In re: The Estate of Luther Garrett ( 2001 )


Menu:
  •                   IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
    AT NASHVILLE
    February 2, 2000 Session
    IN RE: THE ESTATE OF LUTHER GASTON GARRETT
    Appeal from the Chancery Court for Fentress County
    No. P-96-15 Billy Joe White, Chancellor
    No. M1999-01282-COA-R3-CV - Filed October 12, 2001
    The testator, a father of six, left a will which devised to one of his children a specific tract of land
    which, according to the will, was described in an attached survey map. No survey map was attached
    to the will. Appellant, the recipient of that bequest, disagreed with his siblings about the size of the
    tract to which he was entitled. After hearing both parties’ evidence, the trial court found that the
    testator’s intent was to devise separate seven acre tracts to both Appellant and one of his brothers
    with the remainder of the estate’s property to be divided equally among the six children. Appellant
    then commenced this appeal. We affirm in part and reverse in part.
    Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Chancery Court is
    Affirmed in Part, Reversed in Part and Remanded
    PATRICIA J. COTTRELL , J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which BEN H. CANTRELL , P.J., M.S.,
    and WILLIAM B. CAIN , J., joined.
    Phillips Smalling, Byrdstown, Tennessee, for appellant Keith Edward Garrett.
    James P. Romer, Jamestown, Tennessee for appellees Priscilla Louise Wright, Susan Yvonne
    Wright, Christopher Ross Garrett, Patrick Kent Garrett, and David Denver Garrett.
    OPINION
    The testator, Luther Gaston Garrett, the father of six children, left a holographic will which
    contained only one specific bequest, with the remainder of his estate to be divided equally among
    his six children. The specific bequest was a tract of land to his son, Keith Garrett, Appellant, and
    the son’s wife, Pamela Garrett. This dispute, between Keith Garrett and his five siblings, arises over
    how many acres are to be included in that bequest.
    At the time of his death in January of 1996, the testator owned approximately one hundred
    fifty acres of land. The five siblings of Keith Garrett describe the land as consisting of three separate
    tracts, as follows:
    the Falls tract, and Lot 19A of City Lake Estates, known as the Gaston Garrett home
    tract consisting of approximately 19 acres; the Wayne Davis tract of 100 acres, out
    of which the 7 acre tract willed to Keith and Pam Garrett and on which they have
    their house is located, the 7 acre tract on which David Garrett has built his house is
    located, and upon which the cemetery exists where Gaston Garrett is buried; and the
    third tract is the Allardt farm on the Taylor Place Road.
    The Falls tract and the Wayne Davis tract were contiguous. On that basis, Keith Garrett
    considered them a single tract and referred to them as the “homestead,” a tract of approximately 120
    acres. Thus, Keith Garrett takes the position his father owned only two tracts of land: the homestead
    and the Allardt farm property, which consisted of approximately thirty-eight acres.
    Keith Garrett moved onto the Wayne Davis tract in 1974 or 1975. Since 1975, Keith Garrett
    helped his father maintain the land. Sometime after executing the will in question in 1984, the
    testator completed a house on the Falls tract. David Garrett began building a house on the Wayne
    Davis tract, sometime in the 1980s or 1990s.1
    Shortly before his death, the testator called all his children to his bed side. At that time, he
    read them his will and gave each a check.2 The will he read to the children was the holographic will
    the testator had prepared in 1984. It contained only one specific bequest which stated:
    I give, devise and bequeath to my son, Keith Edward, and present wife, Pamela Jo
    Hurley Garrett, a certain tract of land more particularly described in a survey map
    attached to this document. The deed to this tract of land is to be processed by my
    executors, provided I precede the above mentioned in death; however, in case either
    or both of the above mentioned precede me in death, I will make adjustment or
    codicil concerning property mentioned and attached. When the above mentioned
    deed is processed, it is not to be taken as any future part of Keith Edward Garrett’s
    further share in my estate, based on past understanding between us and other
    considerations.
    When the will was found after the testator’s death, no survey map was attached thereto. The will
    named as executors all four of Gaston Garrett’s sons. It contained the following in terrorem clause:
    1
    Keith testified David began his house in 1990 or 1991 ; Keith G arrett’s cou nsel repre sented in opening
    statements that David began building the house in 1987; David testified he started it prior to 1982, but als o
    stated elsewhere he started construction in 1989; and the appellees in one filing say he built it in 1988, but on
    appeal merely claim it was in the 198 0s.
    2
    The total amount o f cash he distributed to ea ch child in the m onths prior to his death was app roxima tely
    $15,000.
    2
    I would hope that I have reared and raised six children that are reasonable, fair, and
    unselfish; therefore, any of my heirs that should bring legal process in a Court of law
    against another heir or heirs of my estate and object to the probate shall be cut off
    from any share whatsoever in my estate and I further direct that the bequests to such
    persons shall be considered as part of my residuary estate.
    The will was amended once during its existence as evidenced by a handwritten notation dated
    January 17, 1995 changing the name of a person to contact regarding legal advice or in the event any
    conflict or difference should arise as to equity or fairness.
    After his father’s death, Keith Garrett filed a petition to admit will for probate and
    appointment of executor. The petition named his siblings as respondents. Keith Garrett sought
    appointment as executor of his father’s estate and, requested, inter alia, that the will be admitted into
    probate. He asserted that under the will, he was to “receive one tract and child’s portion of the
    second tract.”
