In Re: Estate of Mary A. Grass ( 2008 )


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  •                IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
    AT NASHVILLE
    April 27, 2006 Session
    IN RE: ESTATE OF MARY A. GRASS
    Appeal from the Seventh Circuit Court for Davidson County
    No. 02P-1998 David Randall Kennedy, Judge
    No. M2005-00641-COA-R3-CV - Filed: June 4, 2008
    This appeal involves the probate of a will. On appeal, the appellant claims that the
    Probate Court did not have jurisdiction to extend the statute of limitations to elect against the
    will and that the Agreed Order extending the statute of limitations was not effective. The
    appellant also claims that the surviving spouse cannot elect against the will because he
    waived his right to elect by signing a waiver and accepting the benefits of the bequests to
    him under the will. Finally, the appellant claims that the Probate Court erred in calculating
    the award of exempt property, year’s support, homestead exemption, and elective share.
    Finding that the Probate Court did not err in extending the statute of limitations, that the
    surviving spouse did not waive his right to elect against the will and that the Probate Court
    correctly awarded the homestead exemption, but finding that the Probate Court erred in
    calculating the award of exempt property, year’s support, and the surviving spouse’s elective
    share, we affirm in part, reverse in part and remand to the Probate Court to make
    recalculations.
    Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Circuit Court Affirmed in part
    and Reversed in part.
    JERRY SCOTT , SR. J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which WILLIAM C. KOCH , JR., P.J.,
    M.S., joined. WILLIAM BRYAN CAIN , J., not participating.
    Thomas I. Bottorff, Brentwood, Tennessee, for the appellant, James E. McLendon
    Paul A. Gontarek, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellee, Raymond G. Grass
    OPINION
    Facts
    Mary Anne Grass (the “Decedent”) married Raymond G. Grass (the “Husband”) on
    April 16, 1975. They were married for over 27 years, until the Decedent’s death on October
    31, 2002, at 82 years of age. The Decedent had two adult children from a prior marriage,
    James McLendon of Nashville, Tennessee and Lilly Diane McLendon of St. John,
    Newfoundland, Canada. Ms. Grass executed her Last Will and Testament (the “Will”) on
    May 20 or 21, 2002, by which she appointed her son, James McLendon as Executor (the
    “Executor”).1
    Before the Decedent married her Husband in 1975 and until her death, the Decedent
    owned a house in her name alone at 140 Tusculum Road in Antioch, Tennessee. The house
    is located on nine acres and consists of four apartments. Three of the apartments in the
    house were rental apartments, and the fourth apartment was used by the Decedent and her
    Husband as their residence. Each apartment was fully furnished. The house and land were
    valued on the Tennessee Inheritance Tax Return at $292,100. The household furnishings
    were valued at $25,000.
    In her will, the Decedent devised the property at 140 Tusculum Road to her son,
    James Earl McClendon. Two acres of the property is subject to a life estate for her daughter,
    Lilly Diane McLendon to “raise plants,” and the area for her to raise plants can be increased
    to five acres. Her husband, Raymond G. Grass was authorized to continue to use the home
    as long “as he can maintain it and would require it as his principal place of residence.” By
    the terms of the will, the income from the three apartments will continue to pay for all
    upkeep, maintenance, taxes, insurance and rental expenses with the reminder to be retirement
    income for her husband.
    The Decedent also devised two townhouses to her daughter and two townhouses to
    her husband on McLendon Drive in Antioch. Finally, she bequeathed her interest in their
    depository accounts, certificates of deposit, motor home and any automobiles and/or trucks
    to her Husband, which they purchased jointly. The residue was to be divided equally
    between her Husband and her two children.
    The value of the two, two-unit rental townhouses on McLendon Court was reported
    as $200,000 on the Tennessee Inheritance Tax Return. The Decedent and her husband
    owned a 1.16 acre unimproved lot on Bart Drive in Antioch valued by the Davidson County
    Assessor of Property at $5,800. The deed is not in the record. The tax notices were sent to
    her son, the Executor, at his home address.
    The Decedent owned a 1992 Ford Taurus automobile and her Husband owned a
    truck. The motor home was valued on the Tennessee Inheritance Tax Return at $18,000.
    They also owned a substantial amount of lawn equipment, which was valued on the
    Tennessee Inheritance Tax Return at $8,000.
    Before the Decedent died, she and her Husband had a joint bank account with a
    balance of $260,000. The Decedent withdrew $160,000 from the account and placed the
    money in two pay on death accounts payable to her children, James and Dianne McLendon.
    The Husband withdrew $100,000 from the account and gave the money to his children from
    his prior marriage.
    1
    The printed text of the will recites its date as May 20, 2002 in two places, but Ms. Grass wrote May 21,
    2002 as the date of her will.
    2
    After the Decedent’s death, her Husband signed a form giving his consent for James
    McLendon to be appointed Executor without bond and waived the statutory requirement of
    the Executor filing an Inventory or Accounting with the Clerk.2 On December 4, 2002, the
    Executor filed his sworn Petition to Probate the Decedent’s Will and to be appointed
    Executor without bond.
    On April 24, 2003, the Decedent’s Husband signed a document entitled “Receipt and
    Waiver” for the Executor. It is not known who prepared the document. The document
    states:
    I, RAYMOND G. GRASS, a residuary beneficiary of this estate, pursuant to
    Tennessee Code Annotated, section 30-2-601, do hereby acknowledge and
    state to this Court that I am a distributee of this estate pursuant to the duly
    probated Will of the decedent, and that I waive any and all requirements that
    the personal representative make any accounting to the Court in this cause. I
    further acknowledge and state to the Court that I have now received all funds
    and assets bequeathed to me in the Last Will and Testament of the decedent,
    and I hereby acknowledge receipt of same. Finally, I hereby release the
    personal representative of this Estate from any and all further liability and/or
    responsibility as personal representative thereof, both now, and in the future.
    When the document was signed, the Husband was not represented by an attorney. Two days
    before the Husband delivered the “Receipt and Waiver” to the Executor, the Executor signed
    an “Executor’s Deed,” which stated that title to the property located at 140 Tusculum Road
    was transferred by the deed and conveyed by the Executor to himself personally pursuant to
    the provisions set forth in the Will, including a life estate for Raymond G. Grass “as long as
    he can maintain it and would require it as his usual place of residence” and quotes the
    language of the will as to the use of the rental income for its maintenance with the remainder
    payable to the Husband. The Executor’s Deed was recorded on April 24, 2003, the same day
    that the Husband signed the Receipt and Waiver.
    On July 30, 2003, counsel for the Executor and counsel for the Decedent’s Husband
    prepared, signed and submitted an Agreed Order to the Probate Court extending the time
    period for the Husband to petition for his elective share, year’s support, exempt property and
    homestead an additional 60 days beyond the nine months statutory period. In the decretal
    paragraph, the Agreed Order gave the Husband until October 31, 2003, to file a petition for
    his elective share, year’s support, exempt property and homestead. The Order was filed on
    July 30, 2003.
    On October 31, 2003, with the assistance of the attorney who signed the Agreed
    Order for him, the Husband filed his petition for his elective share, year’s support, exempt
    property and homestead (the “Petition for Elective Share”) with the Clerk of the Probate
    Court.
    2
    The will excused the posting of a bond and the filing of an inventory, but did not excuse the filing of an
    accounting.
    3
    Over the next year, the Executor filed his status reports with the Clerk of the Probate
    Court, responded in writing to the Husband’s motion to strike his status report and the
    Husband’s exception to his detailed annual accounting, opposed his counsel’s motion to
    withdraw, which was granted by the Probate Court, served through his new counsel two sets
    of interrogatories on the Husband, and continued to participate in the litigation against the
    Husband. In an Order filed July 15, 2004, the Probate Court found that the Release and
    Waiver did not prevent the Husband from proceeding with his petition for his elective share,
    year’s support, exempt property and homestead.
    On October 19, 2004, the Probate Court entered an Order on Petition for Elective
    Share, Year’s Support, Exempt Property, and Homestead, granting the Husband’s petition.
    On October 29, 2004, the Husband filed a Petition to Compel Sale of Real Property to
    satisfy the award of the elective share, homestead, exempt property and year’s support.
    Also, on that same day, the Husband filed a Motion to Alter or Amend the Order on Petition
    for Elective Share, Year’s Support, Exempt Property and Homestead.
    On November 9, 2004, the Executor filed his Response to Petition to Compel Sale of
    Real Estate and a Response to the Motion to Alter or Amend Order on Petition for Elective
    Share, Year’s Support, Exempt Property, and Homestead. On that same day, the Executor
    also filed a Motion for Interlocutory Appeal supported by a Memorandum of Law in Support
    of Motion for Interlocutory Appeal.
    On November 17, 2004, the Executor filed a Motion to Make Additional Findings
    and to Alter or Amend Order that was entered on October 19, 2004. On November 18, 2004,
    the Executor filed, with the assistance of new counsel, his Second Motion to Make
    Additional Findings and to Alter or Amend Order entered October 19, 2004. On November
    19, 2004, the Probate Court ordered the preparation of a transcript of the October 19, 2004
    hearing. The court reporter was given until 5:00 p.m. on November 22, 2004 to transcribe
    the testimony at the hearing.
    On November 23, 2004, the Executor filed his Amended Answer of James E.
    McClendon, as Executor and Individually, to Petition to Compel Sale of Real Estate. That
    same day, the Probate Court entered a Scheduling Order granting the Deceased’s daughter,
    Diane McClendon, leave to file an Answer or Amended Answer by November 29, 2004,
    setting a deadline for the completion of written discovery and revelation of any of the expert
    witnesses to be called by each side, and setting January 20, 2005, as the trial date. That
    Order was submitted jointly by the Executor’s former counsel and his newly employed
    counsel.
    On January 4, 2005, the Executor’s former counsel was relieved and the new counsel
    continued to represent him. On January 5, 2005, the Husband’s counsel filed his Response to
    Executor’s Motions to Make Additional Findings and to Alter or Amend and also responded
    to the Executor’s motion for an interlocutory appeal.
    On February 4, 2005, the Probate Court heard the Motion to Compel the Sale of Real
    Property and the various Motions to Alter or Amend the Order on Petition for Elective Share.
    4
    The Probate Court took the matters under advisement. On February 15, 2005, the Probate
    Court entered an Order directing the Executor to sell the real property at 140 Tusculum Road
    to satisfy the Husband’s award of elective share. On March 4, 2005, the Probate Court
    entered an Amended Order on Petition for Elective Share, Year’s Support, Exempt Property,
    and Homestead from all of which the Executor appeals, and the Husband filed his cross-
    appeal. Even after the Notice of Appeal was filed, the Executor filed a pro se 49 page
    Motion to Alter or Amend the judgment. The Probate Court overruled the motion due to
    lack of jurisdiction at that point.
    Standard of Review
    The standard of review of a trial court’s findings of fact is de novo, and we presume
    that the findings of fact are correct unless the preponderance of the evidence is otherwise.
    Tenn. R. App. P. 13(d); Rawlings v. John Hancock Mut. Life Ins. Co., 
    78 S.W.3d 291
    , 296
    (Tenn. Ct. App. 2001). For the evidence to preponderate against a trial court’s findings of
    fact, it must support another finding of fact with greater convincing effect. Walker v. Sidney
    Gilreath & Assocs., 
    40 S.W.3d 66
    , 71 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2000); The Realty Shop, Inc. v. R.R.
    Westminster Holding, Inc., 
    7 S.W.3d 581
    , 596 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1999). Where the trial court
    does not make findings of fact, there is no presumption of correctness and we must conduct
    our own independent review of the record to determine where the preponderance of the
    evidence lies. Brooks v. Brooks, 
    992 S.W.2d 403
    , 405 (Tenn. 1999). We also give great
    weight to a trial court’s determinations of credibility of witnesses. Estate of Walton v.
