Hillbilly Homicides: The `Stringbean` Murder Trial Promissory
Transcription
Hillbilly Homicides: The `Stringbean` Murder Trial Promissory
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Please contact Debbie Matthews at 800.251.5644 or 615.279.7238 debbie_matthews@ajg.com Journal Tennessee Bar DECEMBER 2004 VOL. 40, NO. 12 www.tba.org A R T I C L E S 12 FACING IDENTITY THEFT: NEW VICTIMS’ RIGHTS ACT IMPOSES NEW RULES TO PROTECT YOU By Kristin E. Solomon 20 HILLBILLY HOMICIDES: THE ‘STRINGBEAN’ MURDER TRIAL By Donald F. Paine 24 PROMISSORY ESTOPPEL: THE ENFORCEMENT OF GRATUITOUS PROMISES TO PREVENT INJUSTICE By Steven Feldman N E W S & 6 6 6 6 7 8 11 I N F O R M A T I O N New Child Support Guidelines to start in January Rules changes affect confidentiality, how documents are handled One-stop mock trial info now on web Supreme Court Justice Birch resumes full responsibilities Put your hat in the ring for TBA office Board proposes bylaws changes Actions from the Board of Professional Responsibility D E P A R T M E N T S On the Cover Tennesee’s new Identity Theft Victims’ Rights Act requires more of businesses in disposing of documents with personal identifying information on them. Your clients need to know what’s expected and how to keep from becoming victims. Read about it, beginning on page 12. Cover illustration by Landry Butler. 3 President’s Perspective: Drivin’ Miss Pammy By Charles Swanson 5 Letter 5 Jest Is for All: by Arnie Glick 9 The Bulletin Board: News about TBA members 22 Where There’s a Will: Free money: How insurance + annuity = big profit By Dan W. Holbrook 29 But Seriously, Folks! Don’t mess with Texas justice By Bill Haltom 31 Classified Advertising Since 1956, Tennessee attorneys have looked to IPSCO for their professional and personal insurance needs. We represent some of the finest carriers available with a wide range of insurance markets to choose from. Just complete the fax back reply form below. Our agents will work hard to find the right coverage for you. When it comes to experience and customer service... yes, there is a difference! Show me the difference! I would like information on: IPSCO INSURANCE PLANNING & SERVICE COMPANY, INC. T T T T T T T INDIVIDUAL COVERAGE Disability Income Protection Business Overhead Expense Financial Review Service Retirement Planning Long Term Care Health Life T T T T T T T COVERAGE FOR MY LAW FIRM Office Contents/Building Package Workers’ Compensation Professional Liability Life and AD&D Disability Health Dental Name P.O. Box 1109 Chattanooga, TN 37401-1109 Phone 423.629.2400 Toll-free 800.347.1109 Fax 423.629.1109 www.TBAinsurance.com Additional sales offices: Nashville 615.385.4208 Jackson 731.668.0098 Memphis 901.761.2440 Firm Name Address City/St/Zip Phone ( ) Fax ( ) E-mail Fax to: 423.629.1109 Journal P R E S I D E N T ’ S P E R S P E C T I V E Tennessee Bar DECEMBER 2004 VOL. 40, NO. 12 Journal Staff Suzanne Craig Robertson, Editor srobertson@tnbar.org Landry Butler, Publications & Advertising Coordinator lbutler@tnbar.org Barry Kolar, Assistant Executive Director bkolar@tnbar.org Editorial Board Andrée Sophia Blumstein, Nashville, Chair Miles Mason Sr., Memphis Donald F. Paine, Knoxville Nathan D. Rowell, Knoxville Jonathan O. Steen, Jackson The Tennessee Bar Journal is listed in the Index to Legal Periodicals. The Tennessee Bar Journal, ISSN 0497-2325, is published by the Tennessee Bar Association at 221 Fourth Ave. N., Suite 400, Nashville, TN 372192198, (615) 383-7421, monthly. Periodicals Postage Paid, Nashville, Tenn. Subscription price: $60 per year. Members: $22 per year. Individual issues: $10 per copy. Back issues sold on an “as available” basis. Statements or opinions expressed herein are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect those of the Tennessee Bar Association, its officers, board or staff. POSTMASTER: Send address correction to Tennessee Bar Journal, 221 Fourth Ave. N., Suite 400, Nashville, TN 37219-2198. © COPYRIGHT 2004 TENNESSEE BAR ASSOCIATION Observations from the first “First Man” Drivin’ Ms. Pammy I believe that the only unique aspect of my presidency of the TBA is that I am the very first TBA president to have served a term as “First Spouse.” Of course, most of you already know that my lovely and over-achieving wife, Pam Reeves, served as the first female president of our association in 1998-99. Not long after her term of office, I had occasion to write an article in which I talked about a Charles W. Swanson President number of things I learned as a result of my experiences as First Man. This article was first published in Dicta, the newsletter of the Knoxville Bar Association, so if you are from Knoxville and are thinking you have already read the article that follows, you are probably correct! Visit our web site at www.tba.org One of the benefits of having a “celebrity spouse” is that, as she traveled across the state and beyond to fulfill her various duties, often I was called upon to serve as her driver, briefcase carrier and general factotum. Sometimes, when you are merely the shadow to the person who serves as the center “Significant lessons about of attention, you learn some things that might go unappreciimportant things like ated otherwise. So, with apologies to Morgan Freeman and that barbecue, haircuts, delightful movie “Driving Miss Daisy,” I would like to share with football and how you some of the things I observed while “Drivin’ Ms. Pammy.” Significant lessons insignificant we all about important things like barbecue, haircuts, football and how really are in the grand insignificant we all really are in the grand scheme of things. scheme of things.” During my tenure as “First Man,” I learned that if you want real, honest-to-gosh barbecue in this state, you need to go west of Jackson, to places like Brownsville, Covington and Memphis. I must admit a bias toward a somewhat dry, vinegar-based barbecue, probably owing to my youth in North Carolina. Also, I will admit that I actually enjoy eating the soggy, ketchupy stuff that generally passes for barbecue in east and middle Tennessee … I just wish they would call it something else because it just ain’t barbecue. Barbecue is what you can get at the Rendezvous Restaurant just across from the wonderful Peabody Hotel in Memphis. Dry ribs. If you haven’t tried them, fly, drive or hitchhike to Memphis without