    Appellant’s siblings filed a response requesting that all four co-executors named in the will
    be appointed executors. The filing also asserted that Keith Garrett’s claim of entitlement to a tract
    was “misleading” because he “was to receive a 7 acre tract where his home is located and a 1/6
    interest in the other parcels of real property excluding a 7 acre tract on which the decedent permitted
    David Garrett to construct his home, which gift to David Garrett was given in about 1988 after
    Gaston Garrett authored his will in 1984.” The siblings requested, among other things, that the court
    hear proof pursuant to 
    Tenn. Code Ann. § 32-3-101
    , et seq., if the heirs could not agree to a fair and
    equitable distribution at the appropriate time. The siblings submitted a tentative plan for distribution
    of the estate with their filing. This plan proposed in part that Keith and Pam Garrett
    will get seven (7) acres where their house is located in accordance with a survey by
    Andy Potter done in about 1979 which is in the possession of Keith Garrett. This
    tract is not to be taken as any future part of KEITH EDWARD GARRETT’S further
    share in the estate, as stated in the will.
    David Garrett will receive the house he has built on the Wayne Davis Tract and seven
    (7) acres surrounding the house in accordance with a gift made by our father prior to
    the time of his death.
    The trial court entered an agreed order admitting the testator’s will for probate and
    administration. All four male siblings were appointed co-executors. Hand written in the lower
    margin of this order was the following:
    By approval of this order counsel for Keith Garrett does not acknowledge the
    existence of the seven (7) acre survey and it is recognized that an issue exists on this
    matter.
    3
    The trial court heard evidence on this matter. At the hearing, Appellant testified that he was
    claiming 121 acres under the will. This included the land on which his brother David’s house, the
    family cemetery, his father’s house, and his own house were located. Appellant stated that in 1984,
    when the will was written, he was the only child living on the land, and it was meant to be his. He
    testified:
    In ‘84, that’s what Daddy meant. I was the only one interested. They were all going
    on with their lives. I have done a whole lot to improve that place, and I don’t have
    any guilt about wanting the whole place. I believe that’s exactly what it states.
    Pam Garrett, Appellant’s wife, testified that some time around 1984, the testator came to her
    house and told her, “I fixed that place over here so that nobody could ever bother you.” She admitted
    that he did not explain the means he used to effectuate these arrangements.
    The eldest son, Chris Garrett, testified that the family was at an impasse about the distribution
    of the estate, and he requested that the court construe the will and decide on the distribution. He
    testified that when his father came to him shortly after writing the will:
    one of the major things that he was interested in is protecting Keith’s homeplace,
    Pam’s homeplace, and at that time he told me seven acres was the amount of land
    that he intended to be cut off, but he couldn’t give them a deed right now because
    Keith had a previous marriage that might jeopardize the land, so he wouldn’t cut a
    deed at that time.
    Chris Garrett denied that his father had ever expressed an intention that Appellant receive
    the entire 121 acre tract. He recalled that his father intended to give David seven acres as well.
    Chris Garrett testified that when his father called all the children to his sick bed to read the will, there
    was no survey present. He asserted that except for the seven acres to Appellant and seven acres to
    David, the property was to be divided evenly into sixths.
    The second eldest son, Patrick Garrett, testified that his father had intended for Keith to have
    seven acres. Patrick Garrett recalled seeing a survey map. He stated:
    Just before Dad died. When he gave up the checks out, approximately the 10th of
    January, I was sitting with him, and he reached in his lock box, and picked the survey
    up and said, “Keith, here, you will need this survey of your tract.” He didn’t attach
    it, but he had it separate and he handed it to Keith.
    Patrick Garrett testified that he had not seen the survey since. When asked if he had seen the survey
    previously, he testified:
    I knew it was there, and paper, and yes it was there. And, in fact, when he called us
    all together in our last meeting with him, he said, here’s Keith, your survey, and put
    4
    it in the box, and went on with his will, and that was part of his reading and part of
    the day, and he also indicated David’s seven acres to be put to David . . . he gave out
    the survey along with his monies.
    He further testified that both his father and Keith acknowledged that the tract was seven acres.
    Priscilla Wright, the fifth eldest child, testified, “Daddy always talked about seven acres.”
    She also stated, “When Daddy read the will to us, when he gathered us up altogether, he held up
    something, and said, ‘Keith will need this, this is his thing.’ It was about the seven acres, and then
    he just stuck it back in there.”
    The youngest child, Susan White, recalled that her father had mentioned the tract he
    bequeathed to Keith. She testified:
    Well, it’s been so long ago, and he wrote the will, I remember him telling me that he
    wrote a will. I don’t remember if that’s when he told me about the acreage Keith and
    Pam should get first, but he did tell me that Keith and Pam would get seven acres
    before anything else was separated. And then, you know, when he called us all in,
    that’s when he said about David getting seven acres as well.
    She confirmed her sister’s testimony that their father had held up the survey when he was reading
    the will to all the children, but she admitted that she had never looked at the survey to see if seven
    acres were plotted out on it. She also agreed that her father wanted Keith and David Garrett to have
    seven acres each, stating:
    Daddy stressed that for years. He stressed that about Keith getting seven acres and
    the last years he stressed it for David. That was the main thing he wanted us to do
    was to make sure they got their seven acres each before we did anything else. If we
    wanted to own it altogether, or separate it or sell it or whatever we wanted to do with
    it, he wanted that done first, so they had their homeplaces.
    She stated that shortly after her father died, she found the will and the survey was not with it.
    David Garrett, the youngest son, testified that he started his house while he was in college,
    prior to 1982. He stated that his father had never spoken to him about deeding him seven acres,
    stating:
    the only time Dad ever made a reference to me about my place, when he was real
    sick, almost to die, he said, there was somebody to visit him and asked if I would be
    there and I sat over on the edge of the property. I just homesteaded and I hope I get
    my place and Dad raised up his head and he said, “you got it” like that. He never did
    tell me, I never did worry about the acreage up until he got sick and we knew he was
    dying.
    5
    David Garrett offered the following testimony regarding his father’s preference for seven acres:
    Where Dad got the number of seven acres was, he heard the Japanese nation had
    some Imperial monarch or somebody from World War II had divided the whole
    nation into seven acre plots to give each family and that was what made it take off
    as a nation, what made them so productive.
