IN THE SUPREME COURT OF TENNESSEE
AT KNOXVILLE
FILED
February 23, 1998
Cecil Crowson, Jr.
Appellate C ourt Clerk
GENEVA GRAHL, ) FOR PUBLICATION
) Filed: February 23, 1998
Appellant, )
) Blount Circuit
v. )
) Hon. W. Dale Young,
LILLIE DAVIS, ) Judge
)
GREGORY SCOTT JUDKINS and )
JEFFREY TODD JUDKINS, ) Appeal No.
) 03S01-9701-CV-00011
Appellees. )
)
For Appellant: For Appellees
David R. Duggan Norman H. Newton
DUGGAN & ANDERSON CRAWFORD, CRAWFORD & NEWTON
Maryville, Tennessee Maryville, Tennessee
J. Michael Garner Duncan V. Crawford
NICHOLSON & GARNER CRAWFORD, CRAWFORD, & NEWTON
Maryville, Tennessee Maryville, Tennessee
John A. Walker, Jr.
WALKER & W ALKER, P.C.
Knoxville, Tennessee
OPINION
COURT OF APPEALS AFFIRMED. DROWOTA, J.
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The primary issue in this appeal is whether the conservator, Geneva Grahl,
breached her fiduciary duty to the deceased conservatee, Lillie Davis, by allowing the
conservatee’s husband, Omer Davis, to transact four certificates of deposit in which
the conservatee had an interest and reinvest the funds into certificates of deposit
held either solely in the name of Omer Davis or jointly in the name of Omer Davis and
Geneva Grahl. After carefully considering the controlling authority, we have
determined that Grahl breached her fiduciary duty by allowing Omer Davis to transact
the accounts without first seeking court approval, and by dealing with the
conservatee’s property so as to eventually attain a personal benefit. Accordingly, we
affirm the judgment of the Court of Appeals reversing the judgment of the trial court,
and remand this case for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
FACTUAL BACKGROUND
This case arises from the action of the trial court in approving a final
accounting by Geneva Grahl in her capacity as conservator of the estate and person
of Lillie Davis, who is now deceased. There are no material facts in dispute.
In May of 1989, Geneva Grahl, the daughter of Lillie Davis and Omer Davis,
filed a complaint in the Circuit Court of Blount County asking the court to approve the
sale of land owned by her parents as tenants by the entirety. Grahl alleged that her
mother was confined to a nursing home and incompetent. Grahl also alleged that her
father was in a nursing home, but that he could competently manage his own affairs.
In June of 1989, Grahl amended her complaint to seek appointment as conservator
over the person and estate of her mother, Lillie Davis. Notice of the amended
complaint was served upon the defendants, Gregory Scott Judkins and Jeffrey Todd
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Judkins, grandsons of Lillie Davis, the conservatee, and the only children of a
deceased daughter of the conservatee. The defendants thereafter filed an answer.
A hearing was held on June 19, 1989, at which both Geneva Grahl and Omer
Davis testified that the cash assets of Lillie Davis consisted of four certificates of
deposit and a joint checking account for a total balance of $197,512.00. The next
day, June 20, 1989, the trial court entered an order finding Lillie Davis incompetent
and appointing Geneva Grahl conservator of both her person and estate. This order
directed Grahl, as conservator, to file an inventory and bond in the amount of
$135,000.00. By a separate order, the Court approved the sale of the jointly held
property for $68,000.00 and directed that the proceeds be divided $34,000.00 to
Omer Davis and $34,000.00, less expenses, to the conservatee, Lillie Davis.
On March 8, 1990, the conservator filed an inventory which showed the
conservatee had total assets in financial institutions in the amount of $197,512.00,
which consisted of a joint checking account, and four certificates of deposit. Three
certificates were owned by “Omer Davis or Lillie Davis” and one certificate was owned
by “Mr. Omer Davis, Trustee for Mrs. Omer Davis.”