delay. You won’t be sorry. Speaking of Brownsville, I discovered that if you walk in a barber shop on Main Street in Brownsville and tell the guy you want just a regular haircut, be prepared for a buzz cut because, in that part of the country, the “regular” haircut will leave you with no hair anywhere on your head longer then one-quarter inch. Printed on recycled paper. (Continued on page 4) ADVERTISING POLICY: While the Tennessee Bar Journal attempts to confine its advertising to legitimate business endeavors, the statements and material appearing in the advertisements are solely the responsibility of the advertiser. The Journal and the Tennessee Bar Association do not directly or impliedly endorse, support or vouch for the authenticity of any representation made in any advertisement appearing herein. The Journal does not intend to accept any advertising material that is false and misleading. The Journal reserves the right to refuse an advertisement it deems inappropriate. CHANGE OF ADDRESS: If your address has changed, please notify the Tennessee Bar Association at 221 Fourth Ave. N., Suite 400, Nashville, TN 37219-2198, so your address will be updated for the Tennessee Bar Journal and other TBA publications. TENNESSEE BAR JOURNAL, DECEMBER 2004 3 P R E S I D E N T ’ S P E R S P E C T I V E (Continued from page 3) (Obviously, it helped to prepare me for what was to come!) Want to make new friends and acquaintances? Wear an orange tie to any dinner or reception in the entire southeastern United States and guys will come up to you from all over the room to discuss recruiting, coaching, NCAA sanctions, athletic strategy and horrible war stories from the last time their favorite team had to go to Gainesville. When the primary topics of the day have been legal conundrums or bar politics, you can’t imagine how some folks almost thirst for an opportunity to talk about something else. An orange tie is like an engraved invitation to talk about issues we really do care about! The orange tie trick will work in Paris, Tennessee, but not so well in Paris, France. As I mentioned, Pam was the first woman president of the Tennessee Bar Association. Coincidentally, that same year for the first time, the leader of the Paris bar (whom they call a “battonier”) also was a woman. Perhaps not so coincidentally, Pam was invited to “Want to make new friends and acquaintances? Wear an orange tie.” attend the grand ceremony which annually accompanies the opening of the bar in Paris. Even though driving to Paris was not an option (to Pam’s regret), she did invite her driver to accompany her on this occasion. We discovered that the French spare no effort or expense in cre- ating an awesome ceremony to celebrate the opening of their court. At the ceremony itself (invitation only — no drivers allowed), the guests, decked out in their finest, were packed into the Palais de Justice like sardines to hear lengthy speeches that were completely in French. In addition to this type of excitement, for three nights running there were grand parties and balls to celebrate the occasion. The most magnificent of these was held on the lower levels of the Palais de Justice (their version of the Howard Baker Courthouse, I presume). The ladies were adorned in gorgeous ball gowns and evening wear while the men were in tuxedos. But those men who really were somebody didn’t just wear a tuxedo. They also had sashes and medals and more decorations than most Christmas trees! I sort of felt like I had gone to (Continued on page 27) Insuring Attorneys for Over 20 Years. MLM has been a provider of legal malpractice insurance since 1982. "A" (excellent) rated by A. M. Best since 1992. Since 1988 MLM policyholders have received over $23 million in dividend payments. MLM is a direct writer; you work directly with a company representative. Outstanding customer service which is reflected in a renewal rate greater than 95%. Annual CLE seminars on malpractice prevention. Free legal technology advice and practice management consultation. Save 10% by applying online at www.mlmins.com. 800.422.1370 4 www.mlmins.com TENNESSEE BAR JOURNAL, DECEMBER 2004 L E T T E R TENNESSEE BAR A S S O C I A T I O N BOARD OF GOVERNORS ■ Charles Swanson, Knoxville, President; Bill Haltom, Memphis, President-Elect; Larry Wilks, Springfield, Vice President; John Tarpley, Nashville, Immediate Past President; Paul Ney, Nashville, Treasurer; Cecilia Barnes, Memphis, Secretary; Sam Elliott, Signal Mountain, East Tennessee Governor; Sue Van Sant Palmer, Clarksville, Middle Tennessee Governor; Ed Stanton, Memphis, West Tennessee Governor; Morris Hadden, Kingsport, Governor — 1st District; Jim Moore, Knoxville, Governor — 2nd District; Marcia Eason, Chattanooga, Governor — 3rd District; Susan Emery McGannon, Murfreesboro, Governor — 4th District; Barbara Moss, Nashville, Governor — 5th District; Claudia Jack, Columbia, Governor — 6th District; Linda Warren Seely, Jackson, Governor — 7th District; Nancy Miller-Herron, Dresden, Governor — 8th District; George T. (Buck) Lewis III, Memphis, Governor — 9th District; Ewing Sellers, Murfreesboro, Speaker, House of Delegates; Cindy Richardson Wyrick, Sevierville, President, TBA Young Lawyers Division; Danny Van Horn, Memphis, President-Elect, TBA Young Lawyers Division; John McLellan, Kingsport, President, Tennessee Judicial Conference; Greeley Wells Kingsport, President, District Attorneys General Conference; Tom Marshall, Clinton, President, District Public Defender’s Conference; Gail Ashworth, Nashville, General Counsel. We have an obligation to provide needed medication for elderly [This letter is in reference to “Grandma’s Pain: Should claims of under-medication arise in new theories of elder abuse statutes or traditional medical malpractice negligence?” by Dr. Timothy McIntire, October 2004 TBJ]: A few years ago, my mother, who was 94, was in a nursing home. She was receiving excellent care. At least I thought so until I discovered that she had a pressure wound on her foot. She was in a significant amount of pain. I discussed with the nursing home director the need for her to be medicated to the point where she was not experiencing great pain. I was told that they had concerns about the overuse of narcotics. I explained to them that my mother, who had not been ambulatory for several years, and who had never