In re Estate of Calvert Hugh Fletcher ( 2016 )


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  •                      IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
    AT NASHVILLE
    March 1, 2016 Session
    IN RE ESTATE OF CALVERT HUGH FLETCHER
    Appeal from the Circuit Court for Putnam County
    No. 18589 Steven D. Qualls, Judge
    ________________________________
    No. M2015-01297-COA-R3-CV – Filed May 23, 2016
    _________________________________
    This appeal stems from probate proceedings in the Putnam County Probate Court. During
    the course of the trial proceedings, an issue arose as to the ownership of a certificate of
    deposit titled in the decedent‟s name. Following an evidentiary hearing, the trial court
    entered an order concluding that the certificate of deposit was, in fact, the property of the
    decedent‟s estate. On appeal, the decedent‟s surviving wife argues that because the funds
    within the certificate of deposit were derived from a joint marital account, they should have
    been impressed as entireties property. We agree and conclude that the funds in the certificate
    of deposit passed to the surviving wife upon the decedent‟s death. The judgment of the trial
    court is accordingly reversed.
    Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Circuit Court Reversed and
    Remanded
    ARNOLD B. GOLDIN, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which J. STEVEN STAFFORD,
    P.J., W.S., and KENNY ARMSTRONG, J., joined.
    Kenneth S. Williams, Cookeville, Tennessee, for the appellant, Nelda Karene (Kay) Fletcher.
    Henry D. Fincher, Cookeville, Tennessee, for the appellees, Elaine Fletcher, Janet L. Fletcher
    Brady, Richard H. Fletcher, and Peter J. Fletcher.
    Jerry Bowers, Appellee.1
    1
    Appellee Jerry Bowers did not file a brief or otherwise participate in this appeal.
    Carolyn Smith, Appellee.2
    OPINION
    Background
    This case raises an interesting question regarding property classification and the
    manner in which a tenancy by the entirety in bank funds can be terminated. The pertinent
    background facts are fairly straightforward. On April 3, 2012, spouses Nelda Karene
    Fletcher (“Mrs. Fletcher”) and Calvert Hugh Fletcher (“Mr. Fletcher”) refinanced the
    mortgage on their home. With the proceeds from the refinancing, the Fletchers opened a
    joint checking account with rights of survivorship at FSG Bank in Cookeville, Tennessee.
    The initial deposit was over $100,000.00. According to the Fletchers‟ account agreement,
    only one owner‟s signature was required to make a withdrawal from the account.
    In January 2013, Mr. Fletcher withdrew $100,000.00 from the FSG joint account in
    order to fund a certificate of deposit (“CD”) issued by FSG. The CD was titled solely in Mr.
    Fletcher‟s name and was used as security for a line of credit that was also solely in his name.
    It is undisputed that Mr. Fletcher never drew on the line of credit secured by the CD.
    In February 2013, the Fletchers‟ joint account at FSG was closed, and following an
    extended illness, Mr. Fletcher died testate on September 6, 2013. Under his last will and
    testament, Mrs. Fletcher was to receive all of his tangible personal property. The remainder
    of Mr. Fletcher‟s estate was to be divided equally among his four adult children (“the
    Fletcher Children”).3 On November 22, 2013, Mrs. Fletcher filed a petition to probate her
    deceased husband‟s will in the Putnam County Probate Court. Shortly thereafter, on
    November 26, 2013, the trial court admitted the will into probate and appointed Mrs. Fletcher
    as executrix for the estate.
    As the probate proceedings progressed, the classification of the CD became a point of
    contention. On March 25, 2014, Mrs. Fletcher filed an extensive inventory of the estate.
    Although the CD was listed among the assets included within the inventory, it was
    specifically identified as a non-estate asset. In a May 8, 2014 petition, Mrs. Fletcher
    contended that the CD should be treated as property that passed to her at Mr. Fletcher‟s death
    because the monies that funded the CD had been taken from a joint marital account. On
    2
    Appellee Carolyn Smith did not file a brief or otherwise participate in this appeal.
    3
    The Fletcher Children are the product of Mr. Fletcher‟s first marriage. Mrs. Fletcher, the Appellant in this
    case, was his second wife.
    -2-
    February 16, 2015, the Fletcher Children filed an answer and counter-complaint to Mrs.
    Fletcher‟s May 8, 2014 petition. Therein, they denied that the CD was anything other than
    estate property.
