05/26/2017
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
AT KNOXVILLE
January 25, 2017 Session
TONY FRANK ET AL. v. RONNIE FIELDS
Appeal from the Chancery Court for Monroe County
No. 17,982 Jerri S. Bryant, Chancellor
No. E2016-00809-COA-R3-CV
This case involves a claim of undue influence against an attorney-in-fact for his role in
changing bank accounts and certificates of deposit owned by the principal to be payable
on death to the attorney-in-fact. The principal, or decedent in this action, died at the age
of ninety-five in January 2012. The decedent was survived by two nieces and three
nephews, one of whom, the defendant, was the decedent’s attorney-in-fact and the
personal representative of his estate. The decedent’s two nieces and one other nephew
filed a complaint alleging undue influence arising from a confidential relationship.
Following a bench trial, the trial court dismissed the complaint upon finding that although
a presumption of undue influence had been raised by a confidential relationship between
the attorney-in-fact and the decedent, the attorney-in-fact had successfully rebutted the
presumption. The plaintiffs appeal. Discerning no reversible error, we affirm.
Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Chancery Court
Affirmed; Case Remanded
THOMAS R. FRIERSON, II, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which D. MICHAEL
SWINEY, C.J., and FRANK G. CLEMENT, JR., P.J., M.S., joined.
J. Lewis Kinnard, Madisonville, Tennessee, and Keith McCord, Knoxville, Tennessee,
for the appellants, Tony Frank, Joyce Dodd, and Teresa Hipps.
John W. Cleveland, Sr., Sweetwater, Tennessee, and Doris A. Matthews, Madisonville,
Tennessee, for the appellee, Ronnie Fields.
OPINION
I. Factual and Procedural Background
The decedent, Ray L. Frank (“Decedent”) was one of six children. He died
without issue or a surviving spouse. The plaintiffs, Tony Frank, Joyce Dodd, and Teresa
Hipps (collectively, “Plaintiffs”), are, respectively, a nephew and two nieces of Decedent,
each born to a different sibling. The defendant, Ronnie Fields (“Mr. Fields”), is also
Decedent’s nephew. Tony Frank is the son of Ralph Frank, Decedent’s brother, and Ms.
Hipps is the daughter of Gavin Frank, another of Decedent’s brothers. Ms. Dodd and Mr.
Fields are both the children of Mable Fields, Decedent’s sister (“Ms. Fields”). Decedent
had one other living nephew at the time of his death, Scott Frank, who is the brother of
Ms. Hipps and is not participating in this action. All of the parties participating in this
appeal testified during trial.
In its memorandum opinion incorporated into the final judgment, the trial court
found that beginning in the 1990s, Decedent and his two sisters, Ms. Fields and Beuna
Black (“Ms. Black”), “all tried to take care of each other, and they did that from time to
time based on the health of the people that were around them at the time.”1 In the 1990s,
Decedent, Ms. Fields, and Ms. Black resided in separate residences in Vonore,
Tennessee. At some point prior to 2004, Decedent began to lose his eyesight, and his
sisters visited him regularly to check on him. It is undisputed that the ability of
Decedent’s sisters to provide assistance to him began to change in 2004. Ms. Dodd
testified that Ms. Fields and Ms. Black both began to suffer from Alzheimer’s Disease in
2003 to 2004.
Mr. Fields testified that he left his twenty-year position as Vice-President of
Managing and Distribution for Lion Apparel in Dayton, Ohio, to relocate to Monroe
County, where he had grown up, in 2004. Mr. Fields had previously built a home of his
own in Monroe County in 1997. According to Mr. Fields, his wife, Linda Fields,
developed lung cancer in 2004, causing him to leave his employment in order to spend
more time with her in their Monroe County home. Mr. Fields further testified that when
he relocated, he began visiting Decedent nearly every day and transporting Decedent to
appointments and “anywhere he wanted to go.” Mr. Fields stated that he would typically
visit Decedent at lunchtime, explaining that Decedent had meals delivered to him by
Meals on Wheels but enjoyed having someone “put his food on the table for him and get
it ready for him to eat because he couldn’t see very well.” Mr. Fields and Ms. Dodd each
testified that Decedent had a live-in caregiver for at least a few months, Hazel E. Mr.
1
The spelling of Ms. Black’s given name varies in the record. We have adopted the spelling, “Beuna,”
used by Ms. Black when she signed her own last will and testament.
2
Fields maintained that he secured Hazel E. to reside with and assist Decedent. According
to Mr. Fields, Hazel E. was approximately eighty years old at the time.
Testimony demonstrated that at different times from 2010 to 2011, Decedent and
both of his sisters relocated to senior care facilities. Ms. Black was the first of the
siblings to move into Wood Village Nursing Home (“Wood Village”) in Sweetwater,
followed soon after by Ms. Fields. Ms. Dodd explained that Ms. Fields had been residing
with her for approximately five and one-half years prior to Ms. Fields’s breaking her
knee and requiring additional care. In 2010, Decedent resided for approximately six
months at a nursing home in Vonore known as Rivers Edge. Mr. Fields testified that he
moved Decedent to Rivers Edge after Hazel E. could no longer care for him and Mr.
Fields could not find anyone to stay with Decedent at night. Mr. Fields further related
that he moved Decedent to another nursing home for a short time but, finding that nursing
home unsatisfactory, relocated Decedent to the assisted living section of the Wood
Village facility, known as The Lodge at Wood Village. According to Mr. Fields,
Decedent resided at Wood Village for approximately one year, during which time Mr.
Fields regularly visited Decedent on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays, often taking
Decedent out to eat. Mr. Fields explained that he transported Decedent to all types of
appointments, including those with Decedent’s doctors and attorney.