    David related that he had seen the survey, which Andy Potter had created. He testified that after their
    father’s death Keith told him that their father had given him the survey. David Garrett also testified
    that he heard Keith acknowledge that his tract was limited to the seven acres surrounding his house.
    He recalled that Keith had shown him the plat and had fenced the seven acres.
    William Campbell, a general sessions court judge who was referred to in the will as a source
    for advice, testified that Gaston Garrett had mentioned that he intended for “both of the boys” to
    have their own piece of property and that he had a survey. Mr. Campbell recalled that the boys’ plots
    were “about five acres.”
    The mother of the six children, Gaston Garrett’s former wife, testified that Keith had
    mentioned seven acres to her several times. She recalled that after
    all the discussions and the children come and told me what they talked about, and
    never did Keith mention that he was supposed to get all of that over there, and never
    did they mention that Gaston said anything about a – and I would like to say, Gaston
    has his faults, but he would never give more to one than another, and to talk to them
    like he was trying to give them equal shares and then give all that piece to Keith.
    Keith was then called as a rebuttal witness. He denied receiving a plat from his father and
    testified that he never heard his father speak in terms of seven acre plots. He testified that he had
    only fenced a portion of his property where he had kept a cow.
    After hearing the evidence, the trial court found that “Mr. Garrett in no way intended to give
    Keith Garrett the entire 121 acre tract.” The court found clear and convincing evidence that the
    “surveyed tract” referred to in the will was a seven acre plot and that Mr. Garrett intended to give
    David Garrett a seven acre tract as well. The court stated that it accepted Keith’s offer to mark
    himself a plot of not more than seven acres and tender a plat thereof within fifteen days to the court
    and to the other siblings. The court reserved the right to appoint a surveyor to mark the boundaries
    if the parties could not agree.
    Keith moved for an interlocutory appeal which was granted by the trial court and denied by
    this court. Then, fourteen months after the trial court’s ruling, Keith filed a motion for new trial or,
    in the alternative, relief from order under Rule 59 and 60. This motion asserted that several other
    witnesses who had discussions about the testator’s intent shortly before his death substantiated
    Keith’s claim to the entire 121 acres.
    6
    The trial court denied Keith’s motion, holding that it lacked the authority to reopen the case.
    However, he was permitted, for the record, to make an offer of proof of evidence he claimed was
    newly discovered. The offer consisted of testimony from friends of the testator which purportedly
    corroborated Keith’s testimony.
    The trial court entered a final order, finding that substantially all the cash of the estate was
    either distributed prior to the date of the testator’s death or used for the administration of the estate,
    nothing further needed to be done for the administration of the estate, and a final order was necessary
    for the appeal of the court’s prior findings. This appeal ensued.
    I. Standard of Review
    The construction of a will is a question of law for the court. Presley v. Hanks, 
    782 S.W.2d 482
    , 487 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1989). The standard of review for the appellate court is de novo with no
    presumption of correctness. Estate of Burchfiel v. First United Methodist Church of Sevierville,
    Tennessee, 
    933 S.W.2d 481
    , 483 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1996); Tenn. R. App. P. 13(d). When, however,
    the testator’s intent is determined by extrinsic evidence, the trial court’s findings of fact regarding
    that evidence are reviewed de novo with a presumption of correctness. Thrailkill v. Patterson, 
    879 S.W.2d 836
    , 841 (Tenn. 1994); Hanafee v. Jackson Nat’l Bank, No. 02A01-9201-CH-00004, 
    1992 WL 137476
     at *2 (Tenn. Ct. App. Jun. 22, 1992) (no Ten. R. App. P. 11 application filed).
    II. Keith Garrett’s Tract
    Keith Garrett argues that the trial court’s ruling that he and his wife were entitled to a seven
    acre tract was clearly contrary to the language of his father’s will and to his father’s intent. We
    disagree.
    “The basic rule in construing a will is that the court shall seek to discover the intention of the
    testator, and will give effect to it unless it contravenes some rule of law or public policy. That
    intention is to be ascertained from the particular words used, from the context and from the general
    scope and purpose of the instrument.” Daugherty v. Daugherty, 
    784 S.W.2d 650
    , 653 (Tenn. 1990).
    A will must be interpreted in light of the circumstances existing at the time of its execution and in
    light of its general purpose. 
    Id.
     Every word used by the testator is presumed to have some meaning.
    
    Id.
    Where the language of a will is plain and unambiguous, extrinsic evidence is not
    admissible to vary, alter or contradict the terms of the will. Frazier v. Frazier, 
    430 S.W.2d 655
    , 659 (Tenn. 1968); Eslick v. Friedman, 
    235 S.W.2d 808
     (Tenn. 1951);
    Green v. Lanier, 
    456 S.W.2d 345
     (Tenn. App. 1970). Extrinsic evidence of the
    testator's intent is admissible, however, to resolve latent ambiguities. Sadow v.
    Solomon, 
    319 S.W.2d 83
    , 85 (Tenn. 1958); Holmes v. Roddy, 
    144 S.W.2d 788
     (Tenn.
    1940). A latent ambiguity is defined as one where the equivocality of expression,
    or obscurity of intention does not arise from the words themselves, but from the
    7
    ambiguous state of extrinsic circumstances to which the words of the instrument
    refer, and which is susceptible of explanation by the mere development of extraneous
    facts, without altering or adding to the written language, or requiring more to be
    understood thereby than will fairly comport with the ordinary or legal sense of the
    words and phrases made use of.3 
    Id.
     at 789
    In re Will of Leitsinger, No. 01A01-9209-PB-00361, 
    1993 WL 190916
     at *2 (Tenn. Ct. App. June
    4, 1993) (no Tenn. R. App. P. 11 application filed); Greer v. Anderson, 
    36 Tenn. App. 507
    , 509-16,
    
    259 S.W.2d 550
    , 551- 53 (1953). Extrinsic evidence, to be admissible, must show surrounding
    circumstances at the time of the execution of the will, rather than at some later date. Locke v. Davis,
    
    526 S.W.2d 455
    , 457 (Tenn. 1975).