    On April 22, 2015, the trial court held a hearing to decide how the CD should be
    classified.4 In addition to receiving documentary exhibits into evidence, the trial court heard
    oral testimony from Mrs. Fletcher and two of the Fletcher Children. Although many topics
    concerning the CD were addressed at the hearing, much of the testimony related to a phone
    call that took place in April 2013, a time period during which Mr. Fletcher was ill with
    pneumonia. Because of Mr. Fletcher‟s illness, one of his daughters, Elaine Fletcher
    (“Elaine”), came to visit him and assist Mrs. Fletcher with financial issues. In pertinent part,
    Elaine sought to help Mrs. Fletcher find funds to pay back $10,000.00 owed on a loan to one
    of Mr. Fletcher‟s creditors. In the process of trying to locate funds for this purpose, both
    Elaine and Mrs. Fletcher talked to Howard Bilbrey, an officer at FSG Bank, by phone.5
    Although there is no dispute that Mrs. Fletcher spoke with Mr. Bilbrey first and that Elaine
    spoke with him shortly thereafter, their respective testimony presents slightly different
    accounts of what Mr. Bilbrey related to them personally.
    According to Mrs. Fletcher, Mr. Bilbrey never informed her that Mr. Fletcher had
    moved money from their joint account into a separate CD. She testified that she was under
    the impression that she could withdraw funds from the joint account as long as both she and
    Mr. Fletcher signed for a withdrawal. As she explained:
    So I called Howard [Bilbrey]. And I said, “I need to draw down $10,000 on
    the money market fund that we have at your bank.” I didn‟t know that the
    account had been closed. I didn‟t know that it was in a CD. I‟m a total idiot in
    that point. I didn‟t know that. He didn‟t tell me that. I asked him if I could
    borrow from it. So, and he didn‟t indicate to me anything at all that had
    changed from the original time. And he agreed that I could take down the
    $10,000 at that point.
    4
    Although other issues remained pending in the case, they were reserved for future adjudication.
    5
    We note that during Elaine‟s testimony, Elaine stated that she could not recall if Mr. Bilbrey was the person
    to whom she spoke. Specifically, she testified as follows: “I spoke to a high bank official. The name has been
    provided by [Mrs. Fletcher].” There does not appear to be any dispute, however, that Elaine actually spoke
    with Mr. Bilbrey. The Fletcher Children‟s brief, for example, repeatedly references the phone conversation as
    having taken place with Mr. Bilbrey.
    -3-
    After Mrs. Fletcher finished her phone call with Mr. Bilbrey, a conversation eventually
    ensued between Elaine and Mr. Bilbrey. As Mrs. Fletcher testified:
    After I spoke with Howard Bilbrey and he agreed that we could pull down the
    money, I went into my kitchen. [Elaine] was sitting at the counter in my
    kitchen. And I related to her that Howard had said that I could get the money.
    And at some point, she said -- she asked me if there was a service fee or
    anything of that nature. And I said, “Well, I didn‟t ask. I don‟t know.” So she
    picks up the phone, and she calls him. And they chitchat. And the end result
    was, she said, “Well, we don‟t want to do that. We are not going to draw the
    money down because we don‟t want to do that. Because we don‟t want to pay
    a penalty.” And that‟s when the decision was made not to take the $10,000
    from the account.
    As is evident from the following exchange, Elaine testified that Mr. Bilbrey provided
    her with different information than that which was supposedly given to Mrs. Fletcher:
    Q      Okay. What was the information that you received on that call?
    A      He told me that the money was in a CD.
    Q      Okay.
    A      And that it would be difficult to take out, as a result. That there might
    be a fee involved. But the more, standing out more in my mind was
    that we‟d have to bring a notary over to witness the signature on the
    withdrawal to the nursing home. And that seemed like an onerous
    process.
    Elaine testified that she relayed the contents of her conversation with Mr. Bilbrey to Mrs.
    Fletcher after she got off the phone.
    At the conclusion of the April 22 hearing, the trial court ruled that the CD was the
    property of Mr. Fletcher‟s estate. In pertinent part, the trial court concluded that Mrs.
    Fletcher had acquiesced to Mr. Fletcher‟s establishment of the CD. Moreover, by
    referencing Mays v. Brighton Bank, 
    832 S.W.2d 347
    (Tenn. Ct. App. 1992), the trial court
    determined that the funds from the Fletchers‟ joint account at FSG ceased to be part of an
    estate by the entireties once Mr. Fletcher withdrew them. On June 15, 2015, the trial court
    -4-
    entered an order memorializing its April 22 oral ruling.6 Finding that there was “no just
    reason for delay,” the trial court certified the order as final pursuant to its authority under
    Rule 54.02 of the Tennessee Rules of Civil Procedure. This appeal followed.