On June 19, 1990, the conservator filed the first annual accounting which
covered the period June 19, 1989, the date of her appointment, through June 19,
1990. This accounting reflects itemized expenditures of $24,034.94 and indicates
total assets in the conservatorship estate in the amount of $16,659.92. The
conservatee’s share of the proceeds from the court-approved sale of property are
included in this figure.
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The second page of this first accounting is the conservator’s hand-written
explanation of the disposition of the four certificates of deposit and the checking
account shown on the conservator’s original inventory. In summary, the conservator
reported that Omer Davis had redeemed the certificates of deposit he had held jointly
with or in trust for the conservatee and had used the proceeds to purchase four new
certificates of deposit, two of which he held in the name of Omer Davis alone, and
two of which he held jointly with the conservator. With respect to the joint checking
account, the conservator explained that Omer Davis had utilized the remaining
$1,167.71 in the account after a separate conservatorship account had been
established.
Omer Davis died testate in Blount County on December 20, 1989,
predeceasing his wife, the conservatee, Lillie Davis. His will provided in pertinent part,
as follows:
I hereby give, devise and bequeath to my daughter, GENEVA
GRAHL, all my property, of whatever nature, or wherever located or
situated, in Trust, for the use and benefit of my dear wife, Lillie Davis.
The entire property is to be used for the best interest of my wife, and
as far as possible in the same way and manner that I would do were I
living.
The trust shall continue for, and during the natural life of my dear
wife, Lillie Davis, or as long as there are any assets left in the Trust.
The Trust shall terminate upon the happening of the first of the events
mentioned above.
In the event that there is [sic] any assets left in the Trust after it
is terminated as provided above, I give, bequeath the same to my
daughter, GENEVA GRAHL, in its entirety, absolutely and in fee
simple, without condition or limitation, it being her sole discretion to
retain all of the assets or funds as hers, or to make any gifts of them
which she may choose.
I make this provision having great confidence that she will care
for my dear wife in the same way and manner I would do were I living.
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Following the death of Omer Davis, the conservator became the owner of two
of the successor certificates of deposit by right of survivorship. With regard to the
other two certificates of deposit held in the sole name of Omer Davis, the
conservator, in accordance with her father’s will, changed both into trust accounts in
the name of “Lillie Davis, Geneva Grahl, Trustee.” The interest earned on these two
certificates was deposited into the conservatorship account and used on behalf of the
conservatee. Grahl transferred funds between these accounts to obtain the best rate
of interest, but the sum of the principal of the two accounts remained the same. The
conservator did not use any of the principal from these two trust accounts for the
conservatee’s care. The conservator filed a second annual accounting on June 26,
1991, which reflected the interest from these two accounts as income. This
accounting showed that the conservatorship estate had total assets in the amount of
$3,871.11.1
Lillie Davis died intestate on October 5, 1991. Grahl was appointed and
qualified as administratrix of her estate. Sometime in November of 1991, Grahl, in
her capacity as conservator, filed a motion to approve a final accounting and transfer
the remaining assets in the conservatorship estate to the administratrix. The final
accounting indicated total assets in the conservatorship estate in the amount of
$1,937.17.
1
Though none of these documents bear a stamp from the clerk’s office, reflecting the precise
date of filing, the parties agree that the documents were filed with the clerk. However, no court action
was tak en on the m.
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On November 20, 1991, the trial court approved the final accounting and
termination of the conservatorship. The defendants received no notice of the hearing
or order approving the final accounting. On December 17, 1991, the defendants filed
a motion to amend, alter, or modify the order, or in the alternative to grant a new trial
on the motion to approve the final accounting. The trial court denied the motion, but
the Court of Appeals reversed the denial and remanded the case for further
proceedings, finding that the defendants “are entitled to be heard on the matter of the
final accounting and settlement of the conservatorship.”
