can be proved either by direct or by
circumstantial evidence, direct evidence is rarely available. Thus, in most cases, the
contestants establish undue influence by providing the existence of suspicious
circumstances warranting the conclusion that the Will was not the testator’s free and
independent act. [Quoting Kelley v. Johns, 96 S.W.3d 189, 195 (Tenn. Ct. App.
2002).]
Then that’s where the factors came in that we’ve talked about in ad nauseam,
which I think I’m very familiar with and I probably have memorized.
* * *
My findings of fact are that, first of all, there is no case law that says, because
she was under this conservatorship, she couldn’t – didn’t have the testamentary
capacity, and that goes back to the first prong.
And then my findings of fact on the undue influence are that, first of all, Mr.
LeCornu was never present after the stroke to – to personally see her to know
whether or not she was – her condition had deteriorated or she lacked the ability. We
know she wasn’t illiterate.
Second of all, I’m basing a lot of the – and the majority of my ruling on the
fact that I don’t think any attorney in their right state of mind would bet a hundred
and fifty dollars, and actually she received nothing, to lose a law license.
Ms. Collins, who I have never met or even seen or heard before today, was
– her testimony was she, along with the two witnesses, Ms. Vowell and Ms. Parham,
went above and beyond the call of duty to make certain, first of all, that she was
comfortable; that Mrs. Turner was – knew what she was doing; and the fact that she
was very specific about her bequests. If it were just a simple “divided two ways”, it
would certainly raise some red flags – between the two parties who were ultimately
named as the residuary beneficiaries. And, I think the thing that’s most telling is that
she wanted Ms. Collins as an attorney, and she understood that attorney-client
privilege thing probably better than some people who are lawyers, and that she didn’t
want everybody to know.
A wise person said, “Be wise as a serpent, but harmless as a dove.” And, I
think she didn’t want the harm or anyone to be hurt until after her death, and I think
that’s why she waited.
She also read the Will to her and took more pain and caution, from the
testimony I’ve heard, than many, many lawyers do.
So, it is the ruling of this Court that the undue influence burden has not been
met and the Will stands.
Thus, the trial court recognized the proper analytical framework, quoting from Kelley, supra, and
noting the “factors came in that we’ve talked about in ad nauseam, which I think I’m very familiar
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with and I probably have memorized.” The trial court then based “the majority of [its] ruling” on
Collins’ testimony, along with the corroborating testimony of Vowell and Parham. The trial court
determined that, based on this testimony, the testator received advice from Collins, that she was
comfortable with her Will, and that she was aware of what she was doing. The trial court further
credited Collins’s testimony that the decedent valued the attorney-client privilege, and that the
decedent had decided to keep the Will a secret until after her death.
In viewing the trial court’s analysis as a whole, it appears that the trial court found clear and
convincing evidence that the decedent received independent advice, sufficient to rebut any
presumption of undue influence. The trial court did not clearly articulate the burden-shifting
framework. However, the trial court clearly credited the testimony of Collins, who stated
unequivocally that the decedent’s choices were made of her own free will independent of outside
influence. The record supports the trial court’s conclusions in this regard. At the outset, Collins was
adamant that she be given medical proof that the decedent had the requisite testamentary capacity
to make a will. She met alone with the decedent to discuss the bequests in her Will, and the decedent
specified her wishes in detail. Collins even asked about LeCornu specifically, given the fact that he
is of equal kinship with the defendants. The decedent expressed her desire that LeCornu receive only
the items specifically devised. There is no evidence to suggest that Collins conspired with the
defendants or that she operated according to their instructions; even LeCornu conceded that he had
no reason to doubt Collins’ veracity. There are certainly circumstances surrounding the procurement
of the Will that are troubling, particularly the fact that the defendants did not inform LeCornu about
their efforts to secure a will from the decedent, even though he was the co-conservator of her estate
and had communicated with the defendants regarding other decisions about her well-being.
Nevertheless, the trial court’s decision hinged on its assessment of the credibility of the witnesses.
The trial court’s credibility determinations are given great weight on appeal, because the trial court
had the benefit of observing the witnesses and assessing their demeanor and “is in a far better
position that this Court to decide those issues.” Gibson, 2004 WL 2464271, at *3. To find that the
decedent did not in fact receive independent advice would be contrary to the trial court’s
determination that Collins’ testimony should be credited. This we are not at liberty to do.
Under these circumstances, we find that the trial court employed the appropriate legal
standard, and that the evidence does not preponderate against its finding that the burden of proving
undue influence was not met. Therefore, its decision to uphold the Will must be affirmed.
The decision of the trial court is affirmed. Costs on appeal are to be taxed to Appellant John
LeCornu, and his surety, for which execution may issue, if necessary.
___________________________________
HOLLY M. KIRBY, JUDGE
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