    The language of Mr. Garrett’s will itself is not unclear or uncertain. The clear language of
    the will referred to a “certain tract of land more particularly described in a survey map” which the
    will said was attached. When the will was discovered, the survey was not attached. Therefore, the
    ambiguity arose due to the “extrinsic circumstances to which the words of the instrument refer,” i.e.,
    the fact that no survey was attached to the will. This created a latent ambiguity. We find no error
    in the trial court’s decision to hear evidence to determine the testator’s intent regarding the extent
    of the testator’s bequest to Keith.
    Keith contends that the testator only owned two tracts of land, the 121 acre tract on which
    his home, David’s home and the testator’s home were all located, and a separate 38 acre tract.
    Pointing to his and his wife’s testimony that the testator wanted to ensure that they kept their
    homeplace, Keith maintains that the will’s devise of a “certain tract” could only mean the 121 acres
    on which his house was situated. We find this argument unpersuasive.
    Obviously, the testator meant to give Keith and Pamela Garrett something above and beyond
    an equal share of his total estate, as evidenced by the fact that the bequest to them is the only
    individual bequest in the will. However, we do not find that the testator intended to give them the
    entire one hundred twenty one (121) acres, leaving only a 38 acre tract for division among all his
    children.
    3
    In contra st,
    [a] patent a mbigu ity stems from un certainty in the lang uage of the will itself , In re W ill of
    Bybee (Bybee v. Westrick), 
    896 S.W.2d 792
    , 793 (Te nn. Ct. Ap p. 1994) ; Coble Sys., Inc. v.
    Gifford Co., 627 S.W.2d at 362, an d is appa rent on th e face of the will. See 4 William J. Bowe
    & Douglas H. Pa rker, Page o n the La w of W ills § 32.7 (rev. 3d ed. 1961). It involves an
    ambiguous term, see Un ion Plan ters Corp . v. Harw ell, 
    578 S.W.2d 87
    , 92 (Tenn. Ct. App.
    1978), that cannot be clarified by considering extraneous facts.
    Jacobsen v. Flathe, No. 01A01-9511-CH-00510, 
    1997 WL 576339
     at *2, n.3 (Tenn. Ct. App. Sept. 17, 1997)
    (no Tenn . R. App. P. 11 a pplication filed).
    8
    First, the record shows that the testator owned three tracts of land, not two. Janet Garrett
    conveyed two separate tracts of land to the testator on April 1, 1972. These tracts included property
    “on the north side of the highway between the Allardt and the Taylor Place” consisting of
    approximately thirty-eight acres and a one hundred acre tract north of White Oak Creek. In addition,
    Harold Walker conveyed Lot 19A of City Lake Estates, consisting of approximately 19 acres, to the
    testator on January 15, 1981. According to maps in the record, the testator’s home was on Lot 19A,
    and Keith and David Garrett’s houses were located on the White Oak Creek tract.
    Second, the testator’s use of the words “a certain tract of land more particularly described in
    the survey map attached” is inconsistent with an intent to convey in its entirety any parcel owned by
    testator. Had the testator intended to convey an entire tract, he easily could have referred to it by its
    common description (e.g., City Lakes Estate tract) or by the deed which conveyed it to him. No
    survey would have been needed to describe the extent of the bequest, and a copy of a deed could
    have served as the defining document.
    Third, the evidence that the testator was concerned about dividing his estate fairly among
    his children is convincing. The testator’s former wife testified that it would have been
    uncharacteristic of the testator to favor one child over the others by bequeathing to Keith Garrett one
    hundred and twenty one (121) acres and allowing him to split the remaining thirty five (35) with his
    five siblings. The will itself expressed the testator’s hope that he “raised six children that are
    reasonable, fair, and unselfish” and directed the executors to provide “equal and fair share[s]” of his
    estate to the two daughters. In addition, the testator divided his currency equally among his six
    children before his death.
    Finally, although the testimony is inconsistent among the siblings about whether they saw
    a paper they thought was the survey, the trial court could have accredited those witnesses who say
    the survey was present at their bedside meeting with their father. It was later missing. A number
    of witnesses testified that Keith had acknowledged in the past that his father intended to leave him
    seven acres and his house.
    We have determined that the testator intended to give Keith and Pam Garrett a tract of land
    in addition to Keith’s one sixth interest in the residuary estate. We have also determined that it was
    not the testator’s intent to give Keith the entire 121 acre tract (composed of two separately-deeded
    parcels) that Keith claims was his father’s intent. Absent further clarification in the language of the
    will, the trial court was correct in considering other evidence of the testator’s intent. We find no
    evidence to support Keith’s contention that his father intended that he receive 121 acres other than
    Keith’s and Pam’s testimony regarding statements by testator. Those statements are less than
    conclusive as to the amount of land he intended to leave to Keith and Pam. For example, the
    testator’s bare assurance that he had “taken care of” Keith and Pam Garrett provides no greater
    support for Keith’s claim to one hundred and twenty one (121) acres than it does for the other
    siblings’ position.
    9
    As to the size of the tract, each of the other five siblings and their mother testified that the
    testator had intended to bequeath Keith seven acres. Some witnesses testified that Keith had
    acknowledged the seven acre tract in the past. Mr. Campbell, the testator’s legal advisor, recalled
    that the testator intended to leave Keith a tract of “about five acres.” Neither he nor the children’s
    mother had anything to gain from this testimony. The trial court had the opportunity to observe each
    of the witnesses and weigh their credibility. This court must give considerable deference to the trial
    judge's findings regarding the weight and credibility of any oral testimony received. Townsend v.