The trial following remand focused on whether Grahl, as conservator, had
breached her fiduciary duty by allowing Omer Davis to transact the certificates of
deposit and purchase other certificates which did not reflect the conservatee’s
ownership interest. The conservator testified that Omer Davis had been diagnosed
with cancer in November of 1988 and that he had been told by physicians that the
cancer would likely be fatal within two years. Because of his deteriorating physical
health, Omer Davis moved out of his home and into the same nursing home where
Lillie Davis was already residing. This move culminated in the petition to sell the
jointly owned property which was converted to a conservatorship proceeding.
Grahl testified that at the time of the conservatorship proceeding, and later,
when the inventory was filed, the deceased conservatee and her husband, Omer
Davis, held three certificates of deposits in the name of “Omer or Lillie Davis” and a
fourth certificate of deposit in the name of “Omer Davis, Trustee for Mrs. Omer
Davis.”
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Consistent with the summary attached to the first annual accounting, Grahl
testified that, after her appointment as conservator, Omer Davis, on June 22, 1989,
redeemed First Tennessee Bank certificate of deposit number 219244, which was
owned by “Omer Davis or Lillie Davis.” He combined the proceeds from the
certificate, $69,485.35, with additional funds and purchased another First Tennessee
Bank certificate of deposit in the amount of $100,000.00, in the name of “Omer Davis
or Geneva Grahl,” as joint tenants with the right of survivorship.
On June 28, 1989, Omer Davis redeemed First American National Bank
certificate of deposit number 0096463, which was held in the name of “Omer Davis
or Lillie Davis.” He received a cashier’s check payable to “Omer Davis or Lillie Davis”
in the amount of $28,530.72. He negotiated the cashier’s check at First Federal
Savings and Loan Association of Maryville, combined it with other funds he had at
that institution, and purchased a First Federal certificate of deposit in the amount of
$90,983.90, in the name of “Omer Davis or Geneva Grahl,” as joint tenants with right
of survivorship.
On August 17, 1989, Omer Davis transferred the entire balance in the amount
of $84,816.87 from the First Federal Savings and Loan Association of Maryville
certificate of deposit number 1207825, which was held in the name of “Mr. Omer
Davis, Trustee for Mrs. Omer Davis,” to a new First Federal certificate of deposit held
solely in the name of “Omer Davis.”
Finally, on August 17, 1989, Omer Davis redeemed First Tennessee Bank
certificate of deposit number 0109679, which was held in the name of “Omer Davis
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or Lillie Davis.” He deposited the proceeds in the amount of $13,723.59 into an
existing joint savings account at First Tennessee Bank in the names of “Omer Davis
or Geneva Grahl.” These proceeds remained on deposit for less than a month, until
Geneva Grahl withdrew the proceeds, and additional funds from the account, and
purchased a new certificate of deposit at First Tennessee in the amount of
$15,000.00, which was held in the sole name of “Omer Davis.”
Grahl testified that she drove her father to the financial institutions and
accompanied him when he accomplished these transactions. It is undisputed that
Omer and Lillie Davis were married at the time these transactions were effected.
Grahl testified that she had realized Omer Davis was transacting certificates of
deposit which reflected the conservatee’s ownership interest and transferring the
funds to certificates of deposit which did not reflect the conservatee’s ownership
interest. Grahl testified that she had taken no action to stop Omer Davis from
completing these transactions. When asked why she had not taken any action, Grahl
replied that her father had known the consequences of his actions and could not be
easily dissuaded after he had decided on a course. Grahl also said that she had
been unaware that she was supposed to do anything to stop him. Grahl had become
the owner of two of the successor certificates of deposit by right of survivorship upon
the death of her father, and she had become the owner of the two successor trust
accounts after the death of the conservatee, her mother, under the terms of her
father’s will.
With respect to the joint checking account listed on the inventory of the
conservatorship assets, Grahl testified that it had been utilized by her father for his
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personal purposes, and she had opened a separate conservatorship account. After
her appointment as conservator, Grahl’s name had been added to the joint account
so that she could write checks on it if needed. Following the death of Omer Davis in
1989, the conservator expended several hundred dollars from the joint account on
behalf of the conservatee. Thereafter, she transferred the remaining balance in the
amount of $396.17, from the joint account to the conservatorship account.
