IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
AT JACKSON
October 15, 2002 Session
FIRST CITIZENS NATIONAL BANK AS TRUSTEE FOR THE TRUST
ESTATE OF WILL WRAY
v.
JANIECE WRAY
Appeal from the Circuit Court for Lake County
No. 00-8096 Lee Moore, Judge
No. W2002-00525-COA-R3-CV - Filed May 21, 2003
This case involves a trust. The decedent established a trust in his will. His son-in-law and a bank
were designated as co-trustees. A parcel of property with a home was placed into the trust. The trust
allowed one of the beneficiaries, the decedent’s grandson, and his wife to live in the house at no
charge. The beneficiary and his wife divorced, and as part of their marital dissolution agreement,
the beneficiary gave his ex-wife his possessory interest in the home, at no charge. The son-in-
law/trustee died, leaving the bank as the sole trustee. The bank required the ex-wife to begin paying
rent; she declined. The bank then filed the instant lawsuit against the ex-wife for past rent from the
time they first requested rent from her, and also a declaratory judgment permitting the bank to sell
the home. The trial court found that the trustees ratified the terms of the MDA between the
beneficiary and the ex-wife, allowing her to remain in the home rent-free until the trust expired. The
bank appeals. We reverse, finding that the trustees could not ratify the MDA, a contract to which
the trust was not a party.
Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Circuit Court Reversed and
Remanded
HOLLY KIRBY LILLARD, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which ALAN E. HIGHERS, J., and
DAVID R. FARMER , J., joined.
Jason L. Hudson, John W. Palmer, Dyersburg, Tennessee, for appellant, First Citizens National Bank
as Trustee for the Trust Estate of Will Wray.
Michael D. Fitzgerald, Nashville, Tennessee, for appellee, Janiece Wray.
OPINION
In 1956, Will Wray (“Decedent”) executed a Last Will and Testament in which he created
a trust (“Trust”). The trust was to benefit his wife Dora, their two daughters Karneese and Lucille,
their son Ernest, and Ernest’s two children, Jim Wray (“Jim Wray”) and Martin Wray (“Martin
Wray”). The co-trustees were the predecessor to First Citizens National Bank (“Bank”), and the
Decedent’s son-in-law, Schuyler Martin (“Schuyler Martin”). The Trust gave the trustees the power
to sell any property of the Trust, except for the real estate owned by the Decedent at the time of his
death. The Trust included a spendthrift clause,1 and also stated: “No beneficiary shall have any
power to sell, assign, transfer, encumber or in any other manner anticipate or dispose of his or her
interest in the trust estate or the income produced thereby.” The Trust was to terminate twenty-one
years after the death of the Decedent’s last surviving child.
On dates not included in the trial court record, the decedent died, and his grandson, Jim
Wray, one of the beneficiaries, married Janiece Wray. In 1982, co-trustee Schuyler Martin deeded
real property into the Trust on which a home was constructed. Thus, the Trust owned the home. Jim
and Janiece Wray lived in the home from 1982 until their divorce in 1995, during which time the co-
trustees sought no rent from them. The Marital Dissolution Agreement (“MDA”) between Jim and
Janiece Wray “granted” to Janiece Wray her former husband’s possessory interest in the real property
on which their home was located, at no charge to her, so long as she remained single.2 The MDA
also provided that Jim Wray would indemnify Janiece Wray for any action taken to remove her from
the home.3
1
The Trust instrument states:
Neither the principal nor the incom e of the trust created herein shall b e liable for the d ebts
of any beneficiary thereof, nor shall the same be subject to seizure by any creditor of any beneficiary
unde r any writ o r proceed ing at law or in eq uity.
2
The MD A pro vides:
The Parties have had unrestricted possessory use of a home located at 110 Martin Drive,
Tiptonville, Tennessee which is owned by the W ray Estate/Trust. It is the understanding of the parties
that they or [Jim] shall have co ntinued future use of the home. They state to the Court that they are
unaware of any Trust provision being violated by this divorce that should affect their [his] future
possessory use of the home.
3
The MD A pro vides:
Any future rights for possessory use of this home that the Husband may have are hereby given
to the Wife for her future use and possession of the home so long as she remains single. The Husband
further pledges to support the Wife in any action taken to remove her from the home by any Trustee
of the Wray Estate/Trust. Any responsibilities that the possessor of the home may have, such as the
upkeep and repairs of the home, become the responsibility of the Wife as long as she shall remain in
possession.