    State, 
    826 S.W.2d 434
    , 437 (Tenn. 1992); Jones v. Hartford Accident & Indem. Co., 
    811 S.W.2d 516
    , 521 (Tenn. 1991). In light of the above mentioned evidence, we cannot say the trial court erred
    in determining that the testator intended to devise to Keith and Pamela Garrett no more than a seven
    acre tract containing their home.
    III. David Garrett’s Tract
    The trial court’s ruling granting a seven acre plot of land to David Garrett, however, is more
    problematic. The trial court found “Mr. Garrett, by his acts, showed his intention to give David 7
    acres and Keith 7 acres.” The will makes no mention of a separate bequest to David Garrett. Unlike
    Keith Garrett, David is only one of the residuary beneficiaries along with his siblings. With regard
    to the size of the “certain tract” of land bequeathed to Keith Garrett, the court’s role was to interpret
    the intent of the testator, with the starting point being the language of the specific bequest in the will.
    Daugherty, 
    784 S.W.2d at 653
    . There is simply no such starting point for any bequest to David.
    The intent of the testator must be ascertained “from the particular words used, from the
    context and from the general scope and purpose” of the will. Daugherty, 
    784 S.W.2d at 653
    . A
    court must determine the testator’s intent “from what he has written and not from what it is supposed
    he intended.” Martin v. Taylor, 
    521 S.W.2d 581
    , 584 (Tenn. 1975). Consequently, a court cannot
    “make a new will or bequest for a testator but must construe what the testator has written and
    published.” In Re Estate of Jackson, 
    793 S.W.2d 259
    , 261 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1990).
    We find nothing in the will which justifies a finding that the testator intended for David
    Garrett to take the seven acre plot on which his house was located. None of the evidence in support
    of David Garrett receiving the seven (7) acre tract showed that the testator intended to bequeath
    David a separate tract of land at the time the will was executed. Locke, 
    526 S.W.2d at 457
    . “It is
    not our role to guess at a testator's intentions based on what the parties suppose the testator might
    have intended but never put in writing.” Martin v. Hale, 167 Tenn 438, 442, 
    71 S.W.2d 211
    , 212
    (1934); Jacobsen, 
    1997 WL 576339
     at *6 (citing In re Walker, 
    849 S.W.2d 766
    , 768 (Tenn. 1993)).
    The testator wrote his will in 1984 and made no specific bequest to David. He had every opportunity
    to revise his will to provide a specific bequest to David like he made for Keith, but he did not. In
    fact, the testator made revisions in 1995, many years after David began construction of the home,
    and still failed to make a provision regarding a grant to him of that property. Even at the time he
    read his will to his children, he did not amend the will. The court cannot read something into a will
    which is left out. Because the will makes no specific bequest of land to David Garrett, there was no
    basis in the language of the will for deciding that Gaston Garrett intended such a separate bequest.
    10
    Accordingly, we find no basis for a determination that the testator bequeathed seven acres and a
    house to David Garrett via the will.
    However, David and the other appellee siblings do not argue that their father made a
    testamentary gift of the land to David, but, instead, make several alternative arguments to uphold the
    grant to David. First, they assert that the trial court’s order dividing the real property constituted a
    recognition or finding that Gaston Garrett had given David his house and seven acres earlier. Thus,
    they characterize the trial court’s ruling as “upholding a parol gift of a tract with his house on it to
    David as reflective of the condition of the Gaston’s estate at the time of his death.” Second, David
    bases his claim on several Tennessee cases dealing with a parol4 gift of land followed by adverse
    possession “provides at least a defensive title to real property.” He cites Mercy v. Miller, 
    25 Tenn. App. 621
    , 
    166 S.W.2d 628
     (1942) and Choate v. Sewell, 
    142 Tenn. 487
    , 
    221 S.W. 190
     (1919) in
    support of this argument. The third theory argued for upholding the award to David is the agreement
    among David and the other appellee siblings that this would be a fair and equitable distribution.
    The trial court did not specify the legal basis for its ruling, but simply stated:
    In keeping with Exhibit 15 filed in the cause and in keeping with the evidentiary proof
    of the intention and actions of the Testator, Luther Gaston Garrett, and also
    consistent with statements of the brothers and sisters of David Garrett, the court
    hereby divests the heirs of Luther Gaston Garrett . . . of title and vests title consistent
    with Exhibit 1 in this cause in David Denver Garrett and his wife Paula . . .
    We first turn to the argument under the first two theories, that the court’s order should be
    upheld because the grant to David was a valid parol gift or a parol gift accompanied by seven years
    of adverse possession. Under either theory, the party claiming the gift was required to show there
    was a valid gift.
    A promise to make a gift is not a gift. McAdoo v. Dickson, 
    23 Tenn. App. 74
    , 
    126 S.W.2d 393
    , 402 (1938). In fact, an oral contract to devise lands is within the Statute of Frauds and
    unenforceable. Goodloe v. Goodloe, 
    116 Tenn. 252
    , 
    92 S.W. 767
     (1905); Williams v. Buntin, 
    4 Tenn. App. 340
     (1927); Quirk v. Bank of Commerce & Trust Co., 
    244 F. 682
     (6th Cir. 1917).
    There are two essential elements to a gift: donative intent and delivery. In Re Estate of Bligh,
    
    30 S.W.3d 319
    , 321 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2000). To accomplish delivery, the donor must relinquish all
    rights of control over the gifted property. Yale Univ. v. Fisk Univ., 
    660 F. Supp. 16
     (M.D. Tenn.