    Issues Presented
    In her appellate brief, Mrs. Fletcher presents three issues for our review, restated
    verbatim as follows:
    1. Whether the Probate Court applied the wrong burden of proof in evaluating ownership
    of the CD at issue in this case.
    2. Whether or not money withdrawn from a tenancy by the entirety account by a husband
    without knowledge, permission or consent of his wife, and placed in a CD in his name
    only, will be impressed with the entirety provision at his death.
    3. Whether or not a wife, through silence or inaction, can acquiesce to her husband‟s
    change of character of tenancy by the entirety funds even though the husband had the
    lawful power to transfer those funds without her consent.
    As stated in their appellate brief, the Fletcher Children raise the following issues:
    1. Will the law equitably convert property owned by one (1) spouse into entireties
    property when the banking statutes say otherwise?
    2. If so, what chaos will be inflicted on the banking industry as a result?
    3. What burden of proof must be met to equitably convert title from one person‟s
    ownership to another: clear and convincing evidence, substantial evidence or
    preponderance of the evidence?
    4. When a husband and wife sign an agreement permitting the other to withdraw all of
    the account at any time, is that permission for the withdrawal?
    6
    The trial court‟s June 15 order purported to incorporate findings from an attached “Exhibit 1,” which was
    said to contain the transcript of the trial court‟s oral ruling. Although no such exhibit was attached to the order
    when we initially reviewed the record transmitted to us on appeal, a supplemental record has since been filed
    demonstrating that the trial court clerk has re-entered the order with the transcript from the incorporated oral
    ruling attached.
    -5-
    5. When a spouse knew or should have known that money was transferred from a joint
    account to a separate account, and fails [to] object to it for up to a full year, is that
    effective consent to the transfer?
    6. When the Court makes findings that a spouse was not credible in her testimony, and
    that she knew about the transfer despite her testimony to the contrary, will the Court
    of Appeals disturb these credibility findings when the Court of Appeals has no
    opportunity to observe the witness‟s demeanor?
    Standard of Review
    “In a civil case heard without a jury, we review the trial court‟s findings of fact de
    novo upon the record accompanied by a presumption of correctness unless the preponderance
    of the evidence is otherwise.” Moore v. Houston Cnty. Bd. of Educ., 
    358 S.W.3d 612
    , 615
    (Tenn. Ct. App. 2011) (citing Tenn. R. App. P. 13(d)). When the credibility of in-court
    witnesses is at issue, “considerable deference must be accorded to the factual findings of the
    trial court.” Fritts v. Safety Nat’l Cas. Corp., 
    163 S.W.3d 673
    , 678 (Tenn. 2005) (citations
    omitted). In contrast, when we review the trial court‟s resolution on a question of law, no
    presumption of correctness attaches to the trial court‟s legal conclusions. Bowden v. Ward,
    
    27 S.W.3d 913
    , 916 (Tenn. 2000).
    Discussion
    Although several matters are presented for our review through the parties‟ briefs, they
    all speak to one dispositive issue before us: whether the CD is the property of Mr. Fletcher‟s
    estate. Most of the facts pertaining to this issue are not in controversy. Indeed, there is no
    question that Mr. and Mrs. Fletcher, as husband and wife, opened a joint bank account at
    FSG with rights of survivorship. Moreover, there is no dispute that the funds deposited
    within this account were held by the Fletchers as tenants by the entirety. Nor is there any
    dispute that the account agreement provided both spouses with the unilateral right to
    withdraw funds. Additionally, it is undisputed that Mr. Fletcher withdrew $100,000.00 from
    the marital bank account to fund a CD titled in his name alone at FSG.
    Although the above-recited facts are undisputed, the legal effect remains a point of
    contention. Whereas Mrs. Fletcher maintains that the funds in the CD should have passed to
    her outside of probate at Mr. Fletcher‟s death, the Fletcher Children argue that this Court
    should uphold the trial court‟s finding that the CD belongs to Mr. Fletcher‟s estate.
    To support their position that the CD belongs to Mr. Fletcher‟s estate, the Fletcher
    Children argue, as a matter of law, that once funds are withdrawn from a marital account by
    -6-
    one of the tenants and reduced to that tenant‟s separate possession, those funds cease to be a
    part of an estate by the entireties. Although this legal proposition is not without some basis
    in law, there is a lack of unanimity on such a rule across jurisdictions. Indeed, in reviewing
    case law from other jurisdictions, it appears that some courts have adopted it, whereas other
    courts have not. Compare, e.g., McEntire v. McEntire’s Estate, 
    590 S.W.2d 241
    , 244 (Ark.