Ms. Dodd testified that she remembered moving Ms. Fields and Decedent into
Wood Village on the same day. After approximately one year in the assisted living
division of Wood Village, Decedent moved to the nursing home division for only a few
months before his final hospitalization. Ms. Dodd stated that she also assisted with
Decedent’s medical appointments during this time, explaining that Mr. Fields would
transport Decedent from whichever facility he was in and call her when they arrived in
Maryville where the doctor’s office was located. According to Ms. Dodd, she would then
accompany Decedent during his appointment.
Testimony demonstrated that Ms. Black died in 2011, although the exact date is
not clear in the record. Decedent died of natural causes at the University of Tennessee
Medical Center on January 18, 2012, following hospitalization lasting approximately a
week and a half. He was ninety-five years of age. Although Ms. Fields was still living at
the time of Decedent’s death, she died during the pendency of this action.
Decedent and his sisters executed various powers of attorney during the final
years of their lives. On May 16, 2005, Ms. Fields executed a power of attorney
appointing Mr. Fields as her attorney-in-fact. She concomitantly executed a last will and
testament, bequeathing her entire estate to her children, Mr. Fields and Ms. Dodd. On
October 20, 2005, Decedent executed a power of attorney appointing Mr. Fields as his
attorney-in-fact. Mr. Fields testified that once Ms. Black began experiencing difficulty
3
handling Decedent’s accounts and was having trouble handling her own, Decedent asked
Mr. Fields to be his attorney-in-fact. In May 2006, Ms. Black executed two powers of
attorney, each time appointing Mr. Fields and Scott Frank as her attorneys-in-fact. In the
second document, Ms. Black removed a provision withholding the authority of the
attorneys-in-fact until her disability. On December 2, 2010, Decedent executed a second
power of attorney appointing Mr. Fields as his attorney-in-fact.
In Ms. Black’s last will and testament, executed on June 18, 2002, she devised and
bequeathed 25% of her real and personal property to Decedent, provided that he survived
her by thirty days, and equally to Mr. Fields and Scott Frank if Decedent failed to survive
her. She devised and bequeathed the remaining 75% of her estate in equal sixths to Ms.
Fields, Mr. Fields, Ms. Dodd, Scott Frank, Kim Frank, and Brittany Frank. In her will,
Ms. Black appointed Mr. Fields and Scott Frank as co-executors. Mr. Fields testified that
he had served as the executor of Ms. Black’s estate.
Decedent had executed four successive wills that were presented as exhibits
during trial and are in the record before us. First, on July 13, 1990, Decedent executed a
last will and testament, devising and bequeathing all of his real and personal property to
his wife, Mary Belle Frank. In the event that his wife predeceased him, Decedent, apart
from specific items of personal property bequeated to individuals, devised and
bequeathed the remainder of his real and personal property 12.5% to Ms. Fields, 12.5% to
Ms. Black, 12.5% to Charles Gavin Frank, 25% to Tyson Kinser, 12.5% to the heirs at
law of Ralph Frank, and 25% to the heirs at law of Albert Kinser. According to an
inheritance tax return filed by Mr. Fields subsequent to Decedent’s death, Decedent’s
wife died on November 5, 1994.
Decedent executed a second last will and testament on November 4, 1999,
devising and bequeathing his entire estate, except a dining room table and chairs, equally
to Ms. Fields and Ms. Black. In this second will, Decedent designated Ms. Black as his
executrix and Ms. Fields as his substitute executrix. In August 2002, Decedent executed
a power of attorney appointing Ms. Black as his attorney-in-fact.
On April 21, 2005, Decedent executed a third last will and testament, devising and
bequeathing all his real and personal property, with the exception of the oak dining room
set, 25% to Ms. Fields and 25% to Ms. Black, provided that each sister, respectively,
survived him by thirty days. He bequeathed and devised the remaining 50% of his real
and personal property in equal one-sixth shares to Mr. Fields, Ms. Dodd, Ms. Hipps,
Tony Frank, Scott Frank, and Randy Frank. In this testamentary instrument, Decedent
appointed Ms. Black as his executrix and Mr. Fields as his substitute executor. Decedent
directed that his executrix or executor should sell all of his real and personal property
with the proceeds to be apportioned according to the will.
4
Finally, on December 2, 2010, Decedent executed a last will and testament, again
devising and bequeathing all his real and personal property, with the exception of the
dining room set, 25% to Ms. Fields and 25% to Ms. Black, provided that each survived
him by thirty days. He bequeathed and devised the remaining 50% of his real and
personal property in equal one-fifth shares to Mr. Fields, Ms. Dodd, Ms. Hipps, Tony
Frank, and Scott Frank. In this final will, Decedent appointed Mr. Fields as his executor
and Mr. Fields’s son, Michael Fields, as his substitute executor. Mr. Fields executed a
petition to probate Decedent’s 2010 will with the Monroe County Probate Court on
February 10, 2012. Although the record in this matter does not contain a date-stamped
copy of the probate petition, Mr. Fields’s counsel’s certificate of service indicates that
counsel sent a copy of the petition and will to each of the individual legatees named
therein on February 13, 2012. According to a copy attached to Plaintiffs’ complaint in
this action, letters testamentary were issued to Mr. Fields by the Monroe County Probate
Court on March 7, 2012.
At issue in the instant action is Mr. Fields’s involvement in two checking accounts
and three certificate of deposit (“CD”) accounts originally opened by Decedent. At the
time of Decedent’s death, both of the checking accounts, one with Volunteer Federal
Savings Bank in Vonore (“Volunteer Federal”) and a money market account with
Citizens National Bank in Vonore (“Citizens National”), were designated as payable on
death (“POD”) to Mr. Fields. See Tenn. Code Ann. § 45-2-704(b)(1) (2007).2 One of the
three CD accounts was with Volunteer Federal and was designated as POD to Mr. Fields.
Two of the CD accounts were with Citizens National, one designated as POD equally to
Mr. Fields and Scott Frank, and the other owned by Mr. Fields as the last surviving
owner upon Decedent’s death.
