The Tennessee Supreme Court recently decided
an important case on an issue that had not yet been decided in Tennessee. The
case of Darryl F. Bryant,
Sr. v. Darryl F. Bryant, Jr., No. M2014-02379-SC-R11-CV, 2017 WL 1404388 (Tenn.
2017)
decided a key issue pertaining to Joint Tenancy with Right of Survivorship. In
this case, the owner (Ms. Bryant) of the property in question issued a deed
conveying the property to herself and her son as Joint Tenants with Right of
Survivorship. This occurred in 2009. Interestingly, a little bit more than one
year later on September 2, 2010, the original owner, Ms. Bryant, executed
another Quitclaim Deed on the same property. This Quitclaim Deed purported to
convey the property to her grandson, Darryl F. Bryant, Jr. She deeded all of her interests in the
property to this grandson in this deed.
Ms. Bryant died in November of 2013 and then
a dispute arose between Ms. Bryant’s son, Darryl F. Bryant, Sr. and grandson,
Darryl F. Bryant, Jr. The legal issue that governed this situation is whether
Joint Tenancy with the Right of Survivorship can be terminated by one party. In
other words, Ms. Bryant deeded the property as a Joint Tenancy with Right of
Survivorship to herself and her son. She then later deeded her interest in the
property to her grandson (essentially her ½ interest in the Joint Tenancy with
Right of Survivorship). The question, therefore, was whether the second deed
terminated the Right of Survivorship in the first deed, unilaterally, without
permission or input by the co-owner, Darryl Bryant, Sr. If it did not, then Darryl F. Bryant Sr.
would own the property outright due to Ms. Bryan’s death.
The Tennessee Supreme Court analyzed several
prior Tennessee opinions as well as other states’ assessment of this
issue. Ultimately, the Tennessee Supreme
Court found that “joint tenancy with an express right of survivorship may be
severed by the unilateral action of one of the joint tenants and that doing so
converts the estate into a tenancy in common and destroys the survivorship
interests of the original joint tenants.” (Bryant
Sr. at p. 15). In other words, the
conveyance by one of the joint tenancy owners, who owns the property with a
right of survivorship, essentially converts the holding of the property to
tenancy in common when they deed their interest to another party. That is
exactly what occurred in this case. The Court then considered this specific
case and found that when Ms. Bryant conveyed her interest in the property to
the grandson, it severed her joint tenancy with right of survivorship with her
son. At that point, the son and grandson became tenant in common owners and the
right of survivorship was destroyed at that time.
This case can certainly have implications in
estates and real estate transactions. It is an important principle that will
apply to all real estate transactions and estates in Tennessee. The fact there is
a right of survivorship at the time of an original deed does not mean the right
of survivorship can never be modified, as is shown in this case. This is true
even without the approval of all of the owners of the property. This is a very
important case in Tennessee and needs to be considered carefully when
determining estate planning and the handling of an estate.
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