    Young, 
    950 S.W.2d 956
    , 959 (Tenn. 1997); B & G Constr., Inc. v. Polk, 
    37 S.W.3d 462
    , 465
    (Tenn. Ct. App. 2000). Issues of law are reviewed de novo with no presumption of
    correctness. Nelson v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc., 
    8 S.W.3d 625
    , 628 (Tenn. 1999).
    Issues
    The five issues and their sub-issues raised on appeal by the Executor as Appellant are
    as follows:
    A. Whether the time limit prescribed in Tennessee Code Annotated section
    31-4-102(a) for filing a petition for elective share, exempt property, year’s
    support and homestead is subject-matter jurisdictional to the trial court;
    and, whether an Agreed Order signed and entered by the trial court on July
    30, 2003, was effective to extend the time for the Husband to file his
    Petition beyond the July 31, 2003, deadline in this case; and, thus whether
    the trial court had subject-matter jurisdiction of the Husband’s Petition for
    Elective Share, Exempt Property, Year’s Support, and Homestead which
    he filed on October 31, 2003.
    B. Whether the trial court erred in overruling the Executor’s objection to
    allowing the Husband to go forward with his Petition for Elective Share
    on the grounds the Husband had accepted the benefits of the bequest to
    him in the Will, and pursuant to Tennessee Code Annotated section 30-2-
    707, the Husband had signed and delivered to the Executor a Receipt and
    Waiver acknowledging receipt of the benefits accorded him in the Will
    5
    and releasing the estate from any further liability to him; and, in reliance
    thereon, the Executor’s attorney prepared and the Executor executed and
    recorded in the Register’s Office for Davidson County, Tennessee an
    Executor’s Deed setting forth the interests of the Husband and the other
    beneficiaries in the Decedent’s real property located at 140 Tusculum
    Road, Antioch, Tennessee as devised to them under the Will.
    C. In regard to the Order on Elective Share and Amended Order on Elective
    Share awarding the Husband:
    1. Exempt Property. Whether the trial court erred in awarding as exempt
    property, to be paid or set aside from the decedent’s estate under
    Tennessee Code Annotated section 30-2-101(a), an amount which
    included, contrary to subsection (1) thereof, the value of tangible
    personal property, consisting of household furnishings and law
    equipment, that was used primarily in the decedent’s trade or business,
    or was for investment purposes, or alternatively, was owned jointly by
    the Decedent and the Husband; and which included, contrary to
    subsection (2) thereof, the value of a motor home that was titled in the
    joint names of the Decedent and the Husband; all of which also effects
    the calculations of the Elective-Share amount under Tennessee Code
    Annotated section 31-4-101(b) and (c).
    2. Year’s Support. Whether the trial court erred in awarding a year’s
    support under Tennessee Code Annotated section 30-2-102(a), which
    (i) included the decedent’s Social Security benefits; (ii) did not take
    into account the gross rental income from the three rental apartments
    in the real property located at 140 Tusculum Road, Antioch,
    Tennessee, which the Husband received pursuant to the terms of the
    Will, both before and after filing his Petition for Elective Share; (iii)
    did not take into account the value of the Husband’s occupancy of the
    fourth apartment in the real property located at 140 Tusculum Road,
    Antioch, Tennessee as bequeathed to him pursuant to the terms of the
    Will; (iv) did not take into account the substantial amount of assets the
    decedent owned jointly with the Husband and which passed to the
    Husband outside of probate, including but not limited to four rental
    townhouses the parties owned on McLendon Drive in Antioch,
    Tennessee; (v) did not take into account the rental income from the
    four townhouses located on McLendon Drive, Antioch, Tennessee;
    (vi) apparently did not take into account the small amount of money in
    the estate and the fact that as a matter of law the year’s support cannot
    be satisfied out of the decedent’s real property; (vii) did not take into
    account the totality of the circumstance; and, (viii) erroneously offset
    the year’s support award with the award of the exempt property, even
    though that erroneous calculation resulted in no monetary award of
    year’s support, which favors the Executor, and all of which adversely
    6
    affects the calculations in the Elective share amount awarded under
    Tennessee Code Annotated section 31-4-101(b) and (c);
    3. Homestead. Whether the Husband is entitled to an award for
    homestead in view of the fact he has elected against the provisions
    made for him in the Will and has therefor rejected the right to continue
    to reside in the real property owned in the Decedent’s name alone.
    4. Elective Share.
    (a) Whether in calculating the value of the net estate under Tennessee
    Code Annotated section 31-4-101(b) the trial court erred in including,
    as a fraudulent conveyance in violation of Tennessee Code Annotated
    section 31-1-105, a $160,000 amount the Decedent had transferred to
    two pay-on-death accounts with her two adult children, which in
    actuality divided a $260,000 amount on approximately a 60% - 40%
    basis, the same amount the Husband would have received under the
    elective share statute if the Court had fully considered the source from
    which the money came as required by In Re: The Estate of Oleta
    Gray, deceased, 
    729 S.W.2d 668
    , and in view of the fact that the
    Husband accepted, ratified and confirmed said division when he took
    the remaining $100,000 of said funds and gave it to his children.
    (b) Whether the trial court erred in including in the value of the net estate,
    as defined in Tennessee Code Annotated section 31-4-101(b), property
    that was jointly owned by the decedent and the Husband, and which
    passed to the Husband outside of probate, thereby erroneously
    inflating the value of the net estate and the 40% product thereof, based
    on the more than nine year marriage of the parties under Tennessee
    Code Annotated section 31-4-101(a), when the language of the statute
    clearly state the nets estate includes only property subject to
    disposition under the provisions of the Decedent’s will, i.e., assets
    owned in the Decedent’s name alone.
    (c) Whether the trial court erred in not deducting from the net estate,
    contrary to Tennessee Code Annotated section 31-4-101(a), all assets
    includable in the Decedent’s gross estate, which were transferred, or
    deemed transferred, to the surviving spouse or which were for the
    benefit of the surviving spouse, in the same manner as determined for
    inheritance tax purposes pursuant to Tennessee code Annotated
    section 67-8-301 et seq.; and, due to the Husband’s failure to
    actuarially determine the value of the Husband’s occupancy of the real
    property, deducting the value thereof.
    (d) Whether the trial court erred in failing to credit against the awards in
    the Amended Order on Elective Share the amount the Husband
    received from the rents on the apartments and townhouses, the
    7
    proceeds from the “garage sale” of the household furniture and
    furnishing conducted by the Husband over the objections of the
    Executor, and the costs to the estate of the real property taxes,
    insurance, maintenance and upkeep of the real property, which
    charged the Husband in the Will.
    D. In regard to the Order to Sell Real Property, whether the trial court erred
    in ordering the Decedent’s real property sold to satisfy the awards of the
    elective share, exempt property and homestead:
    1. When the awards of elective share, exempt property, year’s support
    and homestead were made even though the Husband had not complied
    with Rule 39 of the Local rules of Practice for Courts of Record,
    Twentieth Judicial District of Tennessee, regarding Special Procedures
    for Probate Matters, which requires the Husband to have accomplished
    service of his Petition pursuant to Rules 3 and 4 of the Tennessee
    Rules of Civil Procedure, on all interested parties, which the Husband
    failed to do; and
    2. When the Husband failed to implead all heirs, devises, encumbrances,
    and others interested in the realty as required by Tennessee Code
    Annotated section 30-2-402(b)(1); and
    3. When Dianne McLendon, a non-resident beneficiary of the estate, was
    not made a party and served with process by the Husband, and,
    pursuant to Tennessee Code Annotated section 30-2-203(b), such
    failure to give her the required notice of the original application for
    homestead results in Dianne McLendon having a period of three years
    from the date of the original application to file for a rehearing of the
    cause; and
    4. When the Order on Elective Share, entered on October 19, 2004, had
    not “become final,” due to the fact the said Order was the subject of
    cross Motions to alter or amend filed by both of the parties and had not
    been heard by the Court and the Order did not order the distribution
    and/or vesting of the elective share to the surviving spouse as required
    by Tennessee Code Annotated section 31-4-102(d); all of which
    affects title to the real property and renders it unmarketable.
    E. Whether the Husband has carried the burden to prove his claims and, thus,
    whether the evidence preponderates against the findings of the trial court.
    The Husband as Appellee/Cross Appellant raised seven issues as follows:
    A. Whether the Probate Court properly exercised its general, original and exclusive
    jurisdiction over the administration of the estate of the Decedent in ruling on Mr.
    Grass’ Petition for Elective Share.
    8
    B.    Whether the Executor can carry his burden of proof on appeal concerning the
    Probate Court’s hearing and resulting ruling on the “Receipt and Waiver,” in light of
    the fact that the Executor failed to fine a transcript of the proceedings.
    C.    Whether the Probate Court’s award of exempt property to Mr. Grass is supported by
    the factual record.
    D. Whether the Probate Court erred in failing to award to Mr. Grass year’s support
    When it: (1) relied on bank accounts held by the Decedent and Dianne McLendon
    to reduce the award of year’s support when no evidence or testimony pertaining to
    those bank accounts was presented at trial; and (2) erroneously credited the award of
    exempt property against the award of year’s support.
    E.    Whether the Probate court’s award of a homestead exemption to Mr. Grass is
    supported by the factual record.
    F.    Whether the Probate Court erred in its calculation of both the net estate and gross
    estate for purposes of the elective share award thereby causing the award of the
    elective share to Mr. Grass to be incorrect as a matter of law.
    G. Whether the Probate Court erred in ordering the Executor to sell real property to
    satisfy the awards of elective share, exempt property and homestead.
    Analysis
    I.      The first issue is whether the Probate Court had jurisdiction to extend the
    time limit prescribed in Tennessee Code Annotated section 31-4-102(a), and
    whether an Agreed Order signed by both parties and entered by the Probate
    Court was effective to extend the time for the Husband to file his petition for
    elective share, exempt property, year’s support, and homestead, and thus,
    retain subject matter jurisdiction of the issues covered by the order.
    In addressing this issue, the statute of limitations for a surviving spouse to elect
    against a will is set forth at Tennessee Code Annotated section 31-4-102(a)(1) and
    incorporated by Tennessee Code Annotated section 30-2-101(d) for exempt property,
    Tennessee Code Annotated section 30-2-102(g) for year’s support allowance, and Tennessee
    Code Annotated section 30-2-204(b) for homestead.
    Tennessee Code Annotated section 31-4-102 provides:
    (a)(1) The surviving spouse may elect to take such spouse’s elective share in
    decedent’s property by filing in the Court and mailing or delivering to the
    personal representative, if any, a petition for the elective share within nine (9)
    months after the date of death, or within six (6) months after the appointment
    of the personal representative, whichever limitation last expires.
    9
    (2) When the title of the surviving spouse to property devised or bequeathed
    by the will is involved in litigation pending so that an election to take the
    elective share cannot be advisedly made, the survivor shall have an additional
    year from the date of the probate of the will within which to elect; provided,
    that the court may upon a proper showing further extend the time to meet the
    exigency of litigation, no concluded, and, that application for allowance of
    additional time, in either case, be made to the court, for record of its action
    thereon.
    In this case, the Decedent, Mary Anne Grass, died on October 31, 2002. Nine months
    from the date of her death was July 31, 2003. The Executor was appointed on December 4,
    2002. Six months after the appointment of the Executor was June 4, 2003. Therefore,
    pursuant to Tennessee Code Annotated section 31-4-102(a)(1), the last day to petition for the
    spouse’s elective share, exempt property, year’s support and homestead was on July 31,
    2003.