The defendants also testified at the hearing and said that they had no
knowledge of undue influence or fraud on the part of the conservator in relation to the
transactions involving the certificates of deposit. The defendants testified that they
had seldom seen their grandparents in the years preceding their death.
Based upon this proof, the trial court again granted Grahl’s motion and entered
an order approving the final accounting and transfer of the funds to the administratrix
of the probate estate of Lillie Davis. In so holding, the trial court stated that the
conservator had committed no fraud or undue influence and that Omer Davis had the
unquestioned authority to engage in the transactions involving the accounts in this
case. The Court of Appeals reversed the trial court’s judgment, finding that three of
the certificates of deposit purchased by Omer Davis with funds from the joint
accounts of Omer and Lillie Davis remained property owned by them as tenants by
the entirety, even though the conservatee’s name did not appear on the successor
instruments. As to the funds in the fourth trust certificate which had been transferred
to Omer Davis, the intermediate court held that the conservator had a duty to act to
protect the interest of the conservatee. Thereafter, we granted permission to appeal
to determine whether the conservator violated her fiduciary duty to the conservatee.
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On the separate grounds stated below, we affirm the judgment of the Court of
Appeals.
FIDUCIARY DUTIES
We begin our analysis with a brief review of the fiduciary duties which govern
the actions of a conservator. The purpose of appointing a conservator is “to preserve
the estate of an incompetent or disabled person.” Tenn. Code Ann. § 34-4-202 (1991
Repl.).2 Pursuant to Tenn. Code Ann. § 34-4-207 (1991 Repl.), a conservator “shall
have the same duties and powers as a guardian of a minor, and all laws related to
the guardianship of a minor shall be applicable to a conservator.” A conservator
occupies a fiduciary position of trust of the highest and most sacred character. See
Meloy v. Nashville Trust Co., 177 Tenn. 340, 149 S.W.2d 73 (1941). The
conservator is to manage the conservatee’s estate to the best advantage. See
Steele v. Reese, 14 Tenn. (6 Yer.) 263 (1834). The conservator should endeavor to
manage the estate so that if the incompetent person recovers, he or she will find the
estate as nearly as possible in the same condition as he or she left it. Folts v. Jones,
175 Tenn. 74, 132 S.W.2d 204, 208 (1939). A conservator should not change the
character of the conservatee’s property interests unless the change is necessary to
protect and promote the interests of the conservatee. Id. In considering a
conservator’s request to cash a life insurance policy for the benefit of the
conservatee’s estate, this Court, in Folts v. Jones, stated:
2
W e are aware that Tenn. Code Ann. §§ 34-4-101 through 34-4-310 have been repealed and
replaced with Tenn. Code A nn. §§ 34-11-101 through 34 -13-109, which becam e effective January 1,
1993. However, this circumstance was not raised by the parties in the Court of Appea ls or in this Co urt.
Therefore, statutory citations are to the C ode prov isions in effect prior to January 1, 1993. However,
in our view, t he ne w law wou ld not chan ge th e out com e of th is app eal.
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Before the character of the interest in property held by a [conservatee]
can be changed, it must be made manifest that it is necessary to
protect and promote his interest. Although as a rule, the court will
preserve, as far as possible, the interests of the succession, this rule
yields to the paramount rule which makes the [conservatee’s] welfare
the first consideration without regard to the rights of those who may
have eventually rights to succession.
Id.; see also Morris v. Morris, 195 Tenn. 133, 258 S.W.2d 732 (1953).
A conservator is not the alter ego of the conservatee, however, and has no
authority to exercise an elective right or power of the conservatee. Folts, 132 S.W.2d
at 207. Therefore, a conservator has no authority to terminate joint accounts in which
the conservatee has an interest or to change a beneficiary on a life insurance policy.