driven a car, was not a risk to peddle the drugs they gave her, out on the street; and if they did not want to meet me in court, I would suggest they take care of my mother. I made a few other suggestions concerning her care. When they started giving her physical therapy, the pressure wound went away. There is a crying need on the part of families to monitor the way their loved ones are being taken care of, and to politely ask if something needs to be changed. If polite doesn’t get the job done, then you might make your suggestions on your own letterhead to get their attention. We as lawyers have an obligation to make sure that these people who have given their lives in the way they raised us, educated us, and served our communities, are not simply warehoused somewhere and allowed to suffer unnecessary pain. — John E. Acuff, Cookeville WRITE TO THE JOURNAL! Letters to the editor are welcomed and considered for publication on the basis of timeliness, taste, clarity and space. They should be typed and include the author’s name, address and phone number (for verification purposes). Please send your comments to 221 Fourth Ave. N., Suite 400, Nashville, TN 37219-2198; FAX (615) 297-8058; EMAIL: srobertson@tnbar.org. STAFF ■ Allan F. Ramsaur, Executive Director; Barry Kolar, Assistant Executive Director; Sharon Ballinger, Receptionist; Landry Butler, Publications Coordinator; Kathleen Caillouette, CLE Administrator; Anjanette Eash, Youth Court Coordinator; Sarah Hendrickson, CLE Assistant; Pam Johnson, Financial Administrator; Byron Morton, Information Systems Coordinator; Jonathan Mott, Intern; Michelle K. O’Neill, Executive Assistant; Lynn Pointer, Programs Administrator and Sections & Committees Coordinator; Becky Rhodes, Access to Justice Coordinator; Megan Rizzo, Membership Coordinator; Suzanne Craig Robertson, Editor, Tennessee Bar Journal; Stacey Shrader, Media Relations and YLD Coordinator; Roger Spivey, Director of Continuing Legal Education; Katie Wilkinson, Customer Service & Receivables Coordinator. TENNESSEE BAR JOURNAL, DECEMBER 2004 5 NEWS & I N F O R M A T I O N New child support guidelines to start in January T he Tennessee Department of Human Services has received approval from the state attorney general and has filed new child support guidelines with the secretary of state’s office. The new guidelines are called an income shares formula, which requires that both parents’ incomes and other major expenditures, including child care costs and medical insurance premiums, be considered when calculating a child support order. Income shares rules are currently in use in 33 other states and will take effect in Tennessee on Jan. 18, 2005. The TBA is offering continuing legal education courses throughout December to familiarize lawyers with the changes. Read more about the new guidelines and the courses at http://www.tba.org/news/ Rules changes affect confidentiality, how documents are handled Court amends Rule 9 on confidentiality The Tennessee Supreme Court has amended Rule 9 dealing with confidentiality in disciplinary cases. The changes came as a result of the court’s holding last February, which invalidated the court’s own rule prohibiting complainants from going public. The court found that state and federal First Amendment guarantees demanded that clients be permitted to voice their concerns. The new rules provide that once a formal petition for discipline has been filed by the Board of Professional Responsibility the matter becomes public. Supreme Court Justice Birch resumes full responsibilities After a short period of recuperation, Tennessee Supreme Court Justice Adolpho A. Birch Jr., has fully resumed his judicial duties, according to the Administrative Office of the Courts. Birch, who underwent surgery in July as well as chemotherapy and radiation treatments, said he has returned to his normal schedule of activities on and off the bench. 6 They largely follow the recommendations of the TBA, filed in August, including a provision for protective orders, requiring written complaints and prohibiting disclosure of private discipline. The order, issued Nov. 2, can be seen at http://www.tba.org/Rules/ rule9_11_2004.html Documents will be handled uniformly, with Rule 15 Court of Appeals Rule 15 was issued Oct. 26, standardizing how records and documents filed with the court will be handled. See the new rule at http://www.tba.org/rules/ coa_rule15.html. child_support_11_2004.html. You’ll also find a link there to the Department of Human Services’ Income Shares Tutorial. One-stop mock trial info now on web The Tennessee Bar Association Young Lawyers Division has made it easier for anyone interested in participating in the statewide mock trial competition to find out more. There is a new web site wth this year’s information as well as a number of general resources on mock trial and historical data about mock trial in Tennessee. Mock Trial Committee Chair Jordan Keller wrote this year’s problem. Long Range Planning Committee Chair David Johnson spearheaded the push for a new web site. Check it out at http://www.tba.org/ mocktrial and mark your calendar for the state competition on March 1819, 2005. TENNESSEE BAR JOURNAL, DECEMBER 2004 N E W S & I N F O R M A T I O N Deadline to qualify is Feb. 15, 2005 Put your hat in the ring for TBA office D uring 2005, the following officers, governors and delegates of the Tennessee Bar Association (TBA) will be elected as set forth in the association’s bylaws: TBA Officers and Board of Governors Officers • A vice president (from the East Tennessee Grand Division — elected by the association’s membershipat-large). The vice president automatically assumes the office of president-elect in 2006 and president in 2007. District Governors • District Governors in the second, fifth, and eighth districts will be elected to three-year terms. They are elected by the members in their respective districts. Those who currently hold those positions are: Jim Moore (2nd); Barbara Moss, who is ineligible for re-election because of term limits (5th); Nancy MillerHerron (8th). Grand Division Governors TBA Grand Division Governors are elected for one-year terms by the membership in each grand division. • An East Tennessee governor from the 1st, 2nd or 3rd district. • A Middle Tennessee governor from the 4th, 5th or 6th district. • A West Tennessee