    On July 30, 2003, the Executor represented to both the Decedent’s Husband and the
    Probate Court, as evidenced by the signature of counsel on the Agreed Order, that he agreed
    to extend the statute of limitations for the Decedent’s Husband to file his Petition for Elective
    Share for an additional 60 days and the Probate Court extended the time to October 31,
    2003.3
    Now the Executor comes to this Court and pleads the statute of limitations claiming
    that the Probate Court did not have subject-matter jurisdiction to extend the statute of
    limitations, and therefore, the Agreed Order was ineffective to extend the time for the
    Decedent’s Husband to file his petition. Nowhere in the pleadings or the proof was there any
    issue raised in the Probate Court challenging the jurisdiction of the trial court to extend the
    statute of limitations by agreement. The Executor now contends that unless there was
    litigation pending the Probate Court had no jurisdiction to enter the Agreed Order.
    The Executor relies on Ferris v. Fort, 2 Tenn. Ch. 147, 150 (1874), wherein the
    Chancellor held that the widow’s formal dissent from the will must be made in open court
    within the time limit. The Court acknowledged that “a widow may assert her rights as
    though she had dissented in time, if she has been prevented from dissenting, within the
    limited time, by fraud” or “if the personal representative refuse to disclose to her, upon her
    application, the condition of her husband’s estate within said period,” or “where there is no
    personal representative to give her information.” 
    Id. The Court
    went on to note that the
    assertion of such right “was reserved exclusively to a court of equity” and the county court
    had “no such jurisdiction.” 
    Id. Pursuant to
    Tennessee Code Annotated section 16-2-506(20)(A), the judge of
    Division VII of the Davidson County Circuit Court, in addition to the jurisdiction of a Circuit
    Court judge, “shall have concurrent chancery court jurisdiction and exclusive jurisdiction
    3
    W hile the Agreed Order provided for an extension of 60 days, which would have been until September 30,
    2005, the decretal portion of the Probate Court’s order set October 31, 2003 as the final date to file, making
    that the last day to file regardless of the sixty days recited earlier in the Agreed Order.
    10
    over the probate of wills and the administration of estates, including the estates of
    dependents and of wards under guardianships and conservatorships.” Stated differently, that
    section of the Code vests Division VII with probate jurisdiction and the entire jurisdiction of
    the Chancery Court of Davidson County. Therefore, Division VII clearly has subject matter
    jurisdiction over wills and estates, including the will in this case.
    Having all the powers of a Chancery Court, the Probate Court can utilize equitable
    remedies such as “equitable estoppel.” The doctrine of “equitable estoppel” “tolls the
    running of the statute of limitations where the defendant has ‘misled the plaintiff into failing
    to file [his] action within the statutory period of limitations.’” Fahrner v. S.W. Mfg., Inc., 
    48 S.W.3d 141
    , 145 (Tenn. 2001) quoting Norton v. Everhart, 
    895 S.W.2d 317
    , 321 (Tenn.
    1995). “A clear example, and the one most prominent in the case law, is a defendant’s
    promise not to plead the statute of limitations, which he breaks once the plaintiff has waited
    for the statute to expire before filing his complaint.” 
    Fahrner, 48 S.W.3d at 145
    . See also
    American Mutual Liab. Ins. Co. v. Baxter, 
    210 Tenn. 242
    , 247-48, 
    357 S.W.2d 825
    , 827
    (1962); Bernard v. Houston Ezell Corp., 
    968 S.W.2d 855
    , 862 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1997); Sparks
    v. Metro. Gov. of Nashville, 
    771 S.W.2d 430
    , 433 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1989).
    The Executor, through his counsel, represented to the Decedent’s Husband, his
    counsel and to the Probate Court, as evidenced by the signatures of counsel on the Agreed
    Order, that he agreed to extend the statute of limitations to October 31, 2003 for the
    Decedent’s Husband to file his Petition for Elective Share.4 Now, the Executor pleads the
    statute of limitations claiming that the Probate Court lacked subject-matter jurisdiction to
    extend the statute of limitations and that the Agreed Order was not effective to extend the
    time for the Decedent’s Husband to file his petition. In essence, the Executor is claiming
    that the original limitations period should apply even though he agreed to extend it.
    Pursuant to Tennessee Code Annotated section 16-2-506(20)(A), the Probate Court
    clearly had jurisdiction over this matter. Furthermore, this case is a clear example of when
    “equitable estoppel” should apply. Therefore, we hold that the Executor is equitably
    estopped from raising the bar of the statute of limitations on appeal because he agreed to
    extend the limitation period to October 31, 2003, and the Decedent’s Husband filed his
    petition on October 31, 2003. Furthermore, the statute of limitations is an affirmative
    defense and must be specifically pleaded in the trial court. Rule 8.03 Tenn. R. Civ. P.;
    George v. Building Materials Corp. of America, 
    44 S.W.3d 481
    , 486 (Tenn. 2001). That was
    never done in this case, even though the litigation continued on for years after the Agreed
    Order was entered by the Probate Court.
    II.     Whether the trial court erred in allowing the Husband to go forward with his
    Petition for Elective Share when the Husband had accepted the benefits of
    the bequest to him under the will and signed and delivered to the Executor a
    document titled “Receipt and Waiver” acknowledging receipt of the benefits
    4
    The Executor’s counsel’s signature was placed on the Agreed Order by the Husband’s counsel “with
    permission,” a common practice among attorneys accepted by courts everywhere. No issue was raised
    about the signature of the Executor’s counsel being affixed by the opposing counsel.
    11
    accorded him in the will and releasing the estate from any further liability to
    him.
    In essence, the Executor claims that the Decedent’s Husband waived his right to his
    elective share of the estate by signing the “Receipt and Waiver” and accepting the benefits of
    the bequest to him under the will.
    “Waiver is a voluntary relinquishment or abandonment of a known right or
    privilege.” Faught v. Estate of Faught, 
    730 S.W.2d 323
    , 325-26 (Tenn. 1987) (citing
    Chattem, Inc. v. Provident Life & Accident Insurance Co., 
    626 S.W.2d 953
    , 955 (Tenn.
    1984); Felts v. Tennessee Consolidated Retirement System, 
    650 S.W.2d 371
    , 375 (Tenn.
    1983)). “Thus, when an individual does not know of his rights or when he fails to fully
    understand them, there can be no effective waiver of those rights.” Faught v. Estate of
    
    Faught, 730 S.W.2d at 326
    .
    The Executor of the estate occupied a fiduciary role in his dealings with the
    Decedent’s Husband as a beneficiary of the estate. 
    Id. “Because of
    this fiduciary role, the
    [Executor was] required to disclose all material facts to [the Decedent’s Husband] including
    the value of the estate, the value of the house, and the value of [the Decedent’s Husband’s]
    statutory share of the estate.” 
    Id. (citations omitted).
         The Executor has the burden of
    proving by a preponderance of the evidence that he provided the Decedent’s Husband with
    the required information. 
    Id. From the
    record, we find that the Executor did not fulfill his
    responsibilities as a fiduciary by disclosing all material facts to the Decedent’s Husband,
    particularly the value of the Husband’s elective share. Because the Executor did not inform
    the Husband of the value of his elective share and the Husband was not represented by
    counsel, we further find that the Husband did not knowingly waive his statutory right to an
    elective share of the estate by signing the document titled “Receipt and Waiver.” Hence, the
    Probate Court did not err by allowing the Husband to go forward with his Petition for
    Elective Share after the Husband signed and delivered the “Receipt and Waiver” to the
    Executor acknowledging receipt of the benefits accorded him in the will and releasing the
    estate from any further liability to him.
    However, the doctrine of election requires a person to either accept a benefit under a
    will and adopt the whole contents of the instrument, conforming to all its provisions, or
    renounce the will and exercise rights inconsistent with the testator’s intent. Colvert v. Wood,
    
    25 S.W. 963
    , 965 (Tenn. 1894). The doctrine of election applies to a surviving spouse
    because he or she has the right to either accept the benefits under the will or exercise his or
    her right to an elective share of the deceased spouse’s estate. Thus, the surviving spouse
    must elect either to receive the elective share or the benefits under the will, but the surviving
    spouse cannot elect to receive both.
    Once a person makes an election, the doctrine of equitable estoppel prevents that
    person from taking a position contrary to the election. The doctrine of equitable estoppel,
    when applied to probate cases, provides “that a man shall not take any beneficial interest in a
    will, and at the same time set up any right or claim of his own, even if otherwise legal and
    well founded, which shall defeat, or in any way prevent, the full effect and operation of every
    part of the will.” Elmore v. Covington, 
    172 S.W.2d 809
    , 812 (Tenn. 1943) (quoting
    
    12 Will. v
    . Williams, 
    83 Tenn. 438
    , 445 (1885)). Equitable estoppel requires evidence of
    the following elements with respect to the party against whom estoppel is asserted:
    (1)       Conduct which amounts to a false representation or concealment of material facts,
    or, at least, which is calculated to convey the impression that the facts are otherwise
    than, and inconsistent with, those which the party subsequently attempts to assert; (2)
    Intention, or at least expectation that such conduct shall be acted upon by the other
    party; (3) Knowledge, actual or constructive of the real facts.
    Osborne v. Mountain Life Ins. Co., 
    130 S.W.3d 769
    , 774 (Tenn. 2004) (citing Callahan v.
    Town of Middleton, 
    292 S.W.2d 501
    , 508 (Tenn. 1954)). With respect to the party who is
    asserting the doctrine, equitable estoppel requires evidence of the following elements:
    (1) Lack of knowledge and of the means of knowledge of the truth as to the
    facts in question; (2) Reliance upon the conduct of the party estopped; and (3)
    Action based thereon of such a character as to change his position
    prejudicially.
    
    Id. In this
    case, the Executor is asserting the doctrine of equitable estoppel against the
    Husband. For equitable estoppel to apply, the Husband must have actual or construction
    knowledge of the “real facts.” As previously stated, the Executor did not fulfill his fiduciary
    responsibilities by providing the required information to the Decedent’s Husband,
    particularly the value of the Husband’s elective share. Now, the Executor is claiming the
    doctrine of equitable estoppel. As a result of the Executor’s negligence in fulfilling his
    responsibilities, the Husband apparently did not understand or was confused about his right
    to accept the benefits under the will or to receive his elective share. Thus, the doctrine of
    equitable estoppel does not apply because the Husband did not have actual or constructive
    knowledge of the facts.
    Additionally, the doctrine of “unclean hands” applies to the Executor. The doctrine
    of “unclean hands” has been explained as follows: “[A] complainant, who has been guilty of
    unconscientious conduct or bad faith, or has committed any wrong, in reference to a
    particular transaction, cannot have the aid of a Court of Equity in enforcing any alleged
    rights growing out of such transaction.” Hogue v. Kroger Co., 
    213 Tenn. 365
    , 
    373 S.W.2d 714
    , 716 (1962) (quoting Gibson's Suits in Chancery § 51). “Once found to exist, the
    doctrine of unclean hands repels the unclean plaintiff at the steps of the Courthouse.”
    Farmers & Merchants Bank v. Templeton, 
    646 S.W.2d 920
    , 924 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1983).
    Therefore, because the Executor failed to fulfill his fiduciary duties resulting in the
    Husband’s confusion as to his rights, the doctrine of unclean hands prevents the Executor
    from claiming the doctrine of equitable estoppel. Hence, the Husband may change his
    election.
    To change his election, the Husband must ask that the whole transaction resulting
    from the election be set aside and return anything that he received as a result of his initial
    13
    election. See Gore v. Howard, 
    30 S.W. 730
    , 732 (Tenn. 1895). Therefore, the Husband
    must reimburse the rental income collected from the property and any value he received by
    living in the fourth apartment after the Decedent’s death less any repairs made to the
    property located at 140 Tusculum Road or payments made regarding the property, including
    insurance, that the Husband made after the Decedent’s death. The Husband can reimburse
    the funds using his elective share.