2
Tennessee Code Annotated § 45-2-704(b)(1) provides:
Any person, or persons jointly as tenants with right of survivorship, owning a deposit
account may enter into a written contract with any bank whereby the balance of the
deposit account may be made payable on the death of the last surviving owner to another
person or persons, notwithstanding any provisions of law to the contrary.
See George v. Warmath, No. 02A01-9807-PB-00183, 1999 WL 323502, at *5 (Tenn. Ct. App. May 24,
1999) (“As with joint accounts with right of survivorship and in appropriate circumstances, payable-on-
death funds are no longer owned by the decedent at death and do not become a part of the assets of the
decedent’s estate.”) (citing Tenn. Code Ann. § 45-2-704(b)).
5
Bank records demonstrate that over the course of two days on January 26 and 27,
2012, Mr. Fields removed, in the form of bank checks made out to himself, $228,887.72
from Decedent’s Citizens National accounts and $229,902.95 from Decedent’s Volunteer
Federal Savings accounts. In addition, Citizens National concomitantly issued a bank
check made payable in the amount of $15,011.10 to Scott Frank, representative of Scott
Frank’s fifty-percent POD interest in one of the Citizens National CD accounts.
Decedent’s Citizens National checking account and one CD account were completely
closed on January 26, 2012, while the CD account POD to Mr. Fields and Scott Frank
was closed the next day. The Volunteer Federal CD accounts were also closed on
January 27, 2012. The Volunteer Federal money market checking account remained
open until Mr. Fields closed it by removing $91.20 in accrued interest on March 19,
2012. Mr. Fields does not dispute that he kept the funds designated as POD to him for
his own use.
On March 11, 2013, Plaintiffs and Ms. Fields filed a complaint alleging, as
pertinent to this appeal, that Mr. Fields had “exercised undue influence” over Decedent
and taken “advantage of his confidential position to obtain control of all the liquid assets”
of Decedent, allegedly depriving Plaintiffs of the “legacy which [Decedent] intended.”
Plaintiffs attached copies of Decedent’s 2010 will and power of attorney, the letters
testamentary issued to Mr. Fields, and a copy of the Tennessee Short Form Inheritance
Tax Return executed by Mr. Fields on August 7, 2012, in his capacity as executor of
Decedent’s estate. The tax return reflected a gross estate value of $538,059.30,
comprised of real estate estimated to be worth $84,400.00 and “Personal and
Miscellaneous Property” valued at $453,659.30. In an attachment to the return, Mr.
Fields delineated the following as “Personal and Miscellaneous Property”:
Household Furnishings $ 2,000.00
Volunteer Federal (CD) 128,902.95
Volunteer Federal (ckg. acct.) 101,000.00
Citizens National Bank (CD) 40,000.00
Citizens National Bank (CD) 15,011.09
Citizens National Bank (MM acct.) 166,745.26
Total $ 453,659.30
Mr. Fields deducted $11,391.55 in funeral and estate expenses, for a net estate worth
claimed on the tax return of $526,667.75.
Bank records demonstrate that the total amount withdrawn from Decedent’s
accounts and paid to Mr. Fields was actually $458,881.87, and Plaintiffs have requested
6
that this amount be returned to the estate. The Citizens National CD account ending in
678 was liquidated for a total of $47,131.36, rather than $40,000.00 as stated in the
inheritance tax return, and Mr. Fields did not include on the return $91.20 in accrued
interest on the Volunteer Federal checking account, subsequently withdrawn in March
2012. Plaintiffs have made no claim regarding the estimated $2,000.00 in household
furnishings or the $15,011.10 paid upon Decedent’s death to Scott Frank from the
Citizens National CD ending in 874. Mr. Fields does not dispute on appeal that the total
amount of funds he received was $458,881.87. Mr. Fields testified that in his capacity as
executor, he had subsequently sold Decedent’s home and deposited the proceeds in the
estate account. Mr. Fields acknowledged that the amount available in the estate account
for distribution according to Decedent’s will was $102,000.00. He explained that
distribution of the estate account awaited completion of the instant action.
In their complaint, Plaintiffs requested that the trial court, inter alia, require Mr.
Fields to account for the funds removed from Decedent’s accounts in January 2012 and
require Mr. Fields to reimburse Decedent’s estate. Mr. Fields filed an answer on April
10, 2013, denying all substantive allegations. He also averred that Ms. Fields was not
competent to be a party to this action and that as Ms. Fields’s attorney-in-fact, he had not
consented to her inclusion as a party.
On January 27, 2014, Plaintiffs filed a motion for summary judgment and
statement of material facts, attaching, in addition to materials previously filed, bank
records, deposition testimony proferred by Michael Fields, and an affidavit executed by
Ms. Dodd. Mr. Fields filed a response and a statement of material facts on March 4,
2014, attaching a record of checks written by Mr. Fields on Decedent’s accounts for
Decedent’s expenses, as well as affidavits executed by Sheila Phillips, a new account
representative with Volunteer Federal who had assisted Decedent with his banking needs,
and Kay Grubb, a customer service representative at Citizens National. Following a
hearing conducted on April 30, 2014, the trial court denied Plaintiffs’ motion for
summary judgment in an order entered May 30, 2014.
On August 11, 2015, the trial court entered an order directing, upon the parties’
agreement, that the assets in question “should be held intact in the investments arranged
by [Mr. Fields].” The court subsequently entered an agreed order on January 11, 2016,
dismissing Ms. Fields’s claim upon finding that Ms. Fields had died testate on February
19, 2014. The court noted that the two beneficiaries of Ms. Fields’s estate, Ms. Dodd and
Mr. Fields, were already parties to this action.
The trial court conducted a trial over the course of two days on February 17 and
18, 2016. Witnesses included the parties; Ms. Phillips; Ms. Grubb; John M. Carson, III,
an attorney who had prepared Decedent’s wills and powers of attorney designating Mr.
7
Fields as attorney-in-fact; Robin Williamson, a former employee of Rivers Edge who had
provided care to Decedent for approximately six months; and Michael W. Abel, Sr., who
had often accompanied Ms. Dodd when she visited Decedent and Ms. Fields at Wood
Village. All relevant testimony and medical assessments presented at trial demonstrated
that although Decedent was blind or nearly blind throughout the last few years of his life,
he suffered from no mental or cognitive impairment. Each of the plaintiffs testified,
respectively, that Decedent appeared to remain mentally independent, alert, and aware of
those around him. Plaintiffs acknowledged that Mr. Fields never inhibited their abilities
to visit with Decedent. Ms. Dodd testified that she did not suspect Mr. Fields of undue
influence until she received information regarding the estate following Decedent’s death.
Mr. Carson testified that he had practiced law in Madisonville for nearly thirty
years and had known Decedent since before he began practicing law. In addition to
preparing Decedent’s testamentary documents and powers of attorney, Mr. Carson had
also prepared such documents for Ms. Black and Ms. Fields. Mr. Carson related that
when he prepared Decedent’s wills and powers of attorney, he spoke with Decedent in
private regarding Decedent’s wishes. He remembered conversations with Decedent over
the years about Decedent’s wife’s health, his sisters’ health, and his desire to have his
real property liquidated for his estate. According to Mr. Carson, although he did not
remember the specific conversation, he was sure he would have explained to Decedent
that accounts designated POD would pass to the beneficiary outside the estate. Mr.
Carson described his typical procedure as follows:
As far as to how names were on bank accounts or so forth, I have a
specific litany that I follow every time that I execute a will. I don’t
remember any specific dialogue with [Decedent], but I know that in every
single will that I execute, there’s the same pattern and dialogue that
happens with every execution. And part of that litany or part of that
dialogue when – I generally will always notarize the document. I have one
or two of my paralegals or somebody else witness the document. I notarize
the document. We get everything signed. I send [a paralegal] to go make
my office copy and then I explain to whoever is sitting there as part of my
litany, we’re sending the original home with you, you have to put that up in
a safe place, that the copy that we keep here is only for our records. . . . I
specifically remind them, as I have told them in the introductory portion,
that recall there are certain assets that pass outside of your estate, life
insurance policies or contracts that you have with a company to pay a
beneficiary upon your death, so that won’t be covered by this, and
specifically refer to jointly held bank accounts will pass to the joint account
holder. I remind them not to put their name on anybody’s account that they
8
don’t want to own that. . . . So that’s just part of the same litany I roll
through every time . . . .
Concerning Decedent’s physical and mental condition when he executed the
documents, Mr. Carson testified:
[T]hrough the years that I had seen [Decedent], his eyesight continued to
fail him, and although his mind remained sharp, he was – or as far as I
could tell for all intents and purposes blind at the time he executed this last
document. I know that we read that out to him completely full and out loud
as opposed to having him review it individually.
Mr. Carson explained that when a client executes a will, he has “whoever else go back
out and wait in the lobby.” Mr. Carson specifically remembered having a “younger
fellow,” subsequently identified as Michael Fields, wait in the lobby while he spoke with
Decedent alone. According to Mr. Carson, on the last occasion that he came into the
office, Decedent “was sort of joking with [Mr. Carson] that he was outliving everybody”
and stated that “[h]e hated to come back and make another change but he was outliving
folks.” Mr. Carson acknowledged that because Decedent began to have trouble climbing
the stairs to Mr. Carson’s former office, Mr. Carson “did go down to the car and see him”
on at least two occasions. Mr. Fields testified, in turn, that he was present when
Decedent executed his most recent will and that Decedent did so in Mr. Fields’s car with
Mr. Carson and Mr. Carson’s assistant also in the car because it was raining outside.
Ms. Phillips and Ms. Grubb each respectively testified that Decedent appeared to
know his surroundings and understand the purpose of his banking transactions. Ms.
Phillips explained that she had been employed with Volunteer Federal since 1999 and
had worked at the Vonore branch since it opened in 2002. She had assisted Decedent
with his accounts since the opening of the Vonore branch. Ms. Phillips stated that in
2002, Decedent would come in and do business on his own. She related that by about
2004, Decedent began needing someone to assist him and that he would usually have
either Ms. Black, Ms. Fields, or Mr. Fields with him. When questioned regarding the
“last couple of years” of Decedent’s life, Ms. Phillips stated that Decedent was
accompanied by Mr. Fields.
As Ms. Phillips reviewed banking records presented by Plaintiffs, she noted that
Mr. Fields’s wife Linda had been added to the Volunteer Federal checking account as a
signatory at some point prior to August 14, 2006, because Mr. Fields “was having a hard
time . . . writing the checks, and so we added Linda on there as signatory so she could
9
write the checks to pay whatever for [Decedent].”3 Ms. Phillips acknowledged that the
signature card adding Linda Fields was undated but explained that it predated an August
14, 2006 signature card. When questioned regarding whether she remembered the
particular instance when Mr. Fields, acting as Decedent’s attorney-in-fact, added Ms.
Fields as a signatory, Ms. Phillips responded:
I don’t, but if [Decedent] wasn’t with [Mr. Fields], it was my best
habit to call – I would call – if [Decedent] wasn’t physically with [Mr.
Fields] in the bank, I would call [Decedent] on the phone or he would call
me, and I would ask, you know, what he wanted to do on these accounts.
***
I would have either – I didn’t make a note of it, no, I did not. But I
would have – I feel like I would have either talked to [Decedent] on the
phone or he would have called me before I would have made the change.
Ms. Phillips maintained that she recognized Decedent’s voice on the telephone and that
when she made a change to an account without speaking with Decedent on the telephone,
it was because he was physically present at the bank. When questioned regarding
whether she recalled explaining to Decedent what a payable-on-death designation meant,
Ms. Phillips testified:
I don’t specifically remember. But like I said, if I had listed it on
there, he would have had to ask me or, you know, if someone else had
requested it I would have talked with him about it to make sure that was his
wishes, that that’s what he wanted on the account.
Ms. Grubb testified that she had been employed with Citizens National at the
Vonore branch since approximately 2002 and had known Decedent for forty or fifty
years. She also testified that she had assisted Decedent with his checking and CD
accounts since very soon after she began working for Citizens National. Ms. Grubb
stated that when Decedent opened or made changes to his accounts, he was present and
instructed her regarding how he wanted them set up. She explained that once Decedent’s
eyesight began to fail, either Mr. Fields or one of Decedent’s sisters would transport him
to the bank. She further explained that later when Decedent had become blind, it was
always Mr. Fields who accompanied him. Ms. Grubb acknowledged that in later years,
Decedent was not able to come into the bank himself, but she maintained that Decedent
did not make changes to the Citizens National accounts at that time. Ms. Grubb opined
3
During trial, Mr. Fields’s counsel noted for the record, without objection, that Mr. Fields suffered from
Parkinson’s Disease.
10
that Decedent knew his surroundings and knew her. She stated that she had no reason to
believe Decedent was not competent to make decisions.
Related to Decedent’s checking and CD accounts, the trial court in its final decree
delineated a timeline of events, which the parties do not dispute. The following is a
summary of the events affecting each account, as noted in the final decree and evinced by
the exhibits presented at trial:
Volunteer Federal Checking Account
September 9, 2002: Decedent opened account.
September 20, 2004: Decedent designated the account as POD to Ms.
Black and Ms. Fields.
October 20, 2005: Decedent appointed Mr. Fields as his attorney-
in-fact.
May 4, 2006: Ms. Black appointed Mr. Fields and Scott Frank
as her attorneys-in-fact.
August 7, 2006: Decedent designated Ms. Black as signatory.
August 7, 2006: Decedent designated the account as POD to Mr.
Fields.
Prior to August 14, 2006: Linda Fields (now deceased) was added as a
signatory.
August 14, 2006: Decedent and Mr. Fields, acting as Decedent’s
attorney-in-fact, both signed a second
designation of the account as POD to Mr.
Fields.
December 2, 2010: Decedent again appointed Mr. Fields as his
attorney-in-fact.
January 27, 2012: Following Decedent’s death, Mr. Fields
withdrew $101,000.00 in POD funds.
11
March 19, 2012: Mr. Fields closed the account by withdrawing
$91.20 in accrued interest.
Volunteer Federal CD Account Ending 3075
February 16, 2010: Decedent purchased the CD and designated it as
POD to Mr. Fields, whom he previously had
appointed as his attorney-in-fact.
December 2, 2010: Decedent again appointed Mr. Fields as his
attorney-in-fact.
January 27, 2012: Following Decedent’s death, Mr. Fields closed
the account by withdrawing $128,902.95 in
POD funds.
Citizens National Money Market Checking Account
October 18, 1999: Decedent opened the account. Ms. Black
exercised a power of attorney given to her by
Decedent to designate herself a signatory.
October 20, 2005: Decedent appointed Mr. Fields as his attorney-
in-fact.
May 4, 2006: Ms. Black appointed Mr. Fields and Scott Frank
as her attorneys-in-fact.
August 7, 2006: Decedent designated the account as POD to Mr.
Fields.
December 2, 2010: Decedent again appointed Mr. Fields as his
attorney-in-fact.
January 26, 2012: Following Decedent’s death, Mr. Fields closed
the account by withdrawing $166,745.26 in
POD funds.
12
Citizens National CD Account Ending 678
October 20, 2005: Decedent appointed Mr. Fields as his attorney-
in-fact.
March 6, 2006: Mr. Fields, acting as Decedent’s attorney-in
fact, renewed CD, which was designated as
jointly owned with right of survivorship by
Decedent, Ms. Black, and Mr. Fields.4
December 2, 2010: Decedent again appointed Mr. Fields as his
attorney-in-fact.
2011: Ms. Black died.
January 26, 2012: Following Decedent’s death, Mr. Fields closed
the account by withdrawing $47,131.36 as the
sole surviving account owner.
Citizens National CD Account Ending 874
August 18, 2009: Decedent purchased a CD in the amount of
$30,000.00 and designated it as POD equally to
Mr. Fields and Scott Frank.
December 2, 2010: Decedent executed a second power of attorney
appointing Mr. Fields as his attorney-in-fact.
January 27, 2012: Following Decedent’s death, Mr. Fields closed
the account by obtaining two bank checks, one
written to him in the amount of $15,011.09 and
one written to Scott Frank in the amount of
$15,011.10.
At the close of trial, the court found that Mr. Fields did not exercise the power of
attorney to make any changes to the ownership or POD status of the Volunteer Federal
checking account and that, therefore, no presumption of undue influence was created as
4
The signature card presented for the Citizens National CD account ending in 678 reflects the opening
date as March 6, 2006. Ms. Grubb testified that a different CD account was paid out prior to Decedent’s
death with the account ending in 678 opened in its place. The trial court characterized this as a renewal in
the final decree without objection from the parties.
13
to that account. Specifically, the court found that although Mr. Fields utilized the power
of attorney on August 14, 2006, to sign the designation of himself as POD of the
Volunteer Federal checking account, this designation actually changed nothing because
Decedent himself had executed the same designation on August 7, 2006, and personally
signed the August 14, 2006 POD designation as well.
As to the remaining accounts, the trial court found that a presumption of undue
influence had been created by the confidential relationship between Decedent and Mr.
Fields. However, the court dismissed Plaintiffs’ complaint upon finding that Mr. Fields
had successfully rebutted the presumption by demonstrating that the transactions were
“fair.” The court specifically found that (1) Decedent was familiar with POD accounts
and had discussed the effects of such accounts with his attorney, (2) Decedent received
independent advice from his attorney and bank personnel, (3) Decedent was mentally
competent and made his own decisions, (4) the changes made to Decedent’s accounts
were consistent with the changes he had made throughout the years, and (5) the changes
were “something that [Decedent] would have or could have done because he felt Mr.
Fields deserved it.” The court entered a final decree on March 28, 2016, incorporating
the memorandum opinion. The court also extended its prior order directing that all assets
subject to this action be maintained in their current form pending the expiration of thirty
days or the resolution of an appeal. Plaintiffs timely appealed.
II. Issue Presented
Plaintiffs present one issue on appeal, which we have restated as follows:
Whether the trial court erred by finding clear and convincing
evidence that Mr. Fields successfully rebutted the presumption of undue
influence.
III. Standard of Review
Our review of the trial court’s judgment following a non-jury trial is de novo upon
the record, with a presumption of correctness as to the trial court’s findings of fact unless
the preponderance of the evidence is otherwise. See Tenn. R. App. P. 13(d); Rogers v.
Louisville Land Co., 367 S.W.3d 196, 204 (Tenn. 2012). “In order for the evidence to
preponderate against the trial court’s findings of fact, the evidence must support another
finding of fact with greater convincing effect.” Wood v. Starko, 197 S.W.3d 255, 257
(Tenn. Ct. App. 2006) (citing Rawlings v. John Hancock Mut. Life Ins. Co., 78 S.W.3d
291, 296 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2001)). The trial court’s determinations regarding witness
credibility are entitled to great weight on appeal and shall not be disturbed absent clear
and convincing evidence to the contrary. See Jones v. Garrett, 92 S.W.3d 835, 838
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(Tenn. 2002). We review the trial court’s conclusions of law de novo with no
presumption of correctness. Hughes v. Metro. Gov’t of Nashville & Davidson Cnty., 340
S.W.3d 352, 360 (Tenn. 2011).
IV. Presumption of Undue Influence
Plaintiffs contend that the trial court erred by finding clear and convincing
evidence that Mr. Fields successfully rebutted the presumption of undue influence. Mr.
Fields does not dispute the trial court’s finding that his relationship with Decedent was a
confidential one, raising a presumption of undue influence when he received a benefit
while acting as attorney-in-fact for Decedent. Mr. Fields asserts, however, that the trial
court properly found that he had rebutted the presumption because the evidence
demonstrated that Decedent was of sound mind and following his own free will when he
designated Mr. Fields as his attorney-in-fact and, either on his own or acting through Mr.
Fields, designated accounts POD or created joint tenancy with right of survivorship.
Upon our careful review of the record and applicable authorities, we conclude that the
trial court did not err in finding that Mr. Fields had successfully rebutted the presumption
of undue influence.
An allegation of undue influence exercised through a confidential relationship may
arise in an action contesting the validity of a will. See Childress v. Currie, 74 S.W.3d
324, 328 (Tenn. 2002) (“[A] will may be challenged on the basis that the decedent was
subject to the undue influence of another in executing the will.”). In contrast, Plaintiffs in
the case at bar assert that Decedent’s true wishes were reflected in his 2010 will, which
upon Decedent’s having been preceded in death by Ms. Black, operated to devise and
bequeath 25% of his estate to Ms. Fields with the remaining 75% to be equally divided
among Decedent’s surviving nieces and nephews: the three Plaintiffs, Mr. Fields, and
Scott Frank. Plaintiffs’ claim of undue influence is based on the designation of
Decedent’s checking and CD accounts as either POD in full or in part to Mr. Fields or, in
the instance of one Citizens National CD account, as jointly owned by Mr. Fields with
right of survivorship. See In re Estate of Price, 273 S.W.3d 113, 125 (Tenn. Ct. App.
2008), perm. app. denied (Tenn. Sept. 29, 2008) (“Courts apply the doctrine of undue
influence ‘when one party, such as a grantee, is in a position to exercise undue influence
over the mind and the will of another, such as a grantor, due to the existence of a
confidential relationship.’”) (quoting Brown v. Weik, 725 S.W.2d 938, 945 (Tenn. Ct.
App. 1983)). Plaintiffs argue that Decedent’s will provides evidence that it was not
Decedent’s intent to pass funds in his checking and CD accounts to Mr. Fields outside the
parameters of the estate.
Regarding the presumption of undue influence that may arise upon the finding of a
confidential relationship, our Supreme Court has explained:
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“Under Tennessee law, as in most jurisdictions, a presumption of
undue influence arises where the dominant party in a confidential
relationship receives a benefit from the other party.” In re Estate of
Hamilton, 67 S.W.3d 786, 793 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2001) (citing Matlock v.
Simpson, 902 S.W.2d 384, 386 (Tenn. 1995); Crain v. Brown, 823 S.W.2d
187, 194 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1991)). “[A] confidential relationship arises as a
matter of law when an unrestricted power of attorney is granted to the
dominant party.” Childress, 74 S.W.3d at 328-29 (citing Matlock, 902
S.W.2d at 386); see also In re Estate of Hamilton, 67 S.W.3d at 793;
Mitchell [v. Smith,] 779 S.W.2d [384,] 388 [(Tenn. Ct. App. 1989)], 779
S.W.2d at 389 (“A person authorized to act on behalf of another by virtue
of an unrestricted power of attorney has a confidential relationship with the
person who executed the power of attorney.”). No confidential relationship
arises when an unrestricted power of attorney is executed but has not yet
been exercised. Childress, 74 S.W.3d at 329. A power of attorney is
restricted and a confidential relationship does not exist as a matter of law
when the power of attorney never came into effect and the person granting
the power of attorney may alter or revoke it at any time. McKinley v. Holt,
No. 03A01-9807-PB-00220, 1999 WL 233400, at *4, 1999 Tenn. App.
LEXIS 247, at *12 (Tenn. Ct. App. Apr. 15, 1999); see also Smith v. Smith,
102 S.W.3d 648, 653 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2002).
Once a presumption of undue influence arises, in order to overcome
the presumption, the dominant party must establish that the transaction at
issue was fair by clear and convincing evidence. In re Estate of Hamilton,
67 S.W.3d at 793. With a will contest, evidence that the testator received
independent, legal advice concerning the contents of a will may rebut this
presumption. Id. (citing Crain, 823 S.W.2d at 194). Finally, we are
mindful that “the presumption of undue influence extends to all dealings
between persons in fiduciary and confidential relations, and embraces gifts,
contracts, sales, releases, mortgages and other transactions by which the
dominant party obtains a benefit from the other party.” Gordon v.
Thornton, 584 S.W.2d 655, 658 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1979) (citing Williams v.
Jones, 54 Tenn. App. 189, 388 S.W.2d 665 (1963); Roberts v. Chase, 25
Tenn. App. 636, 166 S.W.2d 641 (1942)).
Parish v. Kemp, 179 S.W.3d 524, 531 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2005), perm. app. denied (Tenn.
2005).
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In determining that a confidential relationship had been established through
demonstration of Mr. Fields’s exercise of the power of attorney in transactions that
benefitted him, the trial court made the following findings in relevant part:
The testimony from Volunteer Federal from Ms. Phillips was that
[Decedent] signed his own documents and that [Decedent] made his own
decisions, and she never changed anything without talking to [Decedent]
personally or on the phone. Sometime after August of 2006, Ms. Linda . . .
Fields . . . was added as a signatory, but that wasn’t a change in the payable
on death part or the ownership of the account. Ms. Phillips also testified
that the [Decedent] signatures were signed by [Decedent]. So assuming
that, then I don’t see the power of attorney being used when it was
originally signed on 8/7/06 and changed to Ronald Fields as POD. It
wasn’t used and therefore would have created a presumption of undue
influence until 8/14/06, when it was used for that purpose. But that did not
change anything that wasn’t already there on August the 7th of ’06. So I
don’t find that that account was created with a payable on death by undue
influence.
I think that, and I’m going to go through each of these accounts, on
account number 3075 that was opened in 2010, the CD shows [Decedent]
signing that card himself, and then signing again a second card with Ronald
Fields signing as POA [power of attorney]. That account will be treated
like the rest of these accounts that are in ’09 at Citizens Bank since Mr.
Fields had used the POA in 8/14/06. So for the rest of the accounts that
were opened after that where Mr. Fields was added as a payable on death,
there is a presumption based on this confidential relationship of undue
influence that attaches where Mr. Fields has gotten a benefit after the use of
his power of attorney.
On appeal, the parties do not dispute the trial court’s findings regarding how and when a
confidential relationship was established between Mr. Fields and Decedent. The issue on
appeal is therefore narrowed to whether Mr. Fields successfully rebutted, by clear and
convincing evidence, the presumption of undue influence.
As the parties note, this Court recently addressed a similar issue in In re Estate of
Davis, No. E2015-00826-COA-R3-CV, 2016 WL 944143 (Tenn. Ct. App. Mar. 14,
2016). Having affirmed the trial court’s finding of a confidential relationship, the Davis
Court next addressed whether the defendant had rebutted the presumption by proving
clearly and convincingly that the transaction was fair. See id. at *22 (“Once a
confidential relationship between Deceased and Davis [Deceased’s mother] was proven,
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a presumption of undue influence arose and the burden shifted to Davis to prove by clear
and convincing evidence the fairness of the transaction involving the Will.”) (citing
Childress, 74 S.W.3d at 328).
As this Court previously has explained:
It is rare to find direct evidence of undue influence. [In re Estate of
Maddox, 60 S.W.3d 84,] 88 [(Tenn. Ct. App. 2001)]. Usually, to prove
undue influence, one “must prove the existence of suspicious circumstances
warranting the conclusion that the person allegedly influenced did not act
freely and independently.” Id. “The suspicious circumstances most
frequently relied upon to establish undue influence are: (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 89. Some other recognized
suspicious circumstances are:
(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) the testator being
in an emotionally distraught state; (7) discrepancies between
the will and the testator’s expressed intentions; and (8) fraud
or duress directed toward the testator.
Mitchell v. Smith, 779 S.W.2d 384, 388 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1989). “The courts
have refrained from prescribing the type or number of suspicious
circumstances that will warrant invalidating a will on the grounds of undue
influence.” Id.
DeLapp v. Pratt, 152 S.W.3d 530, 540-41 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2004), perm. app. denied
(Tenn. Nov. 29, 2004); see also In re Estate of Davis, 2016 WL 944143, at *21-22. The
Davis Court found that under the totality of the circumstances, the evidence was clear and
convincing that the decedent had decided on the provisions of his will without undue
influence by the defendant, who was the decedent’s mother. Davis, 2016 WL 944143, at
*23 (“Whether this decision by the Deceased was ‘fair’ to his wife and daughters was not
the question before the Probate Court or now before this Court on appeal.”).
Plaintiffs assert that the combination of (1) a confidential relationship between
Decedent and Mr. Fields, (2) Decedent’s physical deterioration and blindness, and (3)
Mr. Fields’s active involvement in procuring his POD designation constituted “suspicious
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circumstances” sufficient to defeat Mr. Fields’s attempted rebuttal of the undue-influence
presumption. We disagree.
In determining that Mr. Fields had successfully rebutted the presumption of undue
influence, the trial court stated in its memorandum opinion in pertinent part:
So with the presumption raised, Mr. Fields has to rebut that
presumption in a couple of different ways. Number one, he has to prove
that the transaction was fair, that this is something that [Decedent] would
have or could have done because he felt Mr. Fields deserved it. Certainly
the proof is there in a clear and convincing way that Mr. Fields took care of
[Decedent], that Mr. Fields drove [Decedent] around, and notably that Mr.
Fields stepped into the shoes of Buena Black and Mable, who previously
helped [Decedent], who apparently needed help not mentally, but
physically because of the decline in his eyesight. [Decedent] was familiar
with payable on death accounts because he had set those up in the past
before Mr. Fields became involved, and because Mr. Carson testified as his
attorney he had discussed those issues with him and because he also
distinguished those accounts from wills, I find that Mr. Fields has produced
clear and convincing evidence that Mr. Carson independently advised
[Decedent] about the [e]ffects of payable on death accounts and making
wills, and that [Decedent] made his own decisions as to who would receive
things when he died. [Decedent], as far as all proof that’s in the case,
received independent advice from both the attorney and from the bank, and
this rebutted the presumption of undue influence. Given that, there was the
physical condition of [Decedent]. I don’t find he was so frail that he was
subjected to undue influence. There is no proof that he was tricked because
of his eyesight. He was of advanced age but there is no proof from
anybody that he did not know who his relatives were . . . what he had and
what he wanted to do with things, and there is no proof that he did anything
but make his own decisions, and I find that by clear and convincing
evidence. There’s no proof [Decedent] was under the dominion and control
of Mr. Fields. Even the circumstances of his physical decline, his loss of
eyesight and his advanced age, those did not weigh in favor of any proof
out there, and I find there was none of dominion and control by Mr. Fields.
While it is unfortunate for the family that emotionally this doesn’t satisfy
them that that’s what [Decedent] wanted to do, in leaving out part of his
family members from his effects, I think he knew what he was doing. He
had done it for years. He had changed both of those documents for years.
Quite frankly, he went to the attorney on several occasions, probably more
than most people do, but not in some way that I would think is exorbitant. I
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think he went in reaction to things that were happening in his life; for
instance, the decline of Buena Black and Mable, his sisters who would help
take care of him, and the stepping into that role of Mr. Fields. So for that
reason, I’m dismissing the case against Mr. Fields.
As the trial court noted, the issue was not whether the transactions were fair to
Plaintiffs but whether the transactions fairly represented Decedent’s free and independent
will. See Davis, 2016 WL 944143, at *23. Plaintiffs argue that Mr. Fields’s testimony
indicated that he treated Decedent’s designation of him as a beneficiary to accounts as
payment for the care he provided Decedent. Plaintiffs assert that “[i]t would be
incredible to argue that his care was worth in excess of $458,000.00.” When questioned
regarding what he thought would justify Decedent’s leaving the funds to him, Mr. Fields
stated, “I took care of him.” Contrary to Plaintiffs’ assertion, however, Mr. Fields did not
characterize Decedent’s designation of him as a beneficiary as payment for the care
given.
Mr. Fields testified that he enjoyed visiting and providing care to Decedent, stating
that Decedent was “like a father” to him. Plaintiffs do not dispute that Mr. Fields spent
time caring for Decedent and providing him with transportation. Plaintiffs argue instead
that the time Mr. Fields spent with Decedent supports their position that Mr. Fields
exerted undue influence. However, the record contains no indication that Mr. Fields ever
isolated Decedent from other family members or insisted on being present when others
visited Decedent. We determine that the evidence does not preponderate against the trial
court’s finding that Decedent’s decision to designate Mr. Fields as the beneficiary of his
financial accounts was reasonably in line with what Decedent may have naturally felt Mr.
Fields “deserved.”
Plaintiffs rely heavily on Decedent’s blindness in later life and the devise and
bequest of his estate among nephews and nieces in his 2010 will as demonstrative of
suspicious circumstances. In contrast, however, the record clearly and convincingly
supports the trial court’s finding that Decedent had taken advantage of legal advice on a
regular basis in his later years and had consistently updated legal documents such as his
wills and powers of attorney with Mr. Carson’s assistance. Ms. Phillips and Ms. Grubb
each respectively testified to Decedent’s longstanding relationship with bank employees
at Volunteer Federal and Citizens National. They each opined that Decedent was aware
of his financial affairs and competent to make decisions concerning his assets.
Plaintiffs’ collective testimony demonstrated that none of them had witnessed
signs of mental impairment in Decedent or dependence beyond his need for physical
assistance. Tony Frank testified that Decedent “seemed to be in good mental condition.”
Ms. Hipps stated through deposition testimony that Decedent was a “strong-willed man”
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and acknowledged during trial that she knew of no instances when anyone had taken
advantage of Decedent due to his blindness. Ms. Dodd acknowledged that during the
time she knew Decedent, he was of sound mind and independent character. Although
Plaintiffs rely on the provisions of Decedent’s will in support of their argument that he
would not have intended for the majority of his financial accounts to pass to Mr. Fields,
each Plaintiff acknowledged through testimony at trial that Decedent had never discussed
his financial assets or estate plans with them.
On appeal, Plaintiffs acknowledge that they presented no proof of fraud or duress.
Upon our thorough review, we conclude that the evidence preponderates in favor of the
trial court’s finding, by clear and convincing evidence, that Mr. Fields successfully
rebutted the presumption of undue influence.
V. Conclusion
For the reasons stated above, we affirm the trial court’s judgment. This case is
remanded to the trial court, pursuant to applicable law, for enforcement of the trial court’s
judgment dismissing Plaintiffs’ complaint and collection of costs assessed below. The
costs on appeal are assessed against the appellants, Tony Frank, Joyce Dodd, and Teresa
Hipps.
_________________________________
THOMAS R. FRIERSON, II, JUDGE
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