governor from the 7th, 8th or 9th district. Those who currently hold those positions are: Sam Elliott (E), N. Sue Van Sant Palmer (M) and Ed Stanton (W). TBA Delegates to the ABA House of Delegates Two members to represent the TBA in the American Bar Association (ABA) House of Delegates will be elected for two-year terms by the TBA membership in 2005. The two positions are designated positions 1 and 3. Position 3 must be held by a young lawyer (under age 35 or 3 years of practice). Those who currently hold those positions are: Randall Noel (1) and Cynthia Richardson Wyrick (3). Special election TBA Delegate to the ABA House of Delegates Position 5, currently held by Paul Campbell III. The members will elect for the balance of a term ending with the ABA annual meeting in 2006. Qualifying, balloting & elections The officers, governors, delegates are elected by the membership as provided by election procedures with petitions due Feb. 15, 2005. Ballots will be dis- TENNESSEE BAR JOURNAL, DECEMBER 2004 tributed by April 1, 2005, and ballots are due back May 1, 2005. To qualify for any of these offices, a candidate must file a nominating petition with the executive director of the TBA. The petition must contain the names of 25 members of the association in good standing. The petition must be received at the TBA headquarters on or before Feb. 15, 2005. A ballot containing the names of all duly-qualified candidates will be distributed to members on or before April 1, 2005. To be counted, all ballots must be received at the office of the TBA auditors by the close of business, May 1, 2005. Votes will be tallied by the accounting firm selected by the Board of Governors in accordance with Section 44 of the bylaws. If there is only one duly-qualified candidate for an office by Feb. 15, 2005, that candidate will automatically be declared elected. Questions? This notice is in accordance with bylaws of the TBA §15 and 40 through 46. For more information on running for any of these offices, visit the TBA’s web site at http://www.tba.org/ news/elexhandbook.html or call 383-7421 in Nashville or (800) 899-6993 for an election handbook. TBA House of Delegates Members of the TBA House of Delegates are elected in odd-numbered years. One member of the TBA House of Delegates from each Judicial District and one additional delegate from the 6th (Knox County), 11th (Hamilton County), 20th (Davidson County) and 30th (Shelby County) are to be elected in 2005. The following is a list of the current members of the House from each district (and one young lawyer delegate from each grand division) whose terms expire this year: • Deborah Yeomans, 1st District • Suzanne Cook, 2nd District • Jimmie Miller, 2nd District • Alfred Schmutzer, 4th District • Martha Meares, 5th District • Douglas Overbey, 6th District • Virginia Schwamm, 6th District • Neil McBride, 7th District • James Romer, 8th District • Loren Plemmons, 9th District • Marcia McMurray, 10th District • Randy Wilson, 11th District • William Killian, 12th District • M. Jane Powers, 13th District • Vanessa Jackson, 14th District (Continued on page 8) 7 N E W S & I N F O R M A T I O N Board proposes bylaws changes T wo amendments to the Tennessee Bar Association bylaws will be voted on at the January 15 meeting of the Board of Governors. The first, a change to section 19, permits the president of the three state organizations with voting seats on the TBA Board of Governors to designate a substitute to attend and vote in his or her absence. Recent experience shows that duties of the office of the president of the Judicial Conference, the Distict Attorneys General Conference and the Public Defenders’ Conference sometimes lead to conflicts, making attendance at TBA board meetings impossible. Following is the new wording: 19. Meetings. The Board of Governors shall meet at least three times each year, at a time and place to be designated by the President. Special meetings may be called by the President or by eight members of the Board. The Board members designated by virtue of being President of the Tennessee Judicial Conference, District Attorneys General Conference and/or the District Public Defenders Conference may designate,in writing, a member of their conference to attend and vote in their absence at any meeting of the Board of Governors or a committee thereof, but only for that meeting or portion thereof. The second bylaws amendment, to section 49, would realign the timing of the election of Position 5, the TBA Delegate to the ABA House of Delegates, to conform with the term set in the ABA constitution. This position, currently held by Paul Campbell III, will be subject to a special election in Spring 2005. See page 7 for more information on that election. Following is the new wording: 49. Election of TBA Delegate, ABA House of Delegates. The TBA Delegates to the ABA House of Delegates shall be elected by a vote of the membership of the TBA. The notice of election, deadline for filing nominating petitions, ballot preparation, mailing and counting of ballots, deadline for receipt of ballots and provisions for contest of elections shall be the same as provided for in sections 40 through 46 for the election of vice president of the TBA. There shall be no requirement as to the grand division from which the candidate shall be nominated or elected. The delegate positions shall be designated by numbers. The delegate positions with terms expiring in 2005 and each subsequent two-year period, shall be designated seats one and three. The positions with terms expiring in 2006 and each subsequent two-year period, shall be designated as positions two, four, and five. The position to be held by a young lawyer delegate shall be designated position three. Comments on the proposals may be directed to TBA Executive Director Allan F. Ramsaur. To read the complete Tennessee Bar Association bylaws, go to http://www.tba.org/ bylaws.html TBA elections (Continued from page 7) • Jody Aulds, 15th District • Ewing Sellers, 16th District • Ginger Shofner, 17th District • Bryce Ruth, 18th District • Robert Ross, 19th District • Gif Thornton, 20th District • Neal McBrayer, 20th District • David Peluso, 21st District • Tony Edwards, 22nd District • John Lee Williams, 23rd District • Charlie Trotter, 24th District • Bill Cole, 25th District 8 • Jim Butler, 26th District • Max