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Ernest Wray, the Decedent’s last surviving child, and co-trustee Schuyler Martin both died
in 1999. Thus, Jim Wray and Martin Wray were the sole beneficiaries of the Trust, and the Bank
was the sole trustee. The Bank then met with Jim Wray and Martin Wray to discuss the disposition
of properties owned by the Trust. It was decided that the beneficiaries’ mother, who was living in
another property owned by the Trust, would be allowed to continue to live there rent-free. Jim Wray,
Martin Wray, and the Bank, however, decided that income should be sought from the property in
which Janiece Wray was living. At the meeting, Jim Wray did not mention the provision of the
MDA ostensibly permitting Janiece Wray to live in the home at no charge.
In early 2000, the Bank contacted Janiece Wray and requested that she begin paying $300
per month rent for the home beginning March 15, 2000. Citing the MDA, Janiece Wray declined
to pay rent. The Bank then sued Janiece Wray, seeking rent from March 16, 2000 forward, and a
declaratory judgment allowing them to sell the property. Janiece Wray argued that statements made
to her by co-trustee Schuyler Martin, the provisions of the MDA, and the trustees’ past failure to
collect rent prevented them from seeking future rent. She also filed a third-party complaint against
her ex-husband, beneficiary Jim Wray, seeking indemnification from him in the event she became
obligated to pay rent to the Bank.
A bench trial was held on December 9, 2001. At the outset of the hearing, Janiece Wray
voluntarily dismissed Jim Wray. The Bank then proceeded with its proof. Bank representatives
testified that the Bank did not attempt to collect rent on the property from 1982 to 1999. A Bank
representative met with Jim Wray and Martin Wray in June 1999, and they decided that “rent should
indeed be charged”on the property in which Janiece Wray lived. At the meeting, Jim Wray did not
discuss the provisions of the MDA. The Bank representative contacted Janiece Wray; she told the
representative about the MDA and refused to pay rent.
Janiece Wray also testified. She said that she had lived in the house at no charge since 1982.
She also said that co-trustee Schuyler Martin put the property and the home into the Trust so that she
and her former husband would have a marital home. Janiece Wray testified that, when she became
divorced in 1995, co-trustee Schuyler Martin, deceased by the time of the hearing, told her he wanted
her to remain in the house so that her college-age children would have a place to come home to on
the weekends and holidays. Janiece Wray said that, during the time in which she had lived in the
house, she had replaced the central heating and air-conditioning unit, installed new carpet and wall
paper, had painted, and had generally maintained the home.
After the trial, the trial court issued a written order. In the order, the trial court found that
Jim and Janiece Wray, by entering into the MDA granting Jim Wray’s possessory interest to Janiece,
had no power to bind the Trust. The trial court ruled, however, that the Bank and Schuyler Martin,
through their conduct, were aware of and ratified the provision of the MDA that allowed Janiece
Wray to remain in the home. The trial judge stated:
It is clear by the course of conduct of [Schuyler Martin and the Bank] . . . that all
trustees were aware of and have followed and relied on the terms and conditions of
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the [MDA] in dealing with this trust property. . . . By their course of conduct,
[Schuyler Martin and the Bank] as co-trustee[s] ratified the terms and conditions of
the [MDA] as they applied to the subject property. 4
Thus, the trial court denied and dismissed the Bank’s petition seeking rent and a declaration of its
authority to sell the subject property. From this order, the Bank now appeals.
On appeal, the Bank argues that the trial court erred in finding that the Bank ratified the
MDA or any oral agreement made between co-trustee Schuyler Martin and Janiece Wray. The Bank
asserts that the MDA would be void as it applies to Trust property. It asserts that the statute of
limitations would prevent the MDA from affecting the Trust, because the Bank, here the party to be
charged, did not sign the MDA. The Bank also argues that the statute of frauds would not permit
the oral agreement purportedly made by Schuyler Martin to stand, and that, since the Bank was not
aware of the terms of the MDA, any promise made by Schuyler Martin to Janiece Wray would have
been a unilateral act of a co-trustee that would not bind the Trust. Janiece Wray argues that the trial
court’s ruling should be affirmed because the Bank ratified Schuyler Martin’s interpretation of the
provision in the MDA by allowing Janiece Wray to stay in the home without objection.
Because this case was heard by the trial court sitting without a jury, it is reviewed de novo
upon the record with a presumption of the correctness of the findings of fact by the trial court, unless
the evidence preponderates against them. See Tenn. R. App. P. 13(d); Wright v. City of Knoxville,
898 S.W.2d 177, 181 (Tenn. 1995). Questions of law, however, are reviewed de novo with no
presumption of correctness. Burlew v. Burlew, 40 S.W.3d 465, 470 (Tenn. 2001) (citation omitted).
We first address the Bank’s argument that the trial court erred in determining that co-trustees
Schuyler Martin and the Bank ratified the provision of the MDA giving Janiece Wray the possessory
interest in the house at no charge.