    1979) (“An estate by the entireties in a bank account differs in one significant aspect from
    such an estate in real property in that the estate exists in the account only until one of the
    tenants withdraws such funds or dies leaving a balance in the account. Funds withdrawn or
    otherwise diverted from the account by one of the tenants and reduced to that tenant[‟]s
    separate possession ceases to be a part of the estate by the entireties.”), with Matter of
    Morrow’s Estate, 
    570 P.2d 912
    , 914 (N.M. 1977) (stating that the act of withdrawing all the
    money from a tenancy by the entirety account does not destroy the estate by the entireties).
    Under existing Tennessee jurisprudence, there is an absence of consistency and clarity on the
    issue. There are conflicting decisions emanating from this Court on the topic, and although
    the Tennessee Supreme Court has referred to the issue on several occasions, it has never
    definitively decided it. In order to understand the unsettled nature of the question before us,
    an overview of Tennessee law in this area is appropriate.
    A “[t]enancy by the entirety is a form of property ownership unique to married
    persons.” Catt v. Catt, 
    866 S.W.2d 570
    , 573 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1993). Under this form of
    ownership, “each party owns the whole, and on death of one of the parties, the survivor takes
    no new title or estate because the survivor is in possession of the whole from its inception.”
    
    Id. (citation omitted).
    “[I]t is well-settled in Tennessee that personal property, as well as
    realty, may be owned by spouses by the entirety.” 
    Id. (citations omitted).
    Moreover, this
    Court has previously noted that once a tenancy by the entirety is created, it can only be
    terminated when “both [spouses] convey, when one spouse dies and the survivor becomes
    owner of the whole, or when the survivorship is dissolved by divorce and the parties become
    tenants in common in the property.” White v. Watson, 
    571 S.W.2d 493
    , 495 (Tenn. Ct. App.
    1978).
    Although it is now a common legal understanding that spouses may hold bank funds
    as tenants by the entirety, that question was not definitively decided in Tennessee until our
    Supreme Court‟s decision in Sloan v. Jones, 
    241 S.W.2d 506
    (Tenn. 1951). In that case, the
    Tennessee Supreme Court expressly held, for the first time, that a tenancy by the entirety
    could be created “in a deposit in a bank.” Sloan v. Jones, 
    241 S.W.2d 506
    , 507 (Tenn. 1951).
    In the course of its discussion, the Sloan court referenced a decision from the Pennsylvania
    Supreme Court, Madden v. Gosztonyi Savings & Trust Co., 
    200 A. 624
    (Pa. 1938). Although
    our Supreme Court appeared to reference Madden for the sole purpose of supporting the
    conclusion that funds within a bank account could be held by the entireties, it also quoted
    -7-
    language from Madden that is directly relevant to the issue before us. In pertinent part, the
    Sloan court stated as follows:
    The Supreme Court of Pennsylvania in Madden v. Gosztonyi Sav. & Trust Co.,
    
    331 Pa. 476
    , 
    200 A. 624
    , 630, 
    117 A.L.R. 904
    , has held that bank deposits
    payable to the husband and wife, or to the husband or wife, are held by them as
    tenants by the entireties, with all the incidents thereof. Unity of control in the
    case of deposits payable to either being found in the implication of authority in
    one to act for both. That Court, among other things, said: “When, on the other
    hand, an account is made payable in its creation to either „husband or wife‟,
    there is an immediate expression of authority, of agency to act for both. As an
    incident of these estates by entireties is the power that each gives the other, at
    the time of the estate‟s creation, to act for the other.” That court then goes on
    and cites a number of other cases and quotes therefrom to support this statement
    and concludes as follows: “Where a deposit is made payable to either spouse,
    agency or authority exists by implication, and the husband or the wife may,
    from that authority, withdraw the entire account, but the money thus
    withdrawn is impressed with the entirety provision that it is the property of
    both, and any one dealing with such specific property as severalty, knowing
    it belongs to both, must submit to the consequences.”
    
    Sloan, 241 S.W.2d at 508-09
    (emphasis added).
    At issue in Madden was the ability of a husband and wife to recover the balance of a
    savings account at a bank. Although the husband in that case had entered into a waiver with
    the bank whereby he agreed to waive a portion of the parties‟ deposit incident to the bank‟s
    plan of reorganization, he and his wife later argued that this release was ineffective based on
    the wife‟s failure to join personally in the agreement. 
    Madden, 200 A. at 625
    . Although the
    trial court agreed with the position advanced by the husband and wife and entered a judgment
    in their favor, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court reversed. 