Speight, 27th District • Jerry Flippin, 28th District • Karen Burns, 29th District • Jim Bland, 30th. District • Randy Womack, 30th District • Keith Smartt, 31st District • Michelle Sellers, (young lawyer) West Tennessee • David Johnson, (young lawyer) Middle Tennessee • Tasha Blakney, (young lawyer) East Tennessee Qualifying, Balloting & Elections To qualify as a candidate for the TBA House of Delegates a TBA member must file a declaration of candidacy with the executive director of the TBA on or before Feb. 15, 2005. A ballot containing the names of all duly-qualified candidates will be distributed to members on or before April 1, 2005. To be counted, all ballots must be received at the office of the TBA auditors by the close of business, May 1, 2005. Votes will be tallied by the accounting firm selected by the Board of Governors in accordance with Section 44 of the bylaws. If there is only one duly-qualified can- didate for an office by Feb. 15, 2005, that candidate will automatically be declared elected. Questions? This notice is in accordance with bylaws of the TBA §15 and 40 through 46. For more information on running for any of these offices, visit the TBA’s web site at www.tba.org/electbook.html or call 383-7421 in Nashville or (800) 8996993 for an election handbook. TENNESSEE BAR JOURNAL, DECEMBER 2004 N E W S A B O U T T B A M E M B E R S The Bulletin Board Tennessee Bar Association members may send information about job changes, awards and work-related news. Send it to The Bulletin Board, c/o The Journal at 221 Fourth Ave. N., Suite 400, Nashville, TN 37219-2198, or email to sballinger@tnbar.org. Submissions are subject to editing. Pictures are used on a space-available basis and cannot be returned. The firm also announced that Darlene T. Marsh, a member of the environmental and natural resources group, has been elected to a three-year term on the Board of Regents for the American College of Mortgage Attorneys. Marsh, who practices in the firm’s Nashville office, concentrates her practice in environmental, commercial real estate, banking, public finance and municipal law. She was honored recently in August 2004 issue of the Nashville Business Journal’s “Best of the Bar.” ■ Amy Wood Malone has joined Colbert & Winstead PC of Nashville where she focuses her practice in civil and commercial litigation, transportation law, contracts, commercial real estate transactions, labor and employment law, workers’ compensation and creditors’ rights. A Memphis native, Malone received her law degree Malone from the University of Memphis in 2001. She is admitted to practice in all state and federal courts in Tennessee and in the United States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit. ■ Counsel On Call, a company founded in 2000 in Nashville and headed by attorney Jane H. Allen recently was ranked 133 of the 500 fastest growing privately held companies WYETH CHANDLER, former Memphis mayor and Circuit Court in the United States as judge, died Nov. 11 at St. Francis Hospital in Bartlett after suffering a compiled by Inc. Magazine. massive heart attack four days earlier. He was 74. He was interred at Counsel On Call places Allen Forest Hill Cemetary Midtown. Chandler was a 1955 graduate of the attorneys in part-time or University of Tennessee College of Law. project positions in law firms and corporate legal departments. The company has G. NELSON FORRESTER, a well-known community leader and doubled in size since its inception. It now retired attorney, died Oct. 31 at his home in Tullahoma after a brief illhas offices in Nashville, Memphis and ness. He was 75. Forrester was in private law practice for 28 years, after Atlanta. Allen also is part of an elite which he headed the Coffee County District Attorney General’s Child group within the Inc. 500 list: only 8 perSupport Division for eight years. He earned his law degree from the cent of the companies cited were founded University of Tennessee, Knoxville. His brother, William Howell Forby women. rester, is a lawyer in Pulaski. (Continued on page 10) ewis, King, Krieg & Waldrop PC recently announced that Isaac T. Conner joined the firm’s Nashville office as an associate. Conner, a native of Knoxville, will concentrate in litigation and sports law. He earned his law degree from the University of Tennessee with a concentration in Conner trial advocacy. Most recently, Conner served as law clerk for state trial court Judge Thomas W. Brothers in Davidson County. ■ The law firm of Greenebaum Doll & McDonald has announced that Lewis Bell has joined its Nashville office as a member in the tax and employee benefits practice and a secondary member in the trusts and estates practice. Bell has 13 years of tax, estate planning, probate, tax exempt organization and municipal bond experience, and has spent time as in-house counsel with a hospital holding company. In 2003 and 2004, he was honored in the Nashville Business Journal’s “Best of the Bar” edition for his outstanding work in taxation law. Prior to joining Greenebaum, Bell was a partner with Miller & Martin PLLC. Bell received his law degree from Cumberland School of Law in 1980 and his LL.M. in taxation from the Georgetown University Law Center in 1995. PA S S A G E S L TENNESSEE BAR JOURNAL, DECEMBER 2004 9 N E W S A B O U T T B A M E M B E R S Chambliss, Bahner & Stophel PC announced that five new attorneys have joined its Chattanooga office, all of whom previously served at the law firm of Strang, Fletcher, Carriger, WalkCarriger Hudson er, Hodge & Smith PLLC. William C. Carriger joined the firm’s business, real estate and taxation and estate preservation sections as a shareholder where he will focus on banking Hitchcock Willett law, business organizations and planning, commercial lending, credit union law, real estate law and tax exempt organizations. He earned his law degree from the University of Tennessee in 1967. Richard T. Hudson also joined as a shareholder in the firm’s business section. He received his law degree from Barham the University of Tennessee in 1975 and practices in the areas of real estate acquisitions and financing, M&A, business organizations and health care. Frederick L. Hitchcock joined as a shareholder in the firm’s business and litigation sections, concentrating his practice in energy and utilities Welcome! as well as environmental MEGAN RIZZO is