Folts, 132 S.W.2d at 207; see also Howard v. Imes, 90 So.2d 818 (Ala. 1956); In Re:
Estate of Wright, 424 N.W.2d 268 (Mich. 1988); Hendricks v. Grant County Bank,
379 P.2d 693, 697 (Okla. 1963); Matter of Guardianship of Rich, 520 N.W.2d 63
(S.D. 1994); Rozycke v. Sroka, 279 N.E.2d 155 (Ill. Ct. App. 1972); Matter of Estate
of Briley, 825 P.2d 1181 (Kan. Ct. App. 1992); Maess v. Greenfield, 547 S.W.2d 777
(Ky. Ct. App. 1977); Strain v. Rossman, 614 P.2d 102 (Or. App. 1980). Instead, the
conservator must petition the court, and the court, on behalf of the conservatee, can
exercise such an election if it is clearly proven to be in the best interests of the
conservatee. Folts v. Jones, 132 S.W.2d at 207; see also Schlieper v. Rust, 360
N.E.2d 1192, 1197 (Ill. Ct. App. 1977); Rozycke v. Sroka, 279 N.E.2d at 158.
A conservator owes the conservatee an undivided duty of loyalty. 18 Tenn.
Juris., Mentally Ill and Other Incompetents, § 8, p. 323 (1984). The conservator
cannot be allowed by law to have any inducement to neglect the interests of the
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conservatee. Freeman v. Martin, 181 Tenn. 470, 181 S.W.2d 745, 746 (1944).
Therefore, it is generally held that a conservator violates his or her fiduciary duty by
acquiring, by purchase or otherwise, the property of the conservatee. Id.; see also
Lanius v. Donnell, 222 Tenn. 158, 432 S.W.2d 659 (1968).
Having generally described the fiduciary obligations of a conservator toward
the property and estate of the conservatee, we must next consider whether the
conservatee had a proprietary interest in the certificates of deposit and the joint bank
account. To that end, we begin with the well-settled proposition that tenancy by the
entirety is a form of property ownership which is unique to married persons. Griffin
v. Prince, 632 S.W.2d 532, 534 (Tenn. 1982). The essential characteristic of a
tenancy by the entirety is that “each spouse is seized of the whole or the entirety and
not of a share, moiety, or divisible part.” Sloan v. Jones, 192 Tenn. 400, 241 S.W.2d
506, 507 (1951). Upon the death of one spouse, ownership of tenancy by the
entirety property immediately vests in the survivor, and the laws of descent and
distribution do not apply. Id. at 509. It is well-settled in this state that personal
property as well as realty may be owned by spouses by the entirety. Griffin, 632
S.W.2d at 535. It has also been expressly held that a tenancy by the entirety with the
right of survivorship may exist in certificates of deposit and bank accounts. White v.
Watson, 571 S.W.2d 493, 495 (Tenn. App. 1978); Smith v. Haire, 133 Tenn. 343,
181 S.W. 161 (1915) (certificates of deposit); Sloan, supra, and Griffin, supra, (bank
accounts). In fact, there is clear authority in this state that a bank account or
negotiable instrument in the name of “husband or wife” will be deemed to create a
tenancy by the entirety with right of survivorship, in the absence of proof to the
contrary. Griffin, 532 S.W.2d at 536.
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Applying these longstanding principles to the facts in this case, it is clear that
when the conservator filed the inventory, three of the certificates of deposit and the
joint bank account were held by Lillie Davis and Omer Davis as tenants by the
entirety, with right of survivorship. There is no proof to the contrary in this record. The
fourth certificate of deposit was held by Omer Davis, as trustee for the conservatee,
Lillie Davis. Therefore, the conservatee had a proprietary interest in the certificates
of deposit and in the joint checking account. Further, that interest was listed as an
asset of the conservatorship estate on the initial inventory. From the very beginning,
therefore, the conservator had a duty to preserve the conservatee’s property interest
in those assets. We must next determine if the conservator breached her fiduciary
duty when she allowed and assisted Omer Davis to transact the certificates of deposit
and utilize the joint checking account.
