OPINION
delivered the opinion of the court, in which
The issue presented in this case is whether a confidential relationship arises as a matter of law when an unrestricted power of attorney is executed but not exercised. The trial court held that a confidential relationship existed and that the resulting presumption of undue influence could only be rebutted by proof of independent advice to the decedent. Because there was no such proof, the trial court set aside the jury’s verdict and found that the will was invalid.
On appeal, the Court of Appeals concluded that since the attorney-in-fact was unaware of the power of attorney at the time the decedent executed her will, there was not a confidential relationship between
BACKGROUND
This case involves a will contest. Virginia Mary Leonard (“the decedent”) executed a will on February 16,1994, leaving her entire estate to the appellant, Billy Joe Childress, who was a friend and former employer. On May 22,1997, the decedent, then age 78, executed another will, leaving her entire estate to the appellee, Natasha Barnes Currie, the decedent’s cousin. 1 The decedent was a widow and had no children. The evidence in the record is summarized below.
In April of 1997, Natasha Currie began living with her elderly cousin, Virginia Leonard, on a part-time basis. Currie helped her cousin care for herself and her home. By May of 1997, Currie was living with and assisting Leonard on a full-time basis while Leonard was afflicted with incontinence, insomnia, and anxiety.
On May 5, 1997, Leonard asked Currie to drive her and Elizabeth Barnes, her second cousin, to the Bank of Ripley where Leonard owned a certificate of deposit totaling approximately $8,500. While at the bank, Leonard withdrew approximately $4,400 from the certificate of deposit and placed the remainder — approximately $4,100 — in a certificate of deposit in her name and the name of Elizabeth Barnes.
Currie testified that Leonard withdrew the $4,400 to pay the deposit on a prearranged funeral policy, to pay property taxes for 1994, and to pay for cleaning supplies and clothing. With the exception of the $2,200 later paid as a deposit on the funeral policy, the record is silent as to the amount of any other expenses and the balance remaining from the $4,400.
On May 22, 1997, Leonard asked Currie to drive her and Elizabeth Barnes to Cur-rie’s Funeral Home so that she could purchase a pre-arranged funeral plan. As Currie and Barnes waited outside the office, the decedent purchased the plan from Frank Currie. 2 After purchasing the funeral plan, she asked Frank Currie to draft a power of attorney in favor of Natasha Currie and a will leaving her entire estate to Gurrie. Frank Currie, who had known Leonard for several years, testified that she acted as he had always known her to act, strong-willed. He also testified that she paid for the funeral plan herself and stated that she wanted to get her business affairs in order.
Although not an attorney, Frank Currie agreed to draft the documents. Leonard then executed both a power of attorney to Natasha Currie and a will, which stated in part as follows:
... I, Virginia M. Leonard, of Lauder-dale County, State of Tennessee, City of Ripley, the undersigned hereby declare and appoint Natasha Barnes Currie the right to handle any and all of my business and to live with me. At the time of my death, Natasha Barnes Currie will have all of my possessions.
Natasha Currie was not present when Leonard signed the documents; however, Elizabeth Barnes witnessed the decedent’s execution of the will. Currie testified that
Natasha Currie testified that in the early part of June 1997, Leonard asked that she withdraw the money from the joint certificate of deposit with Barnes in order to pay the balance on the decedent’s funeral plan — approximately $3,200 — before she went into the hospital. Currie also closed two of the decedent’s bank accounts, totaling approximately $700. When asked where the remainder of Leonard’s money was spent, Currie could not recall.
The record reflects that the decedent was seen by her treating physician, Dr. Luis Wong, on April 3, 1997; May 5, 1997; and June 10, 1997. On June 10, 1997, she was admitted to Baptist Memorial Hospital in Ripley, Tennessee. The admitting diagnosis indicated that Leonard suffered from coronary artery disease, osteoarthritis, chronic organic brain disease, and chronic senile dementia. She was transferred later to the geriatric/psychiatric unit of the Baptist Memorial Hospital and treated by Dr. Louis Wells, a psychiatrist. Dr. Wells testified that Leonard was admitted to the hospital because she was very paranoid and threatened to harm herself. Dr. Wells and his staff agreed that Leonard was paranoid, with some dementia and short-term memory loss. The doctor stated that on occasion Leonard was belligerent, hostile, and very paranoid, and that he prescribed medication for her. On July 3, 1997, Leonard’s condition improved, and she was transferred to a nursing home. She died on July 19th, sixteen days after entering the nursing home.