the TBA’s counseling and litigation for new membership coorditechnology companies and local governments. He earned nator. Before coming to his law degree from the UniNashville, she was develversity of Tennessee in 1977. opment director for the Gregory D. Willett joined as Delaware Chapter of the a shareholder in the taxation Alzheimer Association, and estate preservation secassistant communications tion, concentrating his praccoordinator for Saturn tice in estate planning, proCorporation and developbate and estate administration, ment director for a group taxation and corporate law. that provided services for He received his law degree adults with disabilities. from Washington & Lee UniShe has been a court versity in 1992. Stephen D. Barham joined the firm as an appointed special advoassociate in the litigation seccate. She received her tion, focusing on general litibachelor’s degree in gation, medical malpractice psychology from the defense, bankruptcy and crediUniversity of Delaware tors’ rights. In 1998, he earned 10 his law degree from the University of Virginia. ■ Kevin C. Kennedy, senior attorney with The Kennedy Law Firm PLLC of Clarksville, recently received the 2004 Ed Atkinson Individual Volunteer of the Year Award. This award is given annually to a Clarksvillian who demonstrates exemplary community service. ■ The Florida-based law firm of Ruden McClosky has announced that William Sutton Jr., a partner in its Orlando Health Practice Group, has been certified in health law by The Florida Bar. Board certification acknowledges lawyers who demonstrate special knowledge, skills, experience and proficiency in health law and successfully complete a certification exam. Sutton Sutton received his law degree from Florida State University in 1987. His practice focuses on trial work for clients in criminal, civil and administrative disputes, as well as actions involving government agencies and enforcement authorities. He is a member of the Florida and Tennessee bars. ■ In the listing last month for John Taylor Moses on the recent publication of his novel, No Ceremony, his law school was incorrectly listed. He is a graduate of Ole Miss. ■ The law firm of Burch, Porter & Johnson PLLC celebrated its 100 anniversary this year with a birthday party on Oct. 27. The firm, founded in 1904 by Charles N. Burch, Clinton H. McKay and H. Dent Minor, has been located on Memphis’s Court Square for most of its history and several of its buildings are listed on the National Register of Historic Places. From its roots as a law firm serving railroads and oil companies, Burch, Porter & Johnson has grown into 48-lawyer firm that provides legal representation not only to business clients and individuals but also to governments, educational institutions, and charitable organizations in Memphis and nationally. In addition, the firm recently announced that it has opened a new office in London, England. Serving as representative there is Ralph Lake, a member of the firm who lived in London for seven years as European counsel with the Holiday Inn hotel chain. Lake holds an advanced law degree from the London School of Economics. ■ Julian Bibb, a member of Stites & Harbison PLLC, was named to the “Williamson 25” list by the Nashville Business Journal and Williamson Works. TENNESSEE BAR JOURNAL, DECEMBER 2004 N E W S & I N F O R M A T I O N Actions from the Board of Professional Responsibility Reinstated Howard Brownlow Barnwell, Chattanooga, was suspended June 11 for failure to respond to a complaint of misconduct. A hearing panel of the Board of Professional Responsibility recommended the suspension be dissolved, and he was reinstated Sept. 17. ••• Stanley D. Darnell, Clarksville, was reinstated on the condition that he conduct his law practice from one location and enter into a practice monitoring agreement with another attorney for two years. He was suspended in 1992 and again in 1995. On Oct. 11 a hearing panel recommended he be reinstated, with conditions. ••• D. Michael Van Sant, Nashville, was suspended Jan. 14 for failure to respond to a complaint of misconduct. A hearing panel recommended the suspension be dissolved, and he was reinstated Oct. 12, on the condition he have a law practice management consultation, at his expense, within six months of the order. Suspended By order of the Supreme Court of Tennessee, Hixson attorney Shannon Leigh Clark was suspended from the practice of law on Sept. 17. The suspension followed Clark’s entering of a guilty plea and conviction on one count of bankruptcy fraud in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Tennessee at Chattanooga. The district court ordered that a formal disciplinary proceeding be instituted to determine the extent of final discipline. Clark will remain suspended pending resolution of that proceeding. ••• On Oct.11, the Tennessee Supreme Court imposed a two-year suspension against attorney David Randolph Ray, formerly of Memphis and now residing in Tampa, Fla. The two-year period will follow a fiveyear disbarment imposed in an unrelated proceeding. Ray will not be able to petition for reinstatement of his license until January 2011. At that time, he must prove by clear and convincing evidence that his reinstatement will not be detrimental to the integrity and standing of the bar and the administration of justice or be subversive to the public interest. The Board of Professional Responsibility filed a petition for discipline against Ray in January 2003, for neglecting a client’s real estate matter causing the client to suffer actual damages. The board subsequently convened a hearing panel to review the case and recommend appropriate action. The panel recommended a two-year TENNESSEE BAR JOURNAL, DECEMBER 2004 suspension in March 2004. In deciding to impose a suspension, the panel cited five aggravating factors: (1) Ray’s pattern of neglect in his real estate practice, (2) prior disciplinary offenses, (3) multiple offenses in this case and the case that led to Ray’s disbarment, (4) Ray’s bad faith obstruction of the disciplinary process and intentional failure to comply with the rules of the board, and (5) Ray’s substantial experience in the practice of law. Ray did not respond to the board’s petition, did not appear at his disciplinary hearing and filed no motions for reconsideration or appeal. The Tennessee Supreme Court