    When calculating the Husband’s elective share, the amount of the reimbursement will
    be included in the net estate because the surviving spouse’s elective share is calculated
    notwithstanding Tennessee Code Annotated section 31-2-103, and “the [s]urviving [s]pouse
    should share in any gains or losses experienced by the Decedent’s estate prior to the
    distribution of [his or her] elective share.” Tenn. Code Ann. § 31-4-101(b); In re Estate of
    Jenkins, 
    8 S.W.3d 277
    , 286 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1999). However, once the Husband’s elective
    share is calculated, it shall be reduced by the reimbursement amount, and the reimbursement
    amount shall be distributed to the heirs of the property because “real property of a testate
    decedent vests immediately upon death in the beneficiaries of the will.” Tenn. Code Ann. §
    31-2-103. Hence, we find that the Probate Court did not err by allowing the Husband to go
    forward with his Petition for Elective Share but did err by not requiring the Husband to
    reimburse the heirs who own the property subject to the Husband’s life estate.
    III.    Whether the Probate Court erred in classifying the $160,000.00 that the
    decedent transferred to two pay-on-death accounts with her two adult
    children as fraudulent conveyances.
    To address this claim, we must first determine how the Decedent held the property,
    i.e., as separate property, as a tenant in common, or as a tenant by the entirety.
    Tenancy by the entirety is property ownership unique to married persons. Property
    acquired during a marriage is presumed to be held by the entirety, unless proven otherwise.
    Batson v. Batson, 
    769 S.W.2d 849
    , 858 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1988). “The essential characteristic
    of tenancy by the entirety is that ‘each spouse is seized of the whole or the entirety and not of
    a share, moiety, or divisible part.’” Grahl v. Davis, 
    971 S.W.2d 373
    , 378 (Tenn. 1998)
    quoting Sloan v. Jones, 
    241 S.W.2d 506
    , 507 (Tenn. 1951). “[O]nce a tenancy 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).
    The Tennessee Supreme Court has expressly held that tenancy by the entirety with
    the right of survivorship may exist in certificates of deposit and bank accounts. 
    Grahl, 971 S.W.2d at 378
    . Tennessee Code Annotated section 45-2-703(d)(1), which applies to all
    accounts opened after January 1, 1989, provides that “[w]hen opening a multiple-party
    deposit account, or amending an existing deposit account so as to create a multiple-party
    deposit account, each bank shall utilize account documents which enable the depositor to
    14
    designate ownership interest therein . . . .” Tennessee Code Annotated section 45-2-
    703(e)(4) provides that “[i]n the absence of any specific designation in accordance with
    subsection (d), property held under the title, tenancy by the entireties, carries a right of
    survivorship; property held under the title, joint tenancy, carries no right of survivorship
    unless a contrary intention is expressly stated.” Therefore, if the account was created after
    January 1, 1989 and a specific designation was made in accordance with Tennessee Code
    Annotated section 45-2-703(d), the specific designation controls. If the account had no
    specific designation or was created before January 1, 1989, the Probate Court must determine
    how the bank account was held by the Decedent and her Husband, i.e. tenancy by the
    entirety, which is presumed, or tenants in common. Hence, this issue must be remanded to
    the Probate Court to ultimately determine how the bank account was held by the Decedent
    and her Husband.
    If the Probate Court determines that the bank account was held as tenants by the
    entirety, the issue then becomes whether money withdrawn by one spouse from a bank
    account held by the entirety is still held as tenants by the entirety. The case law is unclear on
    this issue. In Sloan v. Jones, 
    241 S.W.2d 506
    , 508-09 (Tenn. 1951) (quoting Madden v.
    Gosztonyi Sav. & Trust Co., 
    331 Pa. 476
    , 
    200 A. 624
    , 630 (1938)), our Supreme Court
    quoted with approval the following passage:
    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 and 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 Supreme Court of Tennessee also quoted this passage in Griffin v. Prince, 
    632 S.W.2d 532
    , 536 (Tenn. 1982).
    In Mays v. Brighton Bank, 
    832 S.W.2d 347
    , 350-51 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1992), this Court
    held that “[f]unds 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.”
    Our Supreme Court addressed the discrepancy between Sloan and Mays in a footnote
    in Grahl v. Davis stating that:
    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
    15
    recovered by the other spouse absent a showing of fraud. Mays appears to be
    inconsistent with this Court’s prior decisions.
    
    Grahl, 971 S.W.2d at 379
    n.3. We find that this Court’s prior decision in Mays is
    inconsistent with the Supreme Court’s prior decision in 
    Sloan, 241 S.W.2d at 508-09
    , that
    money withdrawn from a bank account held by husband and wife as tenants by the entirety is
    impressed with the entirety provision and that any one who receives the property knowing it
    is impressed with an entirety provision takes subject to the provision.
    Therefore, if 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 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
    .
    If the Probate Court determines on remand that the account was not held as tenants by
    the entirety, Tennessee Code Annotated section 31-1-105 may apply. Section 31-1-105
    defines a fraudulent transfer as:
    Any conveyance made fraudulently to children or others, with an intent to defeat
    the surviving spouse of the surviving spouse’s distributive or elective share, is, at
    the election of the surviving spouse, includable in the decedent’s net estate under
    § 31-4-101(b), and voidable to the extent the other assets in the decedent’s net
    estate are insufficient to fund and pay the elective share amount payable to the
    surviving spouse under § 31-4-101(c).
    For Tennessee Code Annotated section 31-1-105 to apply, courts must determine that
    the decedent intended to prevent the surviving spouse from receiving his or her elective share
    and that the transfer was fraudulent. McClure v. Stegall, 
    729 S.W.2d 263
    , 265 (Tenn. Ct.
    App. 1987); In re Estate of Gray, 
    729 S.W.2d 668
    , 672-73 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1987). In this
    case, the Probate Court specifically found that the Decedent intended to prevent her Husband
    from receiving his elective share of the property and that the Husband “established all seven
    factors necessary for proving a fraudulent conveyance . . . .”
    On appeal, we must first determine whether the Probate Court erred in determining
    that the Decedent intended to prevent her Husband from receiving his elective share of the
    property. Prior to her death, the Decedent transferred $160,000 from a joint bank account
    with her Husband into two pay on death accounts that were payable to her children. At trial,
    the Husband testified that he did not know that the Decedent transferred the funds. Based on
    the Decedent’s actions and the Husband’s testimony, we find that the evidence does not
    preponderate against the Probate Court’s finding that the Decedent intended to prevent her
    Husband from receiving his elective share of the funds.
    16
    Having determined that the Decedent intended to prevent her Husband from receiving
    his elective share, we must determine whether the transfer was fraudulent. In determining
    whether the transfer was fraudulent, the following factors must be considered:
    (1) whether the transfer was made with or without consideration; (2) the size
    of the transfer in relation to the [Decedent’s] total estate; (3) the time between
    the transfer and the [Decedent’s] death; (4) relations which existed between
    the husband and the wife at the time of the transfer; (5) the source from which
    the property came; (6) whether the transfer was illusory; and (7) whether the
    [surviving spouse] was adequately provided for in the will.
    Finley v. Finley, 
    726 S.W.2d 923
    , 924 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1986).
    The Executor claims that the evidence preponderates against the Probate Court’s
    finding that the transfer was fraudulent because the funds came from property owned solely
    by the Decedent and her Husband “ratified and confirmed [the transfer] when he took the
    remaining $100,000.00” of the $260,000 balance and gave it to his children. Considering the
    seven factors listed above, we find that the evidence does not preponderate against the
    Probate Court’s finding.
    First, the transfer of the $160,000 was made without consideration. Second, the
    $160,000 is a large portion of the Decedent’s estate. Third, the Decedent transferred the
    money approximately two months before her death. Fourth, the Decedent had disagreements
    with her Husband regarding the preparation of their wills in the months preceding her death.
    Fifth, the source of the money was martial property. Prior to her marriage to her
    Husband, the Decedent owned five unimproved lots on Bart Drive, which she later sold.
    During her marriage to her Husband, the Decedent purchased duplexes on McLendon Court
    from the proceeds of the property on Bart Drive. The deed to the duplexes lists both the
    Decedent and her Husband as owners. As stated before, property acquired during a marriage
    by husband and wife is presumed to be held by the entirety, unless proven otherwise.
    Batson v. 
    Batson, 769 S.W.2d at 858
    . “Separate property may become marital property
    when there has been a transmutation of the separateness.” Barnhill v. Barnhill, 
    826 S.W.2d 443
    , 452 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1991).
    The doctrine of transmutation was clearly defined in 
    Batson, 769 S.W.2d at 858
    :
    [Transmutation] occurs when separate property is treated in such a way as to
    give evidence to an intention that it become marital property. One method of
    causing transmutation is to purchase property with separate funds but to take
    title in joint tenancy. This may also be done by placing separate property in
    the names of both spouses. The rationale underlying both these doctrines is
    that dealing with property in these ways creates a rebuttable presumption of a
    gift to the marital estate. This presumption is based also upon the provision in
    many marital property statutes that property acquired during the marriage is
    presumed marital. The presumption can be rebutted by evidence of
    17
    circumstances or communications clearly indicating an intent that the property
    remain separate.
    Therefore, once the deed to the duplexes on McClendon Court was signed, listing the
    Decedent and her Husband as owners, the property transmutated into marital property
    creating a rebuttable presumption of a gift to the marital estate. The record contains no
    evidence that the Decedent did not intend for the property to be a gift. Later, the Decedent
    and her Husband sold the duplexes for $260,000 and deposited the money into a joint bank
    account. The $160,000 that the Decedent transferred to her children came out of the
    proceeds from the duplexes. Therefore, the source of the $160,000 dollars was martial
    property.
    The sixth factor is whether the transfer was illusory. The Husband claimed in court
    that he did not know about the transfer of the $160,000. However, the Executor claims that
    the Husband knew about and agreed to the transfers of the $160,000 because he received
    $100,000 of the proceeds from the duplexes and gave the money to his children.
    The seventh factor is whether the Husband was adequately provided for under the
    will. Pursuant to the will, the Decedent bequeathed to her Husband a life estate in the
    property located at 140 Tusculum Road so long as he maintained the property and used the
    property for his principal residence. The Decedent also bequeathed to her Husband the rental
    income from the three apartments located at 140 Tusculum Road to be used to “pay for all
    upkeep, maintenance, taxes, insurance, rental expenses and the remainder as retirement
    income until he moves away from [the property].” She further bequeathed to her Husband
    the depository accounts, certificates of deposit, her share of the motor home, and any
    automobiles and/or trucks that they purchased jointly. According to the Decedent and the
    Husband’s tax returns, in 2001, the property at 140 Tusculum Road made a profit of $3,435
    after the payment of all upkeep, maintenance, taxes, insurance and rental expenses. In 2002,
    the year the Decedent died, the property made a profit of $742. In 2003, the property had a
    loss of $1,370 and was in need of repairs. The Probate Court determined that the depository
    accounts were valued at $15,000, that no certificates of deposit passed pursuant to the will,
    that the Decedent’s share of the motor home was valued at $9,000, and that the Decedent and
    her Husband did not own any automobiles jointly.
    Factors one through five suggest that the conveyance was fraudulent, specifically the
    fact that the conveyance occurred two months prior to the Decedent’s death, it was without
    consideration, the source of the money was from martial property and the Decedent and her
    Husband were having problems regarding their wills. As for factors six and seven, the
    evidence does not preponderate for or against a finding that the transfer was fraudulent.
    Therefore, if on remand the Probate Court finds that the $160,000 was not held as tenants by
    the entirety, we find that the evidence does not preponderate against the Probate Court’s
    finding that the Decedent’s conveyance of the $160,000 was fraudulent.
    IV.      Whether the Probate Court erred in calculating the award of exempt
    property.
    18
    On appeal, the Executor claims that the Probate Court erred by awarding as exempt
    property the value of tangible personal property, consisting of household furnishings and
    lawn equipment because the property was used primarily in the Decedent’s trade or business,
    was used for investment purposes, or was owned jointly by the Decedent and her Husband.
    The Husband claims that the Probate Court did not err in calculating the award of exempt
    property.