Relying upon a decision of the Court of Appeals, Mays v. Brighton Bank, 832
S.W.2d 347 (Tenn. App. 1992), perm. app. denied, the conservator argues that
Omer Davis, as one of the entirety tenants, had the right to redeem the certificates
of deposit, reduce the entire amount to his separate possession, and reinvest the
proceeds. According to the conservator, under such circumstances, the divested
spouse can recover the funds only if fraud is alleged and proven. She asserts that
the defendants have neither alleged nor proven fraud in this case, and therefore are
not entitled to recover the funds.
Relying upon this Court’s decisions in Griffin and Sloan, the defendants
respond that the conservatee’s interest was not defeated because money withdrawn
from a tenancy by the entirety account is impressed with the entirety provision. The
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defendants also claim that the conservator’s reliance upon Mays is misplaced
because Mays is factually distinguishable and inconsistent with this Court’s decisions
in Griffin and Sloan.3
The conservator fails to recognize that this case does not involve a dispute
between two competent persons over funds withdrawn from a tenancy by the entirety
account. In our view, resolution of this appeal does not depend upon the rights of
Omer Davis. Instead, resolution of this appeal depends upon whether the
conservator violated her fiduciary duties by allowing and assisting Omer Davis to
transact and utilize accounts in which the conservatee had an interest. Evaluating
the conservator’s actions and inaction in light of the fiduciary obligations previously
delineated, we clearly must answer that question in the affirmative.
Whatever the rights of Omer Davis, Grahl had a fiduciary obligation to protect
and conserve the assets of the conservatee. Grahl owed a duty of undivided loyalty
to the conservatee. Moreover, Grahl had no authority to change the character of the
conservatee’s property interests unless the change had been necessary to protect
3
W e note that in Sloan this Court, in considering whether an account payable to “husband or
wife” created a tena ncy by t he en tirety, q uote d with appr oval th e follo wing pass age from a Pe nns ylvania
case,”W here a deposit is made payable to either spouse, agency or authority exists by implication, and
the husband or th e wife m ay, from that autho rity, withdraw the entire acc ount, but the money thus
withdrawn is impre ssed w ith the entirety pro vision that it is the property of both, and any one dealing
with such spec ific pro perty a s se vera lty, kno wing it belongs to both, must submit to the consequences.”
Sloan, 241 S.W.2d at 508- 509 (em pha sis added and internal quotations omitted), quoting Madden v.
Gos ztonyi Sav. & Trust Co., 200 A. 624, 630 (Pa.1938). This passage was again quoted and reaffirmed
in the more recent case of Griffin v. Prince, 632 S.W.2d at 536.
The intermediate court in Mays characterized the legal statu s of prop erty purch ased w ith
tenancy by the entirety funds as a question of first impression. That precise question was not at issue
in Sloan and Griff in, so technica lly, the charac terization is co rrect. Th e interm ediate court decided the
issue by rejecting the decision of the Pennsylvania Supreme Court, quoted with approval in Sloan and
Griff in, and by adopting instead the position of the Ark ansas courts that funds withdrawn by one spouse
from a ten anc y by the entir ety account are not impressed with the entirety provision and can not be
recovered by the other spous e abse nt a show ing of frau d. Mays appears to be incon siste nt with this
Cou rt’s pr ior de cisio ns. H owe ver, w e nee d not reac h this issue to res olve th is app eal.