    4
    Parol is defined as “a word; speech; hence, oral or verbal; expressed or evidenced by speech only; as
    opposed to by writing or by sealed instrument.” BLACK ’S L A W D I C T IO N A R Y 1116 (6th ed . 1990).
    5
    Exhibit 1 was a survey David Garrett had made which split off the seven acres on which his house was located
    from the rest of the Wayne Davis tract. The survey was made in 1996 by Andrew Potter.
    11
    1985). The party claiming the gift has the burden to establish those elements by clear, cogent and
    convincing evidence. Bligh, 30 S.W.2d at 321. Any doubt must be resolved against the gift. State
    ex rel Teague v. Home Indem. Co., 
    59 Tenn. App. 518
    , 
    442 S.W.2d 276
     (1967). In particular, every
    fact necessary to show a parol gift of land must be ample, clear and convincing to sustain such gift.
    Mercy v. Miller, 
    25 Tenn. App. 621
    , 
    166 S.W.2d 628
     (1942).
    The delivery requirement is met, in the context of real property, by delivery of a deed.
    Leadford v. Leadford, 3 Tenn. Civ. App. 502 (1912); also THOMPSON ON REAL PROPERTY, THOMAS
    EDITION § 88.15(b)(1) (David A. Thomas, ed. 1994) (“A gift of real property is delivered by delivery
    of the deed.”). The effect of valid delivery is to place the gifted property under the control and
    dominion of the donee. Until such delivery is validly accomplished, a gift may be revoked by the
    donor; once it is accomplished, the donee’s title and right to possession become irrevocable.
    The appellees’ reliance on the theory of parol gift coupled with adverse possession does not
    obviate the need to prove that a gift actually occurred. In Walker v. Moore, 
    745 S.W.2d 292
    , 294
    (Tenn. Ct. App. 1987), this court recognized the rule set out in Choate v. Sewell, 
    142 Tenn. 487
    , 
    221 S.W. 190
     (1919), that “a parol gift of land coupled with an entry by the donee and adverse possession
    by him for more than seven years will vest with him a possessory or defensive right to the land.” In
    Walker, we found the evidence to be inconsistent with either an absolute gift or an adverse holding,
    and affirmed the trial court’s holding there was no enforceable gift.
    The Walker opinion quoted extensively from Mercy v. Miller, 
    25 Tenn. App. 621
    , 
    166 S.W.2d 628
     (1942), another case wherein this court found there was insufficient evidence to
    establish a gift under the Choate v. Sewell rule. In Mercy v. Miller this court observed:
    The opportunity and facility for fraud in setting up parol gifts, after the death of the
    alleged donor, make it the duty of a court to give close scrutiny to evidence offered
    to prove such a gift. . . . To sustain such a gift, the proof must be “ample, clear and
    convincing” as to every fact necessary to make out the gift.
    
    Id. at 631
     (citations omitted). The opinion also cited with approval Atchley v. Rimmer, 
    148 Tenn. 303
    , 
    255 S.W. 266
     for the rule that “the unsupported testimony of the alleged donee ought not to be
    accepted as sufficient proof of a gift” and “a gift cannot be established by proof of declarations of
    the alleged donor alone.”
    In Choate v. Sewell, the seminal case for the rule relied on by appellees, a parol donee was
    determined to be comparable to a parol vendee. The court’s holding is based upon the rule that a
    parol vendor, or donor, has the right to repudiate the sale or gift, and that right accrues immediately
    upon the making of the sale or gift. Where the vendee or donee enters into possession with the
    knowledge of the parol vendor or donor, “claiming adversely to him and all the world,” the vendor
    or donor is precluded, after seven years of such adverse possession, from repudiating the oral sale
    or gift. 221 S.W. at 192-93. “Such adverse possession for seven years extinguishes the right of the
    12
    parol vendor to have an action, either at law or in equity to repudiate his conveyance of the lands.”
    Id. at 193.
    It is clear that David’s claim under the Choate v. Sewell holding must rest upon clear and
    convincing proof of a gift. Additionally, for purposes of determining whether seven years of adverse
    possession has occurred, the specific date or time frame of the gift must be shown. Further, there
    must be proof that David’s possession was adverse to his father’s title or interest. A review of David
    Garrett’s own testimony and the other evidence presented at trial demonstrates that he has not met
    his burden as to any of these requirements.
    In fact, it is David’s own testimony which defeats the claim that he was given the house and
    land in the 1980s by way of any sort of gift; it also defeats any claim that he possessed the property
    adversely to his father’s interest. David concedes that his father did not give him a deed to any land
    and that when he constructed the house and occupied it, he did so only with his father’s permission.
    He testified as follows:
    Q: How did you come to build your house on this 121-acre tract?
    A: Well, to start with, I was just looking for a little cabin in the woods, a little hut or
    something to build, and I started mine like that. I didn’t have anything else.
    Q: Did you talk to your dad about this?
    A: Well, I just said, if he didn’t care, I would sort of squat, I guess.
    Q: Did you have his consent?
    A: Yes.
    Later in his testimony, he stated his father had never spoken to him about deeding him seven
    acres, but testified:
    Dad never did tell me exactly seven acres, no. He never did mention that to me. . . .
    the only time Dad ever made a reference to me about my place, [was] when he was
    real sick, almost to die . . . [I told dad] I just homesteaded and hope I get my place
    and dad raised up his head and he said, “You got it,” like that. He never did tell me,
    I never did worry about the acreage up until he got sick and we knew he was dying.