    Section 30-2-101 of the Tennessee Code Annotated provides:
    (a)The surviving spouse of an intestate decedent, or a spouse who elects
    against a decedent's will, is entitled to receive from the decedent's estate the
    following exempt property having a fair-market value (in excess of any
    indebtedness and other amounts secured by any security interests in such
    property) which does not exceed fifty thousand dollars ($50,000):
    (1) Tangible personal property normally located in, or used in or about, the
    principal residence of the decedent and not used primarily in a trade or
    business or for investment purposes, and
    (2) A motor vehicle or vehicles not used primarily in a trade or business. If
    there is no surviving spouse, the decedent's unmarried minor children are
    entitled as tenants in common only to such exempt property as described in
    subdivision (a)(1). Rights to such exempt property are in addition to any
    benefit or share passing to the surviving spouse or unmarried minor children
    by intestate succession, elective share, homestead or year's support allowance.
    The Executor claims that the Probate Court erred by concluding that the household
    furnishings, lawn equipment, and the motor home were exempt property. A husband and
    wife can own property separately, as tenants in common, or as tenants by the entirety. To
    determine whether the property is exempt, the Probate Court must determine whether the
    Decedent and her Husband owned the household furnishings, lawn equipment, and the motor
    home separately, as tenants in common, or as tenants by the entirety.
    “It is well established in Tennessee . . . that personal property may be held by the
    entirety.” White v. 
    Watson, 571 S.W.2d at 495
    . Property acquired during a marriage by a
    husband and a wife is presumed to be held by the entirety, unless proven otherwise. Batson
    v. 
    Batson, 769 S.W.2d at 858
    . “The essential characteristic of tenancy by the entirety is that
    ‘each spouse is seized of the whole or the entirety and not of a share, moiety, or divisible
    part.’” Grahl v. 
    Davis, 971 S.W.2d at 378
    quoting Sloan v. 
    Jones, 241 S.W.2d at 507
    .
    “Upon the death of one spouse, ownership of tenancy by the entirety property immediately
    vests in the survivor, and the laws of descent and distribution do not apply.” 
    Grahl, 971 S.W.2d at 378
    .
    In this case, the Probate Court found that the household furnishings, lawn equipment,
    and the motor home were jointly owned by the Decedent and her Husband. The Probate
    Court treated the items of personal property as if they were held by the Decedent and her
    Husband as tenants in common and divided the value of the property in half. The Probate
    19
    Court then awarded the Decedent’s half-interest in the property to the Husband as exempt
    property under Tennessee Code Annotated section 30-2-101(a)(1). The Probate Court stated
    that Tennessee Code Annotated section 30-2-101 “does not distinguish between tangible
    personal property that is solely owned by a decedent and tangible personal property that is
    jointly held by a decedent and a spouse.”
    The cited section, Tennessee Code Annotated section 30-2-101(a)(1), is a portion of
    the law of descent and distribution that gives the surviving spouse rights to certain exempt
    property that is part of the Decedent’s estate, i.e., tangible personal property having a fair
    market value not exceeding $50,000.00 that is “normally located in, or used in or about, the
    principal residence of the decedent and not used primarily in a trade or business or for
    investment purposes.” Tenn. Code Ann. § 30-2-101(a)(1). However, property held by a
    husband and a wife is presumed to be held by the entirety, and the laws of descent and
    distribution do not apply to property held as tenants by the entirety. Therefore, if the
    property was held by the Decedent and her Husband as tenants by the entirety, Tennessee
    Code Annotated section 30-2-101 does not apply.
    The Probate Court never addressed whether the household furnishings, lawn
    equipment and motor home were held as tenants by the entirety. Hence, we remand this
    issue to the Probate Court to determine whether the household furnishings, lawn equipment
    and motor home were held by the Decedent and her Husband as tenants by the entirety. As
    to the household furnishings, the Executor claims and the Decedent’s Husband admits that
    some of the household furnishings were owned solely by the Decedent. Therefore, on
    remand, the Probate Court must determine which household furnishings were held separately
    and which were held as tenants by the entirety.
    Furthermore, once the Probate Court determines which items of tangible personal
    property, including the lawn equipment and household furnishings, were not held as tenants
    by the entirety, the Probate Court must determine whether that property was primarily used
    in a trade or business or for investment purposes. The Probate Court found that the lawn
    equipment and the household furnishings were exempt property and not used primarily in a
    trade or business. Clearly, the furniture in the three furnished apartments that the Decedent
    and her Husband rented to their tenants were used primarily in a trade or business.
    Therefore, we find that the evidence preponderates against the Probate Court’s finding that
    the furniture in the three apartments that the Husband and the Decedent rented were exempt
    property.
    The Probate Court also found that the lawn equipment was exempt property and not
    used primarily in a trade or business. The lawn equipment was used on the property located
    at 140 Tusculum Road where the Decedent and her Husband rented three apartments to their
    tenants. However, the Decedent and her Husband also lived in an apartment on the same
    property. As a result, the Probate Court had to determine whether the lawn equipment was
    used for the upkeep of the property primarily for the benefit of the renters or for the benefit
    of the Decedent and her Husband. The Executor cites no facts suggesting that the lawn
    equipment was used primarily for the benefit of the renters. The record contains no rental
    agreement that suggests the renters were not only renting the apartments but also renting the
    property. Furthermore, the record contains no evidence that the renters actually enjoyed and
    20
    used the land. As previously stated, the standard of review of a trial court’s findings of fact
    is de novo, and we presume that the findings of fact are correct unless the preponderance of
    the evidence is otherwise. Tenn. R. App. P. 13(d); Rawlings v. John Hancock Mut. Life Ins.
    
    Co., 78 S.W.3d at 296
    . Therefore, we find that the evidence does not preponderate against
    the Probate Court’s finding that the lawn equipment was not used primarily in a trade or
    business.
    V.      Whether the Probate Court erred in calculating the award of year’s support
    by deducting the award of exempt property from the award of year’s
    support.
    On appeal, the Husband claims that the Probate Court erred in calculating the award
    of year’s support by deducting the award of exempt property from the award of year’s
    support.
    Tennessee Code Annotated section 30-2-102(a) states that:
    In addition to the right to homestead, an elective share under title 31, chapter
    4, and exempt property, the surviving spouse of an intestate, or a surviving
    spouse who elects to take against a decedent's will, is entitled to a reasonable
    allowance in money out of the estate for such surviving spouse's maintenance
    during the period of one (1) year after the death of the spouse, according to
    such surviving spouse's previous standard of living, taking into account the
    condition of the estate of the deceased spouse. The court may consider the
    totality of the circumstances in fixing the allowance authorized by this
    section, including assets which may have passed to the spouse outside
    probate.
    Pursuant to the cited section of our Code, the Probate Court found that for the
    Husband to maintain his standard of living for one year, he would need $25,142.38. The
    Probate Court then deducted the award of exempt property from the award of year’s support
    and arrived at a negative balance.
    The Husband claims that the Probate Court erred by deducting the award of exempt
    property from the award of year’s support. The year’s support statute provides that an award
    of year’s support is “[i]n addition to the right to homestead, and elective share under title 31,
    chapter 4, and exempt property . . . .” Tenn. Code Ann. § 30-2-102(a) (emphasis added).
    Thus, the award for year’s support is clearly in addition to the award of exempt property.
    Therefore, the Probate Court erred when calculating the award for year’s support by
    offsetting the year’s support award with the award of exempt property.
    The Court stated that it was “required to credit the amount of exempt property
    awarded to the surviving spouse against the allowance of year’s support” pursuant to
    Tennessee Code Annotated section 30-2-102(c), which provides:
    The court may authorize the surviving spouse to receive any personal property
    of the estate in lieu of all or part of the money allowance authorized by this
    21
    section, and in any case where the court makes an allowance in money, the
    surviving spouse shall be entitled to select and receive any personal property
    of the estate, of a value not exceeding the allowance in money, which shall be
    in lieu of and which value shall be credited against the allowance.
    Tennessee Code Annotated section 30-2-102(c) gives the Probate Court the option to allow
    the surviving spouse to select property of the estate in lieu of money. Presumably, the
    spouse would select non-exempt property. The statute does not state that the court can give
    exempt property in lieu of the award for year’s support. Once the Probate Court allows the
    surviving spouse to select personal property in lieu of money, the right to choose which
    personal property is selected belongs to the surviving spouse, not the court. Therefore, we
    find that the Probate Court erred in calculating the award for year’s support by offsetting the
    year’s support award with the award of exempt property.
    VI.      Whether the Probate Court erred when determining the award for year’s
    support.
    The Executor claims that the trial court erred when determining the award for year’s
    support:
    A. by considering the Decedent’s Social Security benefits when calculating the award
    for year’s support.
    B. by not considering that the Husband “received over $1,200.00 a month in rent from
    the three apartments in the house” and “did not include the value to the Husband of
    continuing to live in the fourth apartment in the house at virtually no expense since
    the operational cost of the house was paid from the rents from the other three
    apartments . . . .”
    C. by not considering that the Husband “received over $200,000.00 in the jointly owned
    real estate, i.e., the two townhouses, consisting of two units each, located on Lots 9
    and 10 on McLendon Court in Antioch, TN, that received the income from the said
    townhouses, which in 2002 was $24,600.00 with a profit of $14,330.00, and in 2003,
    the year after Mrs. Grass died, the Husband received $20,510.00 with a profit of
    $13,251.00 with no living expense attributable to his deceased spouse . . . .”
    D. by not considering that the 1.16 acre tract of land located on Bart Drive in Antioch,
    Tennessee, that the Husband “received by virtue of ownership with an undisputed
    value of $5,800.00 . . . ,” and
    E. by not considering that “the estate had less than $15,000.00 in cash, and that as a
    matter of law, the year’s support cannot be paid out of the real estate of the
    decedent.”
    Tennessee Code Annotated section 30-2-102(a) states that “a surviving spouse who
    elects to take against a decedent’s will, is entitled to a reasonable allowance in money out of
    22
    the estate for such surviving spouse’s maintenance during the period of one (1) year after the
    death of the spouse, according to such surviving spouse’s previous standard of living, taking
    into account the condition of the estate of the deceased spouse.” Thus, pursuant to this
    statute, the award for year’s support is based on the Husband’s standard of living prior to the
    Decedent’s death. “[T]he words ‘taking into account the condition of the estate’ refer to a
    situation in which the estate is not sufficient to pay the full year’s support without serious
    impairment or depletion . . . .” Phipps v. Watts, 
    781 S.W.2d 863
    , 867 (Tenn. Ct. App.
    1989).5
    Tennessee Code Annotated section 30-2-102(a) further states that “[t]he court may
    consider the totality of the circumstances in fixing the allowance authorized by this section,
    including assets which may have passed to the spouse outside probate.” (emphasis added).
    Therefore, the decision to consider the totality of the circumstances is left to the discretion of
    the Probate Court, and the standard of review is the abuse of discretion standard.
    In Eldridge v. Eldridge, 
    42 S.W.3d 82
    , 85 (Tenn.2001), our Supreme Court stated the
    following regarding the abuse of discretion standard of review:
    Under the abuse of discretion standard, a trial court's ruling “will be upheld so
    long as reasonable minds can disagree as to propriety of the decision made.”
    State v. Scott, 
    33 S.W.3d 746
    , 752 (Tenn. 2000); State v. Gilliland, 
    22 S.W.3d 266
    , 273 (Tenn. 2000). A trial court abuses its discretion only when it
    “applie[s] an incorrect legal standard, or reache[s] a decision which is against
    logic or reasoning that cause[s] an injustice to the party complaining.” State v.
    Shirley, 
    6 S.W.3d 243
    , 247 (Tenn. 1999). The abuse of discretion standard
    does not permit the appellate court to substitute its judgment for that of the
    trial court. Myint v. Allstate Ins. Co., 
    970 S.W.2d 920
    , 927 (Tenn. 1998).