On July 31, 1997, Leonard’s February 1994 will was admitted to probate in the Lauderdale County Probate Court, naming the appellant, Billy Joe Childress, as the sole beneficiary. In September of 1997, Natasha Currie filed a petition contesting the February 1994 will and offering Leonard’s May 1997 will for probate, which named Currie as the sole beneficiary. Childress responded that Leonard did not have testamentary capacity to execute the May 1997 will, and that she signed the will as a result of undue influence. In November of 1997, the probate court rejected the February 1994 will and admitted Leonard’s May 1997 will to probate.
At the request of both parties, the will contest was transferred to the Lauderdale County Circuit Court for a jury trial. The jury returned a verdict upholding the validity of the May 1997 will, but the trial court granted a motion for a directed verdict setting aside the jury’s finding that the decedent, Leonard, had not been unduly influenced. The trial court found that there was a presumption of undue influence because there was a confidential relationship, and that Leonard had not received independent advice prior to executing her May 1997 will that would have rebutted the presumption of undue influence and shown the fairness of the transaction.
On appeal, the Court of Appeals concluded that since Currie was unaware of the power of attorney at the time Leonard executed her will, there was not a confidential relationship between Currie and Leonard. Moreover, the court concluded that since there was not a confidential relationship present, there was no presumption of undue influence and that Cur-rie was not required to prove the fairness of the transaction by clear and convincing evidence. We granted permission to appeal.
A directed verdict is appropriate in a will contest case only when the evidence in the case is susceptible to but one conclusion.
See Eaton v. McLain,
ANALYSIS
In a will contest, a properly executed will may be challenged on a, theory that the decedent’s mind was not “sufficiently sound to enable him or her to know and understand the force and consequence of the act of making the will” at the time the will was executed.
In re Estate of Elam,
The testator must have an intelligent consciousness of the nature and effect of the act, a knowledge of the property possessed and an understanding of the disposition to be made. While evidence regarding factors such as physical weakness or disease, old age, blunt perception or failing mind and memory is admissible on the issue of testamentary capacity, it is not conclusive and the testator is not thereby rendered incompetent if her mind is sufficiently sound to enable her to know and understand what she is doing.
Id. (citations omitted).
Similarly, a will may be challenged on the basis that the decedent was subject to the undue influence of another in executing the will. In Tennessee, for example, where there is a “confidential relationship, followed by a transaction wherein the dominant party receives a benefit from the other party, a presumption of undue influence arises, that may be rebutted only by clear and convincing evidence of the fairness of the transaction.”
Matlock v. Simpson,
The burden of proof regarding a confidential relationship rests upon the party claiming the existence of such a relationship.
See Brown v. Weik,
This Court has held that a confidential relationship arises as a matter of law when
The Court in
Matlock
cited
Mitchell v. Smith,
The issue of undue influence should “be decided by the application of sound principles and good sense to the facts of each case.”
Id.
at 388 (quoting
Halle v. Summerfield,
Unlike Matlock, Natasha Currie did not personally execute the documents on the decedent’s behalf. Indeed, she was not present when the power of attorney and will were executed and she did not learn of the instruments until after everyone had left the funeral home. Moreover, there is no evidence that she knew of the decedent’s intentions at any point before the documents were executed. In short, there is no basis for finding that a confidential relationship gave rise to a presumption of undue influence under the facts of this case. Indeed, the jury in this case determined that the decedent’s May 1997 will was valid and that the decedent was not under undue influence at the time of the execution of the power of attorney. 3
In short, the trial court’s decision to set aside the jury’s verdict was based on its erroneous interpretation of Matlock. Although we in no way alter the holding expressed in Matlock, we simply hold that it was not applicable under the facts of this case. We therefore conclude that the trial court erred in setting aside the jury’s verdict and directing a verdict in favor of Childress.
CONCLUSION
We hold that a confidential relationship does not arise, as a matter of law, when an unrestricted power of attorney is executed but is not exercised. Therefore, the judgment of the Court of Appeals is affirmed. Costs of the appeal are assessed to the appellant, Billy Joe Childress, for which execution may issue if necessary.
Notes
. Ms. Currie is the granddaughter of Ms. Elizabeth Barnes, the decedent's second cousin.
. Frank Currie is the uncle of Ms. Currie’s former husband.
. Because it had been instructed on the presumption of undue influence, the jury also found that the presumption had been rebutted by clear and convincing evidence.