A contract made in the principal’s name by another purporting to act for him may be ratified
by the principal. 1 Tenn. Juris., Agency, § 72 (citing Winham v. Crutcher, 78 Tenn. 610 (1882)).
Ratification is the express or implied adoption or confirmation by the principal of an act or contract
performed or entered into on his behalf by one who acts as his agent without authority to do so. 1
Tenn. Juris., Agency, § 73 (citing Bagley & Co. v. Union-Buffalo Mills Co., 9 Tenn. App. 63
(1928)). Once the principal acquires full knowledge of the actions of the unauthorized agent, the
principal must reasonably promptly protest or disaffirm the contract entered into on his behalf; if he
fails to do so, his silence can amount to ratification of the contract. Valley Fid. Bank & Trust Co.
v. The Cain P’ship, Ltd., 738 S.W.2d 638, 639-40 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1987) (citations omitted); see
also Carnes v. Polk, 44 Tenn. 87, 95 (Tenn. 1867); Duffy Tool & Stamping, Inc. v. Bosch Auto.
Motor Sys. Corp., No. M1997-001440-COA-R3-CV, 2000 Tenn. App. LEXIS 63, at *18-19 (Tenn.
4
The trial judge noted that Jim W ray had not only failed to support his former wife in this action, as
contemplated in the MD A, but that he asked the Bank to either sell the property or require Janiece W ray to begin paying
rent.
-4-
Ct. App. Feb. 1, 2000); Coronado Prods., Inc., v. Stewart, 1988 Tenn. App. LEXIS 672, at *18
(Tenn. Ct. App. Nov. 2, 1988); Hinton v. Robinson, 364 S.W.2d 97, 102 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1962); 1
Tenn. Juris., Agency, § 77.
In this case, regardless of the action or inaction of either of the co-trustees, Schuyler Martin
or the Bank, there could be no “ratification” of the MDA. The Trust is not a party to the MDA
between Jim Wray and Janiece Wray, ostensibly or otherwise. The Trust received no benefit from
the provisions of the MDA. It is undisputed that Janiece Wray knew that Jim Wray was a
beneficiary of the Trust, not a trustee, and there was no indication that Jim Wray was entering into
any type of agreement on behalf of the Trust. The concept of ratification5 simply does not apply with
respect to the MDA entered into between Jim Wray and Janiece Wray.6 In this appeal, Janiece Wray
points to no authority by which the ability of the trustees to act in the best interest of the Trust,
whether by charging rent for the use of the property or by disposing of the property, is impinged
upon by Jim Wray entering into an agreement with Janiece Wray “granting” her any rights he had
to possession of the home.
At the trial, there was testimony from Janiece Wray regarding an oral promise allegedly
made by co-trustee Schuyler Martin that she would be permitted to live in the house indefinitely at
no charge. Over the Bank’s hearsay objection, Janiece Wray testified that Schuyler Martin wanted
her to stay in the home so that her children would have a place to come home to on the weekends
and holidays. She stated:
He wanted to [sic] me to be in that house so that my children have a house to come
to. Amy was just graduated. David was in college. He wanted the house for them
to come home to every weekend and holiday. He wanted to [sic] them to have a
home.
Even if consideration to the Trust in exchange for such an agreement had been recited, which it was
not, the trial court made no factual finding of an agreement between Schuyler Martin, on behalf of
the Trust, and Janiece Wray. We find no error in the trial court declining to find an agreement
between Martin, on behalf of the trust, and Janiece Wray. Such statements by Schuyler Martin,
assuming arguendo that they are true, would not restrict the ability of the Bank, as sole trustee at this
point, to act in the best interest of the Trust by charging rent for use of the property or by disposing
of it.
5
There is no allegation that Janiece Wray relied to her detriment on any action or inaction by the Bank or
Schuyler Martin. Indeed, in her testimony, the only actions she took with respect to the home were routine maintenance,
during which time she lived in the house rent-free.
6
Mo reover, the terms of the MDA are inconsistent with any reliance by Janiece W ray on Jim W ray’s authority
to bind the Trust, since the MDA expressly provides that Jim Wray would “support” Janiece Wray regarding any action
to remove her from the home.
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Therefore, under all of these circumstances, we must conclude that the trial court erred in
dismissing the Bank’s petition on the basis of ratification of the MDA between Jim Wray and
Janiece Wray. This decision by the trial court must be reversed, and the case must be remanded.
The decision of the trial court is reversed and the cause is remanded for further proceedings
consistent with this Opinion. Costs on appeal are taxed to appellee, Janiece Wray, for which
execution may issue, if necessary.
___________________________________
HOLLY KIRBY LILLARD, JUDGE
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