    A. The Executor claims that the trial court erred when determining the award for year’s
    support by considering the Decedent’s Social Security benefits when calculating the
    award for year’s support.
    Pursuant to 42 United States Code section 402(k)(2)(B), the surviving spouse must
    elect to receive either his or her own Social Security benefits or to receive the deceased
    spouse’s Social Security benefits, but not both. The Executor claims that because the
    Decedent’s Husband must elect to receive either his or the Decedent’s Social Security
    benefits, but not both, then the Probate Court should only consider either the Decedent’s
    benefits or the Husband’s benefits when calculating the award for year’s support. As stated
    5
    W hile Phipps defines “taking into account the condition of the estate” as “a situation in which the estate is
    not sufficient to pay the full year’s support without serious impairment or depletion . . . ,” this Court has
    affirmed an award equal to the value of the Decedent’s personal assets in the case of In re Estate of Gray,
    729 S.W .2d 668, 673 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1987). Also, in the case of In re Estate of Truett, No. 02A01-9605-
    PB-00118, 1997 W L 160141, at *3 (Tenn. Ct. App. April 7, 1997), this Court affirmed an award of year’s
    support in the amount of $21,500 and exempt property out of an estate worth $33,900, and in the case of In
    re Estate of Bass, No. 02A01-9504-CH-00094, 
    1996 WL 325582
    , at *2 (Tenn. Ct. App. June 11, 1996), this
    Court affirmed an award of year’s support of $14,000 out of an estate containing $33,665.21.
    23
    above, the award for year’s support is based on the surviving spouse’s previous standard of
    living. Tenn. Code Ann. § 30-2-102(a). The surviving spouse’s previous standard of living
    would surly have been dependent on both the surviving spouse’s income and the deceased
    spouse’s income, including Social Security benefits paid to both of them. Hence, we find
    that the Probate Court did not err by considering the Decedent’s Social Security benefits
    when calculating the award for year’s support.
    A. The Executor claims that the trial court erred when determining the award for year’s
    support by not considering that the Husband “received over $1,200.00 a month in rent
    from the three apartments in the house” and “did not include the value to the Husband
    of continuing to live in the fourth apartment in the house at virtually no expense since
    the operational cost of the house was paid from the rents from the other three
    apartments . . . .”
    Pursuant to Tennessee Code Annotated section 30-2-102(a), the award for year’s
    support is determined according to the “surviving spouse’s previous standard of living,
    taking into account the condition of the estate of the deceased spouse.” The rental income
    the Husband received from the three apartments and the value of the Husband living in the
    fourth apartment after the Decedent’s death does not relate to the Husband’s standard of
    living prior to the Decedent’s death. Both of those facts occurred after the decedent’s death.
    Therefore, when considering the surviving spouse’s previous standard of living, the Court
    did not err by refusing to consider that the Husband received rent from three apartments and
    lived in a fourth apartment in the house located at 140 Tusculum Road in Antioch.
    The Probate Court “may consider the totality of the circumstances in fixing” the
    award for year’s support, such as the rents the Husband received from the three apartments
    and the value of the Husband living in the fourth apartment. Tenn. Code Ann. § 30-2-102(a)
    (emphasis added). However, the Probate Court’s consideration of these circumstances is
    reviewed under the abuse of discretion standard. “A trial court abuses its discretion only
    when it ‘applie[s] an incorrect legal standard, or reache[s] a decision which is against logic
    or reasoning that cause[s] an injustice to the party complaining.’” 
    Eldridge, 42 S.W.3d at 85
    (quoting State v. 
    Shirley, 6 S.W.3d at 247
    ). The Probate Court quite logically based its
    determination of the award for year’s support on the prior tax returns filed by the Decedent
    and her Husband. Therefore, we find that the Probate Court did not abuse its discretion by
    refusing to consider the rents the Husband received from the three apartments and the value
    of the Husband living in the fourth apartment.
    C. The Executor claims that the trial court erred when determining the award for year’s
    support by not considering that the Husband “received over $200,000.00 in the
    jointly owned real estate, i.e., the two townhouses, consisting of two units each,
    located on Lots 9 and 10 on McLendon Court in Antioch, TN, that received the
    income from the said townhouses, which in 2002 was $24,600.00 with a profit of
    $14,330.00, and in 2003, the year after Mrs. Grass died, the Husband received
    $20,510.00 with a profit of $13,251.00 with no living expense attributable to his
    deceased spouse . . . .”
    24
    As previously stated, property acquired during a marriage is presumed to be held by
    the entirety, unless proven otherwise. 
    Batson, 769 S.W.2d at 858
    . “The essential
    characteristic of tenancy by the entirety is that ‘each spouse is seized of the whole or the
    entirety and not of a share, moiety, or divisible part.’” 
    Grahl, 971 S.W.2d at 378
    (quoting
    Sloan v. 
    Jones, 241 S.W.2d at 507
    ). “[O]nce a tenancy 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, 571 S.W.2d at 495
    . Therefore, if the townhouses were
    located on McLendon Court were held by the Decedent and her Husband as tenants by the
    entirety, then upon the Decedent’s death, the townhouses passed to the Husband outside of
    probate. The Probate Court “may consider the totality of the circumstances” when
    determining the award for year’s support, “including assets which may have passed to the
    spouse outside probate.” Tenn. Code Ann. § 30-2-102(a) (emphasis added).
    However, the Probate Court did not address whether the Decedent and her Husband
    held the townhouses as tenants by the entirety. No evidence in the record suggests that the
    Decedent and her Husband intended to hold the townhouses in any other form of ownership.
    The record does not contain a copy of the deed, but the inheritance tax return lists the
    townhouses as jointly owned. Nevertheless, the Probate Court, stating that the townhouses
    was jointly owned, included one half (1/2) of the value of the townhouses in the Decedent’s
    estate as if the Decedent and her Husband held the property as tenants in common.
    Therefore, because the Probate Court never addressed the issue of whether the Decedent and
    her Husband held the townhouses as tenants by the entirety, we remand this issue to the
    Probate Court to determine whether any evidence, such as a deed, overcomes the
    presumption that the townhouses located at McLendon Court was held by the Decedent and
    her Husband as tenants by the entirety.
    Even though the Probate Court included one half (1/2) the value of the townhouses
    in the Decedent’s estate, the Executor claims that the property passed to the Husband outside
    of probate. Assuming that the townhouses passed to the Husband outside of probate, the
    Probate Court may consider the townhouses, including all the rights attached to the
    townhouses, such as the right to rental income, when determining the award for year’s
    support. Tenn. Code Ann. § 30-2-102(a). The decision to consider the townhouses is left to
    the Probate Court’s discretion and the standard of review is the abuse of discretion standard.
    See Tenn. Code Ann. § 30-2-102(a). “A trial court abuses its discretion only when it
    ‘applie[s] an incorrect legal standard, or reache[s] a decision which is against logic or
    reasoning that cause[s] an injustice to the party complaining.’” 
    Eldridge, 42 S.W.3d at 85
    (quoting State v. 
    Shirley, 6 S.W.3d at 247
    ). The Probate Court logically based its
    determination of the award for year’s support on the income stated in the Decedent’s and her
    Husband’s prior joint tax returns. Therefore, we find that the Probate Court did not abuse its
    discretion by not considering the townhouses located on McLendon Court when determining
    the award of year’s support.
    D. The Executor claims that the trial court erred when determining the award for year’s
    support by not considering the 1.16 acre tract of land located on Bart Drive in
    Antioch, Tennessee, that the Husband “received by virtue of ownership with an
    undisputed value of $5,800.00 . . . .”
    25
    The record is unclear as to whether the property passed to the Husband outside of
    probate. Assuming arguendo that the property passed to the Husband outside of probate, the
    Probate Court “may consider the totality of the circumstances in fixing” the award for year’s
    support, “including assets which may have passed to the spouse outside probate.” Tenn.
    Code Ann. § 30-2-102(a) (emphasis added). The Probate Court’s consideration of those
    circumstances is reviewed under the abuse of discretion standard. “A trial court abuses its
    discretion only when it ‘applie[s] an incorrect legal standard, or reache[s] a decision which is
    against logic or reasoning that cause[s] an injustice to the party complaining.’” 
    Eldridge, 42 S.W.3d at 85
    (quoting State v. 
    Shirley, 6 S.W.3d at 247
    ). The Probate Court quite logically
    based its determination of the award for year’s support on the prior tax returns filed by the
    Decedent and her Husband. Therefore, we find that the Probate Court did not abuse its
    discretion by refusing to consider the 1.16 acre tract of land located on Bart Drive in
    Antioch.
    E. The Executor claims that the trial court erred when determining the award for years
    support by not considering that “the estate had less than $15,000.00 in cash, and that
    as a matter of law, the year’s support cannot be paid out of the real estate of the
    decedent.”
    Because of this Court’s findings in this opinion, this issue may be moot.
    Nevertheless, we will address this issue in case the Probate Court addresses it on remand. As
    stated above, the Probate Court must consider the “condition of the estate” when determining
    the award for year’s support. The “condition of the estate” refers to the estate’s ability to
    “pay the full year’s support without serious impairment or depletion.” 
    Phipps, 781 S.W.2d at 863
    . The case law confirms that the award for year’s support can only be satisfied from “the
    personal property and not the real property of the deceased.” In re Estate of Gray, 
    729 S.W.2d 668
    , 672 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1987). However, the “condition of the estate” refers to the
    estate as a whole and not only the personal property. Therefore, when determining the award
    for year’s support in view of the estate’s ability to “pay the full year’s support without
    serious impairment or depletion,” the Probate Court should consider all the property of the
    estate, including the real property. Nevertheless, once the award for year’s support is
    determined, only the personal property of the estate can be used to satisfy the award.
    VII.    Whether the Probate Court erred in relying on evidence that was not
    presented at trial but was only attached to a “Memorandum in Support of
    Executor’s Motion to Make Additional Findings and to Alter/Amend Order”
    to reduce the award for year’s support.
    The Husband claims that the Probate Court erred in relying on evidence that was not
    presented at trial but was only attached to a “Memorandum in Support of Executor’s Motion
    to Make Additional Findings and to Alter/Amend Order” to reduce the award for year’s
    support. Section 901(a) of the Tennessee Rules of Evidence provides:
    The requirement of authentication or identification as a condition precedent to
    admissibility is satisfied by evidence sufficient to the court to support a
    26
    finding by the trier of fact that the matter in question is what its proponent
    claims.
    Section 902 of the Tennessee Rules of Evidence provides:
    Extrinsic evidence of authenticity as a condition precedent to admissibility is
    not required as to the following:
    ***
    (11) Certified Records of Regularly Conducted Activity. - The original or a
    duplicate of a domestic record of regularly conducted activity that would be
    admissible under Rule 803(6) if accompanied by an affidavit of its custodian
    or other qualified person certifying that the record:
    (A) was made at or near the time of the occurrence of the matters set forth by,
    or from information transmitted by, a person with knowledge of those
    matters;
    (B) was kept in the course of the regularly conducted activity; and
    (C) was made by the regularly conducted activity as a regular practice.
    A party intending to offer a record into evidence under this paragraph must
    provide written notice of that intention to all adverse parties, and must make
    the record and declaration available for inspection sufficiently in advance of
    their offer into evidence to provide an adverse party with a fair opportunity to
    challenge them.
    On October 19, 2004, the Probate Court entered an “Order on Petition for Elective
    Share, Year’s Support, Exempt Property & Homestead” setting the award for year’s support.
    On November 17, 2004, the Executor filed a “Motion to Make Additional Findings and to
    Alter or Amend Order.” On November 18, 2004, the Executor filed a “Second Motion of
    Executor to Make Additional Findings and to Alter or Amend Order”.