    Id. at 632.
    The Pennsylvania
    Supreme Court concluded that the trial court had “overlooked the power granted under the
    agency expressed in the creation of the account.” 
    Id. at 631.
    In pertinent part, it stated as
    follows: “Certainly the power to withdraw all of the funds includes within it the power to
    preserve or protect the fund and to consent to a reorganization of a „closed‟ bank for that
    purpose[.]” 
    Id. Although the
    Pennsylvania Supreme Court accordingly denied the husband
    and wife recourse against the bank, it also noted that the immunity of the bank “in no way
    affect[ed] the rights as between the husband and wife.” 
    Id. (citations omitted).
    With regard to the bank account at issue in Madden, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court
    was emphatic that the funds within it represented entireties property. 
    Id. at 631-32.
    In the
    -8-
    process of explaining that entireties ownership was not negated by the ability of one spouse
    to act authoritatively for both, the Madden court stated as follows:
    Where a deposit is payable to “husband and wife”,—a deposit by
    entireties—the husband and wife may withdraw the funds if they sign together.
    But there is nothing in the law relating to entireties that would prevent the wife
    from giving the husband express authority to sign for her as her agent and
    withdraw for both of them, although no such authority may be implied. When,
    on the other hand, an account is made payable in its creation to either “husband
    or wife”, there is an immediate expression of authority, of agency to act for
    both. As an incident of these estates by entireties is the power that each gives
    the other, at the time of the estate‟s creation, to act for the other. This
    conclusion is beyond debate.
    
    Id. at 630.
    In continuing its analysis, the Madden court went on to pronounce the language
    that our Supreme Court quoted in Sloan:
    The authorities thus cited would seem to show that either spouse
    presumptively has the power to act for both, so long as the marriage subsists,
    in matters of entireties, without any specific authorization, provided the fruits
    or proceeds of such action inures to the benefit of both and the estate is not
    terminated. But neither may by such action destroy the true purpose of the
    estate by attempting to convert it or a part of it, in bad faith, into one in
    severalty.
    ****
    Where a deposit is made payable to either spouse, agency or authority
    exists by implication, and the husband or the wife may, from that authority,
    withdraw the entire account, but the money thus withdrawn is impressed with
    the entirety provision that it is the property of both, and any one dealing with
    such specific property as severalty, knowing it belongs to both, must submit to
    the consequences. However, the bank, acting in good faith, is protected when
    funds are withdrawn by either.
    
    Id. at 630-31
    (italics in original).
    The Madden rule, which states that money withdrawn from a marital account remains
    entireties property, was referenced again by our Supreme Court in Griffin v. Prince, 
    632 S.W.2d 532
    (Tenn. 1982). Like Sloan, the facts in Griffin did not specifically call for
    -9-
    application of the Madden rule. At issue in Griffin was whether an individual creditor of a
    husband could garnish deposits in two joint bank accounts. 
    Id. at 533.
    Although the trial
    court had ruled that the entire proceeds of both accounts were subject to garnishment, our
    Supreme Court reversed upon concluding that the bank accounts at issue were owned by the
    husband and wife as tenants by the entirety. 
    Id. In the
    course of explaining why the bank
    accounts were owned as tenants by the entirety, the Griffin court dismissed the creditor‟s
    contention that use of the word “or” between the names of the spouses on the bank accounts
    prevented entireties ownership:
    There is abundant authority in this state that the use of the word “or” between
    the names of spouses on a bank account or negotiable instrument does not
    preclude their ownership of the asset by the entirety and that joint property of
    spouses will be deemed to be so held in the absence of proof to the contrary.
    Probably the leading case is Sloan v. Jones[.]
    
    Id. at 536.
    The Griffin court then proceeded to quote from the prior Sloan decision, including
    its reference to the Madden rule. 
    Id. Approximately a
    decade after our Supreme Court‟s decision in Griffin, this Court
    issued its opinion in Mays v. Brighton Bank, 
    832 S.W.2d 347
    (Tenn. Ct. App. 1992).
    Although the ultimate issue in Mays concerned the validity of a bank‟s security interest in a
    trailer that the bank had repossessed, the case also provided an occasion for this Court to
    address the status of funds that had been withdrawn from a husband and wife‟s bank account.
    After stating that no Tennessee case had directly addressed the question as to how the
    character of such withdrawals should be treated, we acknowledged that there was a split of
    authority among other jurisdictions on the issue. 
    Id. at 350.
    We noted that some courts held
    that a withdrawal of funds from a tenancy by the entirety account ended the other party‟s
    interest in the funds; however, we also observed that other courts held that entireties
    ownership continued notwithstanding a removal of funds. 