    In this case, it is not entirely clear when the gift was supposed to have been made, but
    appellees seem to have settled on sometime in the 1980s, on the basis that that is when David went
    into possession of the house.6 David’s testimony, however, contradicts any assertion that his father
    gave him the house in the 1980s since he stated that his father never made any reference to the house
    6
    The original response filed by the five siblings alleged their father had given the house and seven acres
    to David in 1988 It could be argued that this theory was abandoned at trial, as the court stated, “The only issue
    [is] interpretation of this size of land awarded to Keith Garrett, is that the only issue?” to which appellee counsel
    responded, “Tha t’s all we see .” Non etheless, th e trial court granted seven acres and a house to David, and
    appellees seek to uphold that ruling on the basis of an earlier parol gift.
    13
    until shortly before his death. In addition, there is absolutely no proof that the testator surrendered
    control over any real property surrounding David’s house or that the testator intended to give David
    the house and any acreage at the time David moved into the house. For the reasons stated herein,
    we find the donee has failed by prove by clear and convincing evidence that the testator made a gift
    of land to him in the 1980s.
    Finally, David argues that because the will contained a clause stating that the testator hoped
    that he raised his children to be fair and equitable, and because all of the appellee siblings had agreed
    that David would be entitled to the house and seven acres before the rest of the estate was divided,
    the court’s order should be upheld because it is fair and equitable and what the testator would have
    wanted. We have no doubt that the siblings are convinced that their father wanted David to have his
    house and seven acres around it and that they are taking actions consistent with that belief. The role
    of the courts, however, is limited. As stated, above, a court may not read into a will that which is
    not there. The testator’s hope that his children would agree on a fair and equitable distribution of
    his estate does not constitute a separate devise or bequest and does not authorize the children or the
    courts to re-write his will.7
    Therefore, we reverse the trial court’s order granting to David and Paula Garrett a separate
    seven acres and house in addition to David’s interest in the residuary estate. Thus, the house built
    by David and any land around it are to be considered part of the residuary estate which is to be
    divided equally among the children according to the provisions of the will. This is not to say that
    David has no recourse to obtain the house he built; he may always request that part of his one-sixth
    portion of the residual estate include the home and land on which the home is located. Additionally,
    while the siblings are free, of course, to give their one-sixth interest in the house built by David and
    acreage surrounding it to David, the agreement of five of them cannot divest Keith of his one-sixth
    interest in the residuary estate.8
    IV. Motion for New Trial
    Keith Garrett argues that the trial court erred in denying his motion for new trial or,
    alternatively, for relief from the order. That motion was made under Tennessee Rules of Civil
    Procedure 59 and 609 over fourteen months after entry of the order construing the will. The basis for
    7
    W e interpret the testator’s precatory language to refer to the residuary estate and not to give authority
    to the ch ildren to d ecide ho w to divid e his entire estate.
    8
    This holding should not be interpreted as implying that K eith has any right to a specific parcel in the
    residuary estate or a portion of the land surrounding David’s house. He is simply entitled to one-sixth of the
    residuary estate which is to be divided in equal and fair shares, with the w ill directing process for resolving
    disputes as to fairness.
    (continu ed...)
    14
    the motion was that counsel had discovered witnesses to “contradict, rebut and establish the true
    intent of the testator at or near the time of his death” and that, because the appellees had presented
    evidence regarding testator’s intent at the time of his death, Keith Garrett, the petitioner, should be
    given that opportunity. The motion contended that the evidence was not discovered until after the
    hearing, when the proposed witnesses heard of the court’s decision, and that the evidence was
    relevant to key issues. The motion asked the trial court to grant a new hearing, on the issue decided
    over a year previously, asking the court to “grant a new trial in this cause on the issue of disposition
    of the real property of the decedent.” The appellees opposed the motion on the ground it was
    untimely. The trial court denied the motion.
    Keith Garrett was permitted to make an offer of proof, which included affidavits and live
    testimony. At the close of the hearing, the trial court declined to change its ruling on the basis of the
    offered testimony, stating it had already denied the motion for new trial.
    Keith Garrett’s motion was entirely designed to get the court to hear evidence from witnesses
    who were not called in the earlier hearing on the issue decided in that hearing. Essentially, it was
    a request that the court re-open an order, and the issues decided in that order, which had been entered
    over a year previously, on the basis of newly-discovered evidence.
    Tenn. R. Civ. P. 59.02 states in pertinent part:
    Time for Motions.--A motion for new trial and all other motions permitted under this
    rule shall be filed and served within thirty (30) days after judgment has been entered
    in accordance with Rule 58.
    Obviously, the motion for new trial was not filed within thirty days of entry of the order
    construing the will. In addition, the evidence the motion sought to have the court consider was not
    newly-discovered evidence within the rule regarding new trial.
    Another principle of law that is deeply ingrained in the holdings of our courts and has
    been repeated in the majority of the some 65 cases where our courts have addressed
    this issue is that to justify a new trial for newly discovered evidence it must be shown
    that the new evidence was not known to the moving party prior to or during trial and
    that it could not have been known to him through exercise of reasonable diligence.
    Seay v. City of Knoxville, 
    654 S.W.2d 397
    , 399 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1983) (citations omitted). An
    affidavit in support of such a motion must set out the facts constituting due diligence with
    particularity. 
    Id.
     Further, “in ruling on a motion for new trial on the grounds of newly discovered
    evidence the trial court is vested with wide discretion, and its denial of such a motion will not be
    (...continued)
    9
    On appeal, the appellant argue s the issue only on the basis of Rule 59 grounds.
    15
    disturbed by an appellate court unless it has abused its discretion.” Evans v. Evans, 
    558 S.W.2d 851
    ,
    853 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1977).
    The trial court acted well within its discretion when it denied the motion for new trial which
    was filed many months after the entry of the order. In addition, having reviewed the affidavit and
    testimony offered in support of the motion for new trial, we find that the evidence Keith Garrett
    presented was not newly discovered evidence that could not have been discovered prior to or during
    the hearing through the exercise of due diligence.10 We affirm the trial court’s denial of the motion
    for new trial.