    Subsequently, on February 4, 2005, the Executor filed a “Memorandum in Support of
    Executor’s Motion to Make Additional Findings and to Alter/Amend Order,” which had five
    attachments. One of the attachments was a group of bank statements from an account jointly
    held by the Decedent and her daughter. This was the first time that these bank statements
    were presented to the Probate Court. In the Memorandum, the Executor argued that, based
    on the bank statements, the Decedent directly deposited distributions from retirement funds
    in the amount of $21,076.62 into the joint account, and because the funds were directly
    deposited, the Decedent’s Husband never had use of the funds. The Executor further argued
    that, because the Husband did not have use of the funds, the Probate Court should not
    consider the funds in calculating the award for year’s support. On March 4, 2005, relying on
    the bank statements, the Probate Court entered an “Amended Order on Petition for Elective
    27
    Share, Year’s Support, Exempt Property, and Homestead” reducing the award for year’s
    support by $21,076.62.
    The Husband now argues that the Probate Court erred by relying on the bank
    statements because they were not properly before the Probate Court. The record indicates
    that these bank statements were not properly authenticated pursuant to Tennessee Rule of
    Evidence 901. The Executor presented no extrinsic evidence to authenticate the statements
    nor did an employee of the bank or any witness testify as to the authenticity of the
    attachments. Also, the attachments were not self-authenticated pursuant to Tennessee Rule
    of Evidence 902 because the attachments were not “accompanied by an affidavit of its
    custodian or other qualified person.” Therefore, the Probate Court erred by relying on
    unauthenticated and uncross-examined evidence to reduce the award for year’s support. On
    remand this issue can be examined utilizing properly authenticated documents.
    VIII.    Whether the Husband is entitled to an exemption for Homestead.
    The Executor claims that the Husband is not entitled to an exemption for homestead
    because “he has elected against the provisions made for him in the Will and has therefor
    rejected the right to continue to reside in the real property owned in the Decedent’s name
    alone.” The Husband claims that he is entitled to an exemption for homestead pursuant to
    Tennessee Code Annotated sections 30-2-204 and 30-2-209. Tennessee Code Annotated
    section 26-2-301, provides:
    An individual, whether a head of family or not, shall be entitled to a
    homestead exemption upon real property which is owned by the individual
    and used by the individual or the individual’s spouse or dependent, as a
    principal place of residence. The aggregate value of such homestead
    exemption shall not exceed five thousand dollars ($5,000); provided,
    individuals who jointly own and use real property as their principal place of
    residence shall be entitled to homestead exemptions, the aggregate value of
    which exemptions combined shall not exceed seven thousand five hundred
    dollars ($7,500), which shall be divided equally among them in the event the
    homestead exemptions are claimed in the same proceeding; provided, if only
    one (1) of the joint owners of real property used as their principal place of
    residence is involved in the proceeding wherein homestead exemption is
    claimed, then the individual’s homestead exemption shall be five thousand
    dollars ($5,000). The homestead exemption shall not be subject to execution,
    attachment, or sale under legal proceedings during the life of the individual.
    Upon the death of an individual who is head of family, any such exemption
    shall inure to the benefit of the surviving spouse and their minor children for
    as long as the spouse or the minor children use such property as a principal
    place of residence.
    Tennessee Code Annotated section 30-2-204 states:
    (a) The surviving spouse may make application to any one of the courts
    named in § 30-2-202 in the county where the husband or wife, as the case may
    28
    be, last resided before death, for the appointment of two (2) freeholders or
    householders of the county, unconnected by affinity or consanguinity with
    those interested in the estate of the deceased, to allot and set apart the
    homestead to the applicant, in connection with the county surveyor, or his
    deputy.
    (b) Any action to set aside the property designated in this section shall be
    brought within the time limits set by § 31-4-102.
    Tennessee Code Annotated section 30-2-209 states:
    If real estate is so situated that homestead cannot be set apart, as herein
    provided, then the realty shall be sold and five thousand dollars ($5,000) of
    the proceeds invested in real estate, under the direction of the court having
    jurisdiction to be held as homestead subject to the law governing homestead,
    or if the court deems it more desirable and practical, it may order the
    payment of five thousand dollars ($5,000) in cash or other personal property
    outright and in fee to the surviving spouse, if any, otherwise to the minor
    children, if any, in lieu of all other homestead rights in the realty of the
    deceased.
    Pursuant to Tennessee Code Annotated section 26-2-301, the Husband is
    entitled to his homestead exemption in the property located at 140 Tusculum Road
    because the property was his principal place of residence immediately prior to the
    Decedent’s death. When the Decedent died, the property became the property of her
    son, James McClendon under the terms of her will, with a life estate reserved to her
    Husband. The Husband exercised his right to his homestead exemption. Pursuant to
    Tennessee Code Annotated section 30-2-209, the Probate Court deemed it more
    desirable and practical to order the payment of five thousand dollars ($5,000) in cash
    in lieu of all other homestead rights in the realty of the deceased. The Husband is
    entitled to an award of homestead, and the Probate Court did not err in awarding the
    Decedent’s Husband $5,000 in lieu of all of his homestead rights.
    IX.      Whether the Probate Court erred in calculating the surviving spouse’s
    elective share.
    The Executor claims that the Probate Court erred by including the $160,000 transfer
    in the net estate as a fraudulent transfer and property that was jointly owned by the Decedent
    and her Husband. The Executor also claims that the Probate Court erred by not deducting
    from the net estate all assets includable in the Decedent’s gross estate, which were
    transferred or deemed transferred to the surviving spouse. Finally, the Executor claims that
    the Probate Court erred by not deducting from the award for elective share the value the
    Husband received by living in the fourth apartment at 140 Tusculum Road, the amount the
    Husband received from the rents on the apartments and townhouses, the proceeds from the
    “garage sale” of the household furniture and furnishings, and the cost to the estate of the real
    property taxes, insurance, maintenance and upkeep of the property located at 140 Tusculum
    Road.
    29
    The Husband claims that the Probate Court erred in calculating his elective share by
    including the value of the real property located at McLendon Court in its computation of the
    Decedent’s net estate because the property passed outside of probate. The Husband further
    claims that the Probate Court erred by including in the Decedent’s gross estate the $100,000
    that the Husband withdrew from a joint bank account prior to the Decedent’s death.
    Tennessee Code Annotated section 31-4-101 states:
    (a)(1) The surviving spouse of an intestate decedent who elects against taking
    an intestate share, or a surviving spouse who elects against a decedent's will,
    has a right of election, unless limited by subsection (c), to take an elective-
    share amount equal to the value of the decedent's net estate as defined in
    subsection (b), determined by the length of time the surviving spouse and the
    decedent were married to each other, in
    accordance with the following schedule:
    If the decedent and the
    Surviving spouse were                  The elective-share
    married to each other:                 percentage is:
    less than 3 years                      10% of the net estate
    3 years but less than 6 years          20% of the net estate
    6 years but less than 9 years          30% of the net estate
    9 years or more                        40% of the net estate
    (2) For purposes of determining the total number of years to be applied to the
    computation provided in this subsection, the number of years persons are
    married to the same person shall be combined. The years do not have to be
    consecutive, but may be separated by divorce. All years married shall be
    counted toward the total number of years for purposes of this section.
    (b) The value of the net estate includes all of the decedent's real and personal
    property subject to disposition under the provisions of the decedent's will or
    the laws of intestate succession, reduced by the following: secured debts to
    the extent that secured creditors are entitled to realize on the applicable
    collateral, funeral and administration expenses, and award of exempt property,
    homestead allowance and year's support allowance.
    (c) After the elective-share amount has been determined in accordance with
    the foregoing subsections (a) and (b), the amount payable to the surviving
    spouse by the estate shall be reduced by the value of all assets includable in
    the decedent's gross estate which were transferred, or deemed transferred, to
    the surviving spouse or which were for the benefit of the surviving spouse.
    For purposes hereof, the decedent's gross estate shall be determined by the
    court in the same manner as for inheritance tax purposes pursuant to T.C.A.
    30
    §§ 67- 8-301 et seq., except that the value of any life estate or trust for the
    lifetime benefit of the surviving spouse shall
    be actuarially determined.
    (d) The elective-share amount payable to the surviving spouse is exempt from
    the claims of the unsecured creditors of the decedent's estate.
    To calculate the net estate of the Decedent, the total value of the real and personal
    property, which passed under the Decedent’s will, must be reduced by the secured debts of
    the Decedent, to the extent that secured creditors are entitled to realize, funeral and
    administration expenses, the award of exempt property, the homestead allowance, and the
    year’s support allowance. Tenn. Code Ann. § 31-4-101(b). To determine what property
    passed pursuant to the Decedent’s will, the Probate Court should have first determined how
    the Decedent held the property, specifically, whether she held the property in her name
    alone, as a tenant in common, or as a tenant by the entirety. In this case, the Probate Court
    did not address whether the Decedent held any property as a tenant by the entirety.
    Therefore, this issue is remanded to the Probate Court to determine what property was held
    by the Decedent and her Husband as tenants by the entirety.
    On remand, any property that the Probate Court determines that the Decedent and her
    Husband held as tenants by the entirety will not be included in the net estate because
    property held as tenants by the entirety passes outside of probate and is not subject to
    disposition under the Decedent’s will or the laws of intestate succession. 
    Grahl, 971 S.W.2d at 378
    ; Tenn. Code Ann. § 31-4-101(b). However, the value of the Decedent’s ownership
    interest in any property that the Probate Court determines that the Decedent and her Husband
    owned in any form other than tenants by the entirety or tenants in common with right of
    survivorship will be included in the net estate. Tenn. Code Ann. § 31-4-101(b).
    After the net estate is determined, the value of the net estate is multiplied by a
    percentage based on the number of years the Decedent and her Husband were married. Tenn.
    Code Ann. § 31-4-101(a)(1). The Probate Court found that the Decedent and her Husband
    were married for over 27 years, and thus, the elective share shall be calculated at forty
    percent (40%) of the Decedent’s net estate. Tenn. Code Ann. § 31-4-101(b).
    Once the Probate Court determines the elective share, the amount payable to the
    surviving spouse by the estate shall be “reduced by the value of all assets includable in the
    decedent's gross estate which were transferred, or deemed transferred, to the surviving
    spouse.” Tenn. Code Ann. § 31-4-101(c). “The decedent's gross estate shall be determined
    by the court in the same manner as for inheritance tax purposes pursuant to Tennessee Code
    Annotated sections 67-8-301, et seq., except that the value of any life estate or trust for the
    lifetime benefit of the surviving spouse shall be actuarially determined.” 
    Id. Tennessee Code
    Annotated section 67-8-305(a) provides:
    Whenever any property was held jointly by the decedent and one (1) or more
    persons as tenants by the entirety or otherwise, or was deposited in banks or
    other depositories or institutions in the joint names of the decedent and one
    31
    (1) or more other persons and was payable to one (1) or more, or to the
    survivor or survivors, so that, upon the death of the decedent, the survivor or
    survivors became entitled to the immediate possession, ownership or
    enjoyment of such property, the entire value of any such property shall be
    deemed to have been transferred from the decedent to the survivor or
    survivors, and such transfer shall be subject to the inheritance tax imposed by
    parts 3-5 of this chapter, except:
    (1) Where the decedent and the survivor are husband and wife at the death of
    the decedent, there shall be deducted one half ( 1/2 ) of the value of the
    taxable transfer; . . . .
    Therefore, the Husband’s elective share shall be reduced by one half (1/2) of the value of any
    property that was held by the Decedent and her Husband as tenants by the entirety. Tenn.
    Code Ann. § 67-8-305(a).
    As stated above, the Executor’s first claim is that the Probate Court erred by
    including the $160,000 transfer in the net estate as a fraudulent transfer. If on remand, the
    Probate Court determines that the $160,000 and the “jointly owned property” were held by
    the Decedent and her Husband as tenants by the entirety, then, pursuant to Tennessee Code
    Annotated section 31-4-101(b), the $160,000 and the “jointly owned property” will not be
    included in the net estate, but one half of the $160,000 and the value of the “jointly owned
    property” shall be deducted from the Husband’s elective share, pursuant to Tennessee Code
    Annotated section 67-8-305(a).