    Id. Holding the
    former position to
    be the “better view,” 
    id., we concluded
    that the wife‟s withdrawal of funds from a joint
    account eliminated the entireties nature of the money withdrawn. 
    Id. at 351.
    Although the rule adopted in Mays has not yet been overturned by the Tennessee
    Supreme Court, its validity has been cast into doubt on two occasions. The first criticism of
    Mays comes from our Supreme Court‟s 1998 decision in Grahl v. Davis, 
    971 S.W.2d 373
    (Tenn. 1998). At issue in that case was whether a conservator had breached her fiduciary
    duty to her conservatee by allowing the conservatee‟s husband 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 [the conservatee‟s husband] or jointly in the name of
    [the conservatee‟s husband and conservator].” 
    Id. at 373-74.
    Because the Supreme Court
    - 10 -
    ordered that the amounts redeemed from the original certificates of deposit be restored to the
    conservatorship estate based on its conclusion that the conservator breached her fiduciary
    duties, it did not need to specifically resolve the question of whether funds withdrawn from
    an entireties account remain impressed with an entireties provision. The Supreme Court did,
    however, openly question whether the rule articulated in Mays represented sound law:
    The intermediate court in Mays characterized the legal status of property
    purchased with tenancy by the entirety funds as a question of first impression.
    That precise question was not at issue in Sloan and Griffin, so technically, the
    characterization is correct. The intermediate court decided the issue by
    rejecting the decision of the Pennsylvania Supreme Court, quoted with
    approval in Sloan and Griffin, and by adopting instead the position of the
    Arkansas courts that funds withdrawn by one spouse from a tenancy by the
    entirety account are not impressed with the entirety provision and can not be
    recovered by the other spouse absent a showing of fraud. Mays appears to be
    inconsistent with this Court‟s prior decisions.
    
    Id. at 379
    n.3.
    The continuing validity of Mays was also cast into doubt by this Court‟s decision in In
    re Estate of Grass, No. M2005-00641-COA-R3-CV, 
    2008 WL 2343068
    (Tenn. Ct. App.
    June 4, 2008), perm. app. denied (Tenn. Jan. 20, 2009). Although the appeal in Grass
    involved a variety of issues related to the probate of a will, of note to our present discussion
    is the Grass court‟s analysis of two withdrawals from a joint bank account held by the
    decedent and her husband. Before the decedent in Grass passed away, the joint bank account
    had a balance of $260,000.00. 
    Id. at *2.
    Whereas the decedent withdrew $160,000.00 from
    the account and placed the money into two pay on death accounts payable to her children, the
    husband withdrew $100,000.00 from the account and gave the money to his children from a
    prior marriage. 
    Id. For various
    reasons pertinent to the probate proceedings, the validity of these
    withdrawals was placed into issue. Although we ultimately remanded the case to the trial
    court to first determine whether or not the bank account at issue was held as tenants by the
    entirety, we concluded that if the bank account had been held as tenants by the entirety, the
    amounts withdrawn should be deemed to be impressed with an entirety provision. For
    example, with regard to the $160,000.00 withdrawn by the decedent, we stated as follows:
    [I]f on remand the Probate Court determines that the bank account was held by
    the Decedent and her Husband as tenants by the entirety, then the $160,000
    was impressed with the entirety provision. As stated above, “once a tenancy
    - 11 -
    by the entirety is created, it can be terminated only when both convey, when
    one spouse dies and the survivor becomes owner of the whole, or when the
    survivorship is dissolved by divorce and the parties become tenants in common
    in the property.” White v. Watson, 
    571 S.W.2d 493
    , 495 (Tenn. Ct. App.
    1978). Hence, if the Probate Court determines that the Husband did not agree
    to the transfer of the $160,000 into two pay on death accounts for the benefit
    of the Decedent‟s children, then upon the Decedent‟s death, ownership of the
    $160,000 immediately vested to the Husband, not the Decedent‟s children.
    
    Sloan, 241 S.W.2d at 507
    .
    
    Id. at *14.
    Moreover, with respect to the $100,000.00 withdrawn by the husband, we noted:
    [I]f on remand the Probate Court determines that the joint bank account was
    held as tenants by the entirety by the Decedent and her Husband, then the
    $100,000 was impressed with the entirety provision when the Husband
    withdrew it. To transfer money that is held as tenants by the entirety, both
    spouses must agree. The Probate Court stated that the money was transferred
    to the Husband “for his own benefit,” but did not state whether the Decedent
    agreed to the transfer. As stated above, money withdrawn from a bank account
    held by a husband and wife as tenants by the entirety is impressed with the
    entirety provision and that anyone who receives the property knowing it is
    impressed with an entirety provision takes subject to the provision. 