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and promote the interests of the conservatee. The proof in this record established
that the principal amount of the certificates of deposit were never utilized to meet the
needs of the conservatee. Even if a conservator deems it necessary to change the
character of property to meet the needs of the conservatee, the appropriate course
of action is to seek court approval. Folts, 132 S.W.2d at 207.4 If a conservator has
no authority to change the nature of the conservatee’s interest for the benefit of the
conservatorship estate, certainly a conservator has no authority to act or fail to act
so that the conservatee’s interest is completely extinguished, with no benefit to the
conservatorship estate. Therefore, when Omer Davis expressed his desire to transact
the certificates of deposit, as conservator, Grahl was obligated to seek guidance from
the trial court. This proposition applies with equal force to both the certificates of
deposit held jointly by Omer and Lillie Davis and to the certificate held by Omer Davis
as Trustee for Mrs. Omer Davis. Accordingly, Grahl had no authority to consent to
the withdrawal of the funds on behalf of the conservatee, and violated her fiduciary
duty by failing to petition the trial court for guidance.5
Moreover, in this case, Grahl personally benefited by allowing Omer Davis to
transact the certificates of deposit. Grahl was named as the joint tenant with right of
survivorship on two of the successor certificates of deposit. Therefore, Grahl became
the owner of those funds immediately upon the death of Omer Davis. By virtue of the
fact that Omer Davis changed the other two successor certificates of deposit into his
4
See Tenn. Code Ann. 34-11-115(c) (1997 Repl.), which specifically requires a cons ervator to
seek court ap proval be fore cha nging the nature o f a cons ervatee ’s investm ent.
5
Seeking guidance from the trial court was particularly important in this case because, on
January 10, 1 989 , Om er Da vis had executed a power of attorney appointing Geneva Grahl attorney
in fact. The dual capacity in which Grahl was func tioning, attorney-in-fact for Omer Davis and
conservator for Lillie Davis inherently, posed a conflict of interest with respect to the assets in which
they both held interests.
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name alone, they passed through his will to Grahl to be held in trust for the
conservatee, Lillie Davis. Upon the death of the conservatee, Grahl became the
owner of these funds. By allowing Omer Davis to transact the certificates of deposit,
Grahl eventually acquired legal ownership of the funds which otherwise would have
passed to the conservatorship estate, by right of survivorship, upon the death of
Omer Davis. Therefore, Grahl violated her fiduciary duty by acquiring the property
of the conservatee.6
Moreover, contrary to the conservator’s assertion, damages arose as a result
of the breach of her duties. Though the proof is undisputed that the personal needs
of the conservatee were fully satisfied, the proof also clearly demonstrates that the
assets in the estate of the conservatee substantially decreased as a result of the
action and inaction of the conservator. Since Grahl was functioning as conservator
of the person and estate of Lillie Davis, she was duty bound to carefully manage the
estate in addition to providing for the personal needs of the conservatee.
CONCLUSION
Having determined, for the reasons previously explained, that the conservator
breached her fiduciary duties by allowing Omer Davis to redeem the certificates of
deposit without first seeking court approval, and by dealing with the conservatee’s
property so as to eventually attain a personal benefit, we affirm the judgment of the
6
In so holding, we do not by any m eans im ply that Grah l acted in ba d faith or fra udulently. In
fact the proof in this case, including the testim ony of the d efenda nts, indicate s that she did not.
However, when she was appointed conservator, she was then bound to act in accordance with the
duties imposed by law upon all fiduciaries. The good faith of a conservator does not justify a breach
of those strict legal requirements.
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Court of Appeals reversing the judgment of the trial court approving the final
accounting of the conservator. This cause is remanded to the trial court for a new
and correct final accounting under which the conservator shall be required to restore
to the conservatorship estate of Lillie Davis the total amount of the four certificates
of deposit when redeemed in 1989 and interest earned on that sum from the dates
of redemption to the date of restoration to the conservatorship estate. The
conservator shall also be required to account for the amount of funds held in the joint
checking account at the time of the initial accounting, $1,167.71, and restore to the
conservatorship estate any portion of that amount for which a proper accounting is
not provided. The trial court shall allow a set off for the interest that was deposited
to the conservatorship estate after the date of redemption of the certificates of
deposit.
_____________________________________
FRANK F. DROWOTA, III,
JUSTICE
Concur:
Anderson, C. J.
Reid, Birch, Holder, JJ.
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