    However, if the Probate Court does not determine that the $160,000 was held by the
    Decedent and her Husband as tenants by the entirety, then the $160,000 is a fraudulent
    conveyance because in a previous section, this Court affirmed the Probate Court’s finding
    that the conveyance was fraudulent assuming that the $160,000 was not held as tenants by
    the entirety. Therefore, if the Probate Court determines that $160,000 was not held as
    tenants by the entirety, the $160,000 shall be included in the Decedent’s net estate pursuant
    to Tennessee Code Annotated sections 31-4-101(b) and 31-1-105. Furthermore, if the
    Probate Court determines that the “jointly owned property” was not held by both the
    Decedent and her Husband as tenants by the entirety or joint tenants with right of
    survivorship, the value of the Decedent’s ownership interest in the “jointly owned property”
    shall be included in the net estate.
    The Executor further claims that the Probate Court erred by not deducting from the
    net estate all assets includable in the Decedent’s gross estate, which were transferred or
    deemed transferred to the surviving spouse, including the four townhouses on McLendon
    Court, the motor home, the household furnishings and the lawn equipment. If the trial court
    determines on remand that the townhouses, motor home, household furnishings or lawn
    equipment were held by the Decedent and her Husband as tenants by the entirety, the
    Husband’s elective share shall be reduced by one half the value of the property held as
    tenants by the entirety. However, if the Probate Court determines that the townhouses, motor
    home, household furnishings or lawn equipment were not held by the Decedent and her
    32
    Husband as tenants by the entirety, the property shall be included in the net estate in the
    calculation of the Husband’s elective share.
    Additionally, the Executor claims that the Probate Court erred by not deducting from
    the award for elective share the value the Husband received by living in the fourth apartment
    at 140 Tusculum Road. As stated in a previous section, for the Husband to elect against the
    will, the Husband must reimburse the rental income collected from the property located at
    140 Tusculum Road and any value the Husband received by living in the fourth apartment
    after the Decedent’s death less any repairs made to the property or payments made regarding
    the property, including insurance, that the Husband made after the Decedent’s death. The
    Husband can reimburse the funds from his elective share. The issue is whether the
    reimbursement amount should be included in the calculation of the Husband’s elective share.
    In the case styled In re Estate of 
    Jenkins, 8 S.W.3d at 286
    , this Court held that “the
    [s]urviving [s]pouse should share in any gains or losses experienced by the Decedent’s estate
    prior to the distribution of [his or her] elective share.” Therefore, when calculating the
    Husband’s elective share, the amount of the reimbursement shall be included in the net estate
    pursuant to Tennessee Code Annotated section 31-4-101(b). Furthermore, once the
    Husband’s elective share is calculated, it shall be reduced by the reimbursement amount, and
    the reimbursement amount shall be distributed to the heirs of the property.
    The Executor’s next claim is that the Probate Court erred by not deducting from the
    award for elective share the rental income the Husband received from the townhouses. The
    Probate Court treated the townhouses as if they were jointly owned but did not address
    whether they were held by the Decedent and her Husband as tenants by the entirety. As
    previously stated, the Probate Court must determine on remand whether the presumption that
    property acquired during marriage is held as tenants by the entirety is overcome. If the
    Probate Court determines that the townhouses were held by the Decedent and her Husband as
    tenants by the entirety, the rental income from the townhouses shall not be included in the
    calculation of the Husband’s elective share because the townhouses passed to the Husband
    outside of probate and were not subject to disposition under the Decedent’s will or the laws
    of intestate succession. 
    Grahl, 971 S.W.2d at 378
    ; Tenn. Code Ann. § 31-4-101(b).
    If the Court determines that the townhouses were held in some other form of
    ownership, such as tenants in common or in the Decedent’s name alone, and are subject to
    disposition under the Decedent’s will or the laws of intestate succession, the Decedent’s
    share of the rents, which could be all of the rents or part of the rents depending on the form
    of ownership in which the Decedent held the property, shall be included in the net estate
    when calculating the Husband’s elective share because “the [s]urviving [s]pouse should
    share in any gains or losses experienced by the Decedent’s estate prior to the distribution of
    [his or her] elective share.” In re Estate of 
    Jenkins, 8 S.W.3d at 286
    . Once the elective share
    is calculated, the Husband shall reimburse the heirs of the townhouses their share of the rents
    from his elective share.
    The Executor’s next claim is that the Probate Court erred by not deducting from the
    award for elective share the proceeds from the “garage sale” of the household furniture and
    furnishings. The Probate Court treated the household furniture and furnishings as if they
    were jointly owned but did not address whether they were held by the Decedent and her
    33
    Husband as tenants by the entirety. As previously stated, the Probate Court must determine
    on remand whether the presumption that property acquired during marriage is held as tenants
    by the entirety is overcome. The proceeds from the sale of any household furniture or
    furnishings that were held by the Decedent and her Husband as tenants by the entirety shall
    not be included in the calculation of the Husband’s elective share because the townhouses,
    furniture and furnishings passed to the Husband outside of probate and are not subject to
    disposition under the Decedent’s will or the laws of instate succession. 
    Grahl, 971 S.W.2d at 378
    ; Tenn. Code Ann. § 31-4-101(b). However, one half of the value of the furniture at the
    time of the Decedent’s death shall be deducted from the Husband’s elective share. Tenn.
    Code Ann. § 31-4-101(c). The Decedent’s share of the proceeds from the sale of any
    furniture or furnishings that were held in some other form of ownership, such as tenants in
    common or in the Decedent’s name alone, shall be included in the net estate when
    calculating the Husband’s elective share. Tenn. Code Ann. § 31-4-101(b). Once the elective
    share is calculated, the Husband shall reimburse the estate from his elective share the
    Decedent’s share of the proceeds from the sale of the household furniture and furnishings.
    The Executor’s next claim is that the Probate Court erred by not deducting from the
    award for elective share the cost to the estate of the real property taxes, insurance,
    maintenance and upkeep of the property located at 140 Tusculum Road. As previously
    stated, “the [s]urviving [s]pouse should share in any gains or losses experienced by the
    Decedent’s estate prior to the distribution of [his or her] elective share.” In re Estate of
    
    Jenkins, 8 S.W.3d at 286
    . Therefore, when calculating the Husband’s elective share, the
    Decedent’s net estate shall be reduced by any losses the estate incurred due to the payment of
    the real property taxes, insurance, maintenance and upkeep of the property. The record is
    unclear as to whether the Probate Court reduced the Decedent’s net estate by any losses the
    estate incurred.
    The Husband claims that the Probate Court erred in calculating the Husband’s
    elective share by including the value of the real property located at McLendon Court in its
    computation of the Decedent’s net estate because the property passed outside of probate.
    Tennessee Code Annotated section 31-4-101(b) provides that “[t]he value of the net estate
    includes all of the decedent's real and personal property subject to disposition under the
    provisions of the decedent's will or the laws of intestate succession . . . .” As stated in a
    previous section, we remanded the issue as to whether the property was located at McLendon
    Court was held by the Decedent and her Husband as tenants by the entirety. If the Probate
    Court determines that the property was held as tenants by the entirety, the value of the
    property shall not be included in the Decedent’s net estate for purposes of calculating the
    Husband’s elective share, but one-half of the value of the property shall be deducted from the
    Husband’s elective share pursuant to Tennessee Code Annotated sections 31-4-101(c) and
    67-8-305(a). 
    Grahl, 971 S.W.2d at 378
    ; Tenn. Code Ann. § 31-4-101(b). If the Probate
    Court determines that the property did not pass outside of probate, the entire value of the
    Decedent’s share of the property shall be included in the Decedent’s net estate.
    The Husband further claims that the Probate Court erred by including in the
    Decedent’s gross estate the $100,000 that the Husband withdrew from a joint bank account
    prior to the Decedent’s death. Tennessee Code Annotated section 31-4-101(c) provides that
    the decedent's gross estate shall be determined by the court in the same manner as for
    34
    inheritance tax purposes pursuant to T.C.A. §§ 67- 8-301 et seq. . . . .” As quoted above,
    Tennessee Code Annotated section 67-8-305(a) only addresses property that “upon the death
    of the decedent, the survivor or survivors became entitled to the immediate possession,
    ownership or enjoyment of such property . . . .” In this case, the Husband removed the
    money from the joint bank account prior to the Decedent’s death. The Husband then gave
    the money to his children. Arguably, prior to the Decedent’s death, the Husband no longer
    was entitled to possession, ownership or enjoyment of the money, and therefore, the
    $100,000 should not be included in the Decedent’s gross estate.
    However, if 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. Hence, we remand this issue to determine whether the joint bank account
    was held by the Decedent and her Husband as tenants by the entirety, whether the Decedent
    agreed to the transfer of the $100,000 to the Husband’s children, and whether the Husband’s
    children knew that the Decedent and her Husband held the property as tenants by the
    entirety.
    X.      Whether the Probate Court erred in ordering the sale of real property
    located at 140 Tusculum Road, Antioch, Tennessee, to satisfy the Husband’s
    elective share when the Husband did not properly serve process.
    The Executor claims that the Probate Court erred in ordering the sale of real property
    located at 140 Tusculum Road to satisfy the Husband’s elective share because the Husband
    did not properly serve process to Dianne McLendon.
    Rule 4A of the Tennessee Rules of Civil Procedure, which governs service upon
    individuals in foreign countries, allows service to be effectuated by “any form of mail
    requiring a signed receipt, to be addressed and dispatched by the clerk of the court to the
    party to be served” as long as service of process by mail is not prohibited by the law of the
    foreign country. In this case, the Husband, not the clerk of the court, mailed a copy of the
    Petition to Compel Sale of Real Estate to Dianne McLendon, who lived in Canada at that
    time. Therefore, the Husband did not properly serve Dianne McLendon.
    Additionally, the Husband’s counsel argues in his brief that Ms. McLendon was
    properly served because he filed the Petition to Compel pursuant to Tennessee Code
    Annotated section 30-2-402. Tennessee Code Annotated section 30-2-402 requires that
    “[t]he surviving spouse, heirs, devisees, encumbrancers, and others interested in the realty,
    35
    excepting creditors, shall be impleaded.” The Husband’s counsel further argues that “James
    E. McLendon, both as Executor and individually, and Dianne McLendon have been made
    parties to the lawsuit. They are listed as ‘Respondents’ on the style of the lawsuit.” Being
    listed as “Respondents” in the style of a lawsuit does not make any person a party to a
    lawsuit. To implead a defendant, thereby making him or her a party to the lawsuit, service of
    process must be issued and served pursuant to Rule 4 of the Tennessee Rules of Civil
    Procedure. Ms. McLendon was not properly served pursuant to Rule 4 of the Tennessee
    Rules of Civil Procedure. Therefore, the Probate Court erred in ordering the sale of real
    property located at 140 Tusculum Road, but that error can be corrected on remand.
    Conclusion
    In conclusion, we find that the Probate Court had jurisdiction to extend the statute of
    limitations and that the Agreed Order authorized by representatives of both parties was
    effective to extend the statute of limitations. We also find that the Probate Court did not err
    by allowing the Husband to elect against the will. Additionally, we find that the Probate
    Court did not err in awarding the homestead exemption, but did err in calculating the award
    for year’s support, exempt property, and the Husband’s elective share. Finally, we find that
    the Probate Court erred by ordering the sale of real property located at 140 Tusculum Road
    until process is properly served.
    Therefore, the judgment is affirmed in part and reversed in part, and this matter is
    remanded to the Probate Court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. Costs on
    appeal are assessed against the Estate, for which execution may issue if necessary.
    ____________________
    Jerry Scott, Senior Judge
    36