approved the hearing panel’s judgment and assessed the costs of the proceedings against Ray. ••• Thomas Keith McAlexander, a Memphis lawyer, was suspended for two years by the Tennessee Supreme Court on Oct. 12. In 2002 McAlexander was handling two separate matters for a client and in both cases he falsified the status of the proceedings. In the first case, he prepared a fictitious order from the Shelby County Circuit Court purporting to award his client $170,000 in an employment discrimination action. In the second case, he falsely informed his client that he had filed a motion to set aside a dismissal order in an action pending in the Dyer County Circuit Court. He prepared and mailed this fictitious motion to the client with a false certification of service (Continued on page 28) Attorneys reinstated after Rule 21 violation The following attorneys have been reinstated, as of press time, to the practice of law after complying with Rule 21, the rule for mandatory CLE as required by the Board of Professional Responsibility. They were all suspended on Sept. 7, 2004: Mark Edward Adkins, Murfreesboro; Arthur James Andrews, Knoxville; T. Martin Browder Jr., Kingsport; Craig J. Donaldson, Sevierville; Ernest Lee Edwards III, Nashville; Joe Mike Felknor, Knoxville; Willie Rena Harper, Knoxville; Matthew Peter Huggins, Orlando, Fla.; Richard Kantor, Jerusalem, Israel; Martha Haren McCampbell, Knoxville; Clay Spencer Nails, Corinth, Miss.; Michael A. Pietrangelo, Memphis; Heidi L. Simmons, Mt. Pleasant, S.C. 11 C O V E R S T O R Y By Kristin E. Solomon 12 TENNESSEE BAR JOURNAL, DECEMBER 2004 Know the Tennessee Identity Theft Victims’ Rights Act of 2004 our client was recently denied a mortgage even though he pays every bill on time. Collection agencies have begun leaving urgent messages on his answering machine. Suspicious, he requested a copy of his credit report, only to find numerous past due accounts listed that he never opened. He has fallen prey to an identity thief. He frantically calls you, seeking advice. What do you tell him? Y According to Federal Trade Commission (FTC) data, 2,782 Tennessee residents filed identity theft complaints with the FTC in 2003.1 Thousands more Tennesseans are victimized each year, and the numbers are only expected to increase. To address this growing problem, the Tennessee legislature recently passed the Identity Theft Victims’ Rights Act of 2004.2 The Victims’ Rights Act, which replaced Tennessee Code Annotated Section 39-14-150, went into effect on July 1, 2004. In addition to expanding the existing criminal identity theft statute, the Victims’ Rights Act places certain obligations on businesses and other private entities with respect to the disposal of materials containing customers’ personal information. Because attorneys and law firms themselves routinely deal with the type of information covered by the statute, they must take care to comply with the requirements of the Victims’ Rights Act or face potentially onerous penalties. This article discusses obligations placed on Tennessee businesses by the Victims’ Rights Act; what recourse a client may have; and what an attorney should counsel a client to do if the client is victimized. Duties imposed on Tennessee businesses, including attorneys and law firms The Victims’ Rights Act imposes certain duties on private entities and businesses that discard materials containing customers’ personal identifying information. Tennessee attorneys should not only educate their clients about the new law, they should also take steps to ensure that their own business practices are in compliance with the requirements. The new law requires a business (or other private entity) to take measures to safeguard customers’ personal identifying information when disposing of records. For purposes of the duties imposed on businesses, “personal identifying information” means a customer’s: • social security number • driver’s license number • savings account number • checking account number • personal identification number or password • complete credit or debit card number • demand deposit account number • health insurance identification number, or • unique biometric data.3 (Continued on page 14) TENNESSEE BAR JOURNAL, DECEMBER 2004 13 Tennessee Identity Theft Victims’ Rights Act (Continued from page 13) Any record that contains a customer’s personal identifying information may not be discarded unless, at a minimum, the business first shreds or burns the record, erases the personal identifying information, or modifies the record to make the personal identifying information unreadable. Alternatively, the business may take action to destroy the customer’s personal identifying information in a manner that it reasonably believes will ensure that no unauthorized persons have access to the information contained in the record during the time between the record’s disposal and its destruction. Any private entity or business that fails to comply with these requirements may be held civilly liable under the Tennessee Consumer Protection Act, and subjected to a civil penalty of $500 for each record that is wrongfully disposed of or discarded. However, no such penalty may exceed a total of $10,000 for any one customer. Additionally, it is an affirmative defense to any civil penalty that the business used due diligence in its attempt to properly dispose of customers’ records. The crime of identity theft What exactly is the crime of identity theft under Tennessee law? The Victims’ Rights Act provides that a person commits the offense of identity theft who knowingly obtains, possesses, buys or uses the personal identifying information of another, with the intent to commit any unlawful act, and without the consent of the other person or without the lawful authority to obtain, possess, buy or use such identifying information. “Personal identifying information” for purposes of the crime of identity theft means any name or number that may be used, alone or in conjunction with any other information, to identify a specific individual.4 Such information includes the more obvious, such as a person’s name or taxpayer identification number, date of birth and address. Also included are items that come less quickly to mind, such as fingerprints, retina or iris images, and telecommunication access devices. Under Tennessee law, identity theft is a Class D felony, which carries a sentence of two to 12 years and a fine of up to $5,000. Prosecution must begin within four years of commission of the offense. The Victims’ Rights Act confers on victims of identity theft all rights afforded to crime victims under the Tennessee Constitution and the Tennessee Victims’ Bill of Rights,5 including the right to receive restitution. Civil redress for victims The Tennessee Consumer Protection Act of 19776 (TCPA) permits a victim of identity theft to bring a private civil action against the thief. The victim must file suit within two years of the date liability arises, or within two years of the discovery of the liability, if concealed. A successful plaintiff may recover damages and reasonable attorneys’ fees and costs. Although your client may be eager to haul the perpetrator into court, the unfortunate fact is that many victims of identity theft have no idea who stole their identity. The thief’s name? Your client’s. The thief’s address? Fake. Even if the perpetrator is discovered, your client may very well find that the thief has Kristin E. Solomon is an associate attorney with Sherrard & Roe PLC, in Nashville. She is a 2002 graduate of Vanderbilt University Law School, where she was an associate editor of the Vanderbilt Law Review. Solomon's practice is focused primarily on business law. She is actively involved in pro bono work, most recently incorporating a nonprofit dog rescue and handling its application for federal tax-exempt status. Solomon 14 rather shallow pockets. Some victims have looked to parties other than the thief for restitution by bringing civil actions against the financial institutions that issued credit to the thieves. The majority of these actions have been brought for failure to comply with the federal Fair Credit Reporting Act,7 which imposes certain duties on credit issuers insofar as they are “furnishers of information” to consumer credit reporting agencies.8 Specifically, the Fair Credit Reporting Act requires furnishers of information to provide accurate information to consumer reporting agencies, conduct investigations and promptly report any inaccurate or incomplete information to the agencies upon notice of dispute by a consumer.9 But the Fair Credit Reporting Act does not impose liability on issuers of credit for negligence in connection with the original extension of credit to the imposter. Identity theft victims sometimes try to devise creative common law negligence claims when suing over the issuance of credit to imposters. Surprisingly few cases based on state common law theories have been reported, and none in Tennessee. Of the reported state law cases, most were dismissed for procedural reasons without discussion of the merits.10 Given the lack of reported cases in Tennessee, Tennessee courts may look to the decisions of other state courts when considering a victim’s common law claim against a credit issuer. In one of the few reported state law cases not dismissed on procedural grounds, an identity theft victim sued various credit card issuers for the tort of “negligent enablement of imposter fraud” under South Carolina law.11 The defendants extended credit to an unknown identity thief, who proceeded to incur charges in the plaintiff’s name without paying the bills. The plaintiff alleged that the credit card issuers failed to verify or corroborate the imposter’s identity before issuing credit in the plaintiff’s name, and failed to adopt policies that would prevent the issuance of credit to imposters. Unfortunately for the plaintiff, the Supreme Court of South Carolina refused to recognize the tort of negligent enable- TENNESSEE BAR JOURNAL, DECEMBER 2004 ment of imposter fraud under South Carolina law, stating that issuers of credit cards do not have a duty to protect victims of identity theft. It remains to be seen whether the Tennessee courts would entertain a suit against a credit issuer for, say, negligence in connection with the issuance of credit to an imposter. A successful plaintiff would have to show that the credit issuer owed a duty of care to the plaintiff, a burden that may prove difficult to meet. The identity theft victim may encounter additional difficulties in bringing suit in state court if the address used by the identity thief is outside Tennessee. In a 1997 case involving an identity theft victim in Missouri who sued a credit card issuer, the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed a lower court ruling that Missouri lacked personal jurisdiction over the defendant.12 The defendant, a New York bank, issued credit cards to an imposter in the plaintiff’s name, but at a TENNESSEE BAR JOURNAL, DECEMBER 2004 “Any private entity or business that fails to comply with these requirements may be held civilly liable under the Tennessee Consumer Protection Act.” New York address. The defendant bank argued that it did not have the requisite minimum contacts necessary for a finding of personal jurisdiction under Missouri law. The court noted that the bank had not purposely availed itself of the privilege of conducting activities in Missouri when it issued credit to a person who supposedly resided in New York. To further dampen the spirits of a would-be plaintiff, it remains to be seen whether an identity theft victim may bring a private cause of action in Ten- nessee against an issuer of credit for violation of the Fair Credit Reporting Act. Several courts, including the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals, have held that a consumer may bring a private action against a furnisher of information (such as an issuer of credit) for any willful noncompliance or negligent noncompliance with the Fair Credit Reporting Act.13 However, the United States District Court for the Western District of Tennessee held in 1999 that a consumer has (Continued on page 16) 15 Tennessee Identity Theft Victims’ Rights Act (Continued from page 15) no such private right of action.14 The court dismissed the identity theft victim’s suit against a credit issuer because in the court’s opinion: (1) enforcement of the portions of the Fair Credit Reporting Act that pertain to furnishers of information is limited to certain federal or state officers, and (2) the provisions setting forth civil liability do not apply to violations by furnishers of information. Several courts in a variety