    Sloan, 241 S.W.2d at 508-09
    . Therefore, if the Decedent did not agree to the transfer, the
    $100,000 withdrawn by the Husband was impressed with the entirety
    provisions, and if the Husband‟s children knew that the property was held by
    the Decedent and her Husband as tenants by the entirety, then they take the
    money subject to the entirety provision.
    
    Id. at *32.
    In reaching these conclusions, it is evident that we declined to follow the rule we
    articulated in Mays but instead followed the rule pronounced by the Pennsylvania Supreme
    Court in Madden. We observed that the Madden rule had been quoted with approval by our
    Supreme Court in Sloan and also noted that it had been quoted in the Griffin decision. 
    Id. at *13-14.
    Further, we observed that the Grahl court had highlighted the discrepancy that
    existed between Mays and the Sloan line of cases. 
    Id. at *14.
    Because we found Mays to be
    inconsistent with the Supreme Court‟s prior decisions, we concluded that money withdrawn
    from an entireties bank account remains impressed with the entirety provision. 
    Id. We also
    explained that “anyone who receives the property knowing it is impressed with an entirety
    provision takes subject to the provision.” 
    Id. at *32
    (citation omitted).
    - 12 -
    On appeal, the Fletcher Children characterize the rule from Grass as a “legal fiction.”
    They argue that an entireties provision does not attach to funds withdrawn from a marital
    bank account and accordingly urge us to apply the rule we previously articulated in Mays.
    Although the trial court concluded that Mays remains good law in light of the fact that it has
    not been overturned by our Supreme Court, we think that our position in Grass is the correct
    one. It is unclear to us why one spouse‟s withdrawal of funds from a marital bank account
    should automatically divest the other spouse of an ownership interest in the funds withdrawn.
    Again, “once a tenancy by the entirety is created, it can be terminated only when both
    [spouses] convey, when one spouse dies and the survivor becomes owner of the whole, or
    when the survivorship is dissolved by divorce and the parties become tenants in common in
    the property.” 
    Watson, 571 S.W.2d at 495
    . In our opinion, absent evidence of some
    agreement by the non-withdrawing spouse that his or her interest in the funds is to cease, we
    fail to see how one spouse‟s withdrawal of money from a martial bank account could
    effectively destroy the entireties character of the funds. In a tenancy by the entirety, “each
    party owns the whole.” 
    Catt, 866 S.W.2d at 573
    . That ownership interest should not
    suddenly cease because one spouse has withdrawn funds from a bank account. Nor should
    account agreements like the one at issue, which provides either spouse with the right to
    withdraw funds, be generally construed as evidencing advance consent that either spouse
    may terminate entireties ownership through a unilateral withdrawal. As a practical matter,
    such a notion would seem to be an affront to the marital expectations that spouses have. As
    the Pennsylvania Supreme Court stated in Madden:
    When . . . an account is made payable in its creation to either “husband or
    wife”, there is an immediate expression of authority, of agency to act for both.
    As an incident of these estates by entireties is the power that each gives the
    other, at the time of the estate‟s creation, to act for the other.
    
    Madden, 200 A. at 630
    (emphasis added). Although the rule from Mays has not been
    specifically rejected by our Supreme Court, we find that the rule laid down in Grass is more
    consistent with the character of entireties ownership and the expectations incident thereto.
    Accordingly, we reject the principle from Mays that entireties ownership ceases when one
    spouse withdraws money from a marital account and reduces those funds to his or her
    separate possession. As a general proposition, absent an agreement from the non-
    withdrawing spouse that his or her ownership interest in the funds is to cease, the funds
    withdrawn should remain impressed with an entirety provision.
    In connection with its conclusion that the CD belonged to the estate of Mr. Fletcher,
    the trial court incorporated oral findings from the April 22, 2015 hearing. As is evident from
    the incorporated ruling, there appear to be two bases for the trial court‟s classification of the
    CD. First, the trial court appears to have determined, as a matter of law, that the funds
    - 13 -
    withdrawn from the Fletchers‟ marital account ceased to be entireties property once they
    were withdrawn. Indeed, in referencing the Mays decision, the trial court remarked as
    follows:
    [T]hat case basically, according to the Court‟s opinion, is still the law -- even
    though the Supreme Court has criticized it. But they didn‟t overturn the case.