    V. The In Terrorem Clause
    Keith Garrett argues that because his siblings challenged his interpretation of the will, the
    forfeiture clause was activated. He maintains that they should take nothing under the will. The
    siblings respond that the in terrorem clause has no effect because neither side is objecting to the
    probate. They also contend that forfeiture provisions are not enforceable when suits are pursued in
    good faith, relying on Winningham v. Winningham, 
    966 S.W.2d 48
     (Tenn. 1998).
    10
    One of the witnesses was Andrew Potter, the surveyor wh om Da vid said had cr eated the sur vey referred to
    in the will. Mr. P otter denied that he had sur veyed the testa tor’s prope rty by dividing it into seven acre tracts. He also
    stated his office had burned a nd his reco rds had b een destro yed. Mo st of the prop osed testimo ny dealt with statements
    made by the testator, not at the time of the execution of the will, but much closer to his death. Kathy Gernt, who had
    worked with the testator at a chicken plant, testified that she and her husband visited the testator during his illness. After
    her husband commented about how much he liked the testator’s house, the testa tor purpo rtedly stated: “it was K eith’s
    house, that Keith had built it . . . He said his ho use neede d to be pa inted and I to ld him maybe we would get some
    commercial grade wallpaper and put it up . . . He said that he didn ’t know if Keith w ould like that.” M rs. Gernt’s
    husband substantiated much of this testimony. The testimony of Billy Allen South, a neighbor, was also proffere d in
    support of Keith’s claim. M r. South made a pe rsonal statement concerning the testator’s last wishes:
    Gaston wished me to say to the Court that he wished that this matter of this Will be settled behind
    closed doors, the members that were all to be involved, and that he had written the Will and that the
    same lawyer that helped him word and prepare them and explain the Will and they had went over it
    word for word and that the Will would stand good for itself and that the records of properties or
    anything that was on record, everything was on record and that he felt between our discussions that
    the Will wou ld stand goo d for itself and w ould not b e problem of the Cour t to decide . . . I will have
    to state that Gaston’s intentions of me as far as knowing of the Will whic h I stated he ha d named Keith
    and Pam. He intended for Keith to have that property. He intended it to b e under co ntrol of Ke ith
    Garrett.
    When asked wha t specific pro perty he was re ferring to, M r. South stated , “the prope rty that he lived on. He
    considered it – he named it as this property – the house that he lived in, he considered it to be all – all of the land that
    was there whe re he lived tha t was joining tha t tract that he lived o n was one p roperty.”
    Keith also proffered the affidavits of two additional witnesses. Ben King attested that the testator ha d told him
    that “Keith was the only child that had ever done anything for me” and “the other children are only interested in what
    they can get fro m me.” P ete Taylor attested that the tes tator said that his h ouse wou ld one da y belong to K eith.
    16
    Tennessee courts recognize the validity of forfeiture provisions in wills. Tate v. Camp, 
    147 Tenn. 137
    , 149, 
    245 S.W. 839
    , 842 (1922) (finding that such provisions are not void as against
    public policy).
    However, it has been the rule since Tate v. Camp, that a forfeiture provision will not
    be enforced where a contest is pursued “in good faith and upon probable cause.”
    After considering decisions from other jurisdictions, the Court in Tate v. Camp
    approved the following from South Norwalk Trust Co. v. St. John, 
    92 Conn. 168
    , 
    101 A. 961
    , 963 (1917), “Where the contest has not been made in good faith, and upon
    probable cause and reasonable justification, the forfeiture should be given full
    operative effect. Where the contrary appears, the legatee ought not to forfeit his
    legacy.”
    Winningham, 966 SW2d at 51.
    It appears that the siblings commenced this action in good faith and upon probable cause.
    The record shows that they simply disagreed with Keith’s desire to take the vast majority of his
    father’s estate. There was obviously a valid question as to what the survey contained in light of the
    fact that the will referenced the document and it was never found. Additionally, they have prevailed
    at trial and on appeal on the size of the parcel bequeathed to Keith. Thus, the in terrorem clause was
    not triggered.11
    VI. Frivolous Appeal
    The siblings argue that this appeal is frivolous and they are entitled to sanctions because
    Keith’s position that he is entitled to all one hundred twenty one (121) acres is groundless. They
    seek costs and attorney fees pursuant to 
    Tenn. Code Ann. § 27-1-122.12
     We cannot say that this
    appeal was totally lacking in merit, or taken for delay, so as to invoke the statutory penalty,
    particularly when we vacated the trial court’s disposition giving David Garrett a separate tract.
    VII. Summary
    11
    Keith Garrett’s brief acknowledges that the in terrorem clause would only be triggered if the trial
    court’s rulings were reversed.
    12
    Tenn . Code A nn. § 27- 1-122 p rovides:
    When it appears to any reviewing court that the appeal from any court of record was frivolous
    or taken solely for d elay, the court may, either upon motion of a p arty or of its own motion,
    award just damages against the appellant, which may include but need not be limited to, costs,
    interest on the judgm ent, and expen ses incurre d by the appellee as a result o f the app eal.
    17
    The trial court’s decision to award Keith and Pamela Garrett a seven acre tract surrounding
    their homestead is affirmed. We reverse the trial court’s decision regarding the grant of a separate
    bequest of the home and seven (7) surrounding acres to David Garrett. Next, we find the trial court
    did not abuse its discretion in denying Keith’s motion for new trial and the trial court properly
    refused to apply the in terrorem clause. Finally, we reject the appellees’ request for sanctions. This
    cause is remanded to the trial court for further actions necessary not inconsistent with this opinion.
    Costs of this appeal are taxed equally to the appellant and the appellees, for which execution may
    issue, if necessary.
    ______________________________
    PATRICIA J. COTTRELL, JUDGE
    18