    It says, “An estate by the entireties in a bank account differs in one
    significant aspect from an estate in real property in that the estate exists in the
    account only until one of the tenants withdraw such funds or dies leaving a
    balance in the account. Funds withdrawn or otherwise diverted from the
    accounts by one of the tenants and reduced with that tenant‟s separate
    possession ceases to be part of the estate by the entireties.”
    It goes on to say though that, “This does not mean that in a proper case
    under timely allegations of fraud or other such remedy that one of the co-
    tenants could not sustain an action to recover all or part of the funds diverted
    or withdrawn by the other.”
    The Court didn‟t hear any proof whatsoever that Mr. Hugh Fletcher had
    done anything fraudulent, or tried to hide this asset from Mrs. Fletcher. It‟s
    just, it‟s not there.
    So the Court finds that the CD established by Mr. Hugh Fletcher was in
    his individual name at the time of his death.
    To the extent the trial court‟s classification of the CD was predicated on the Mays case, we
    conclude that it erred. As we have emphasized, as a general proposition, funds withdrawn
    from a marital account remain impressed as entireties property and anyone receiving such
    property “knowing it is impressed with an entirety provision takes subject to the provision.”
    In re Estate of Grass, 
    2008 WL 2343068
    , at *32 (citing 
    Sloan, 241 S.W.2d at 508-09
    ). See
    also 
    Madden, 200 A. at 631
    (“[T]he money thus withdrawn is impressed with the entirety
    provision that it is the property of both, and any one dealing with such specific property as
    severalty, knowing it belongs to both, must submit to the consequences.”).
    The trial court‟s oral ruling, however, does not appear to be limited to a simple
    application of the rule from Mays. The trial court also made findings that Mrs. Fletcher
    “acquiesce[d] to the CD.”7 In pertinent part, it stated as follows: “Since Mrs. Fletcher knew
    7
    The necessity of the trial court‟s findings in this regard is somewhat unclear given its apparent endorsement
    - 14 -
    or should have known by the simplest of inquiries that the $100,000 was in Mr. Fletcher‟s
    individual name [but did not do anything about it for several months], that she did acquiesce
    to the CD.” (emphasis added).
    Having reviewed the trial court‟s findings, we conclude that they fail to demonstrate
    that Mrs. Fletcher ever agreed to give up her entireties interest in the funds withdrawn from
    the marital account. Although the trial court ultimately concluded that Mrs. Fletcher
    “acquiesced” to the CD, its oral ruling does not even definitively conclude that she knew the
    CD had been titled in her husband‟s name. At several points, the trial court simply referred
    to what she “should have known.” For example, the trial court stated as follows in
    connection with its finding of acquiescence: “Since Mrs. Fletcher knew or should have
    known by the simplest of inquiries that the $100,000 was in Mr. Fletcher‟s individual name,
    she did acquiesce to the CD.” (emphasis added) Although we would not dispute that a
    spouse could agree to give up his or her interest in entireties funds, there is insufficient
    evidence in this case that Mrs. Fletcher ever agreed to do so. As noted, the trial court did not
    even definitively conclude that Mrs. Fletcher knew about separate ownership of the CD.8
    The findings of the trial court thus do not present a proper basis for concluding that Mrs.
    Fletcher ever waived any claim of ownership in the disputed funds. Accordingly, the trial
    court‟s determination that the funds in the CD belong to Mr. Fletcher‟s estate is hereby
    reversed. Because the funds were entireties property at Mr. Fletcher‟s death, they now
    belong solely to Mrs. Fletcher.
    Conclusion
    We hereby reverse the trial court‟s determination that the CD belongs to the estate of
    Mr. Fletcher. The funds in the CD constituted entireties property at Mr. Fletcher‟s death and
    accordingly belong to Mrs. Fletcher. Costs of this appeal are assessed jointly and severally
    against the Appellees, Janet L. Fletcher Brady, Elaine Fletcher, Richard H. Fletcher, and
    Peter J. Fletcher, for which execution may issue if necessary. This cause is remanded to the
    trial court for the collection of costs, enforcement of the judgment, and for such further
    proceedings as may be necessary and are consistent with this Opinion.
    _________________________________
    ARNOLD B. GOLDIN, JUDGE
    of the rule from Mays. Again, under Mays, funds withdrawn from a martial account and reduced to one
    spouse‟s separate possession cease to be a part of an estate by the entireties.
    8
    Of course, mere knowledge that funds have been withdrawn and placed in a separate individual account does
    not necessarily establish that the non-withdrawing spouse has agreed to relinquish his or her ownership
    interests. Whether consent has been given will depend on the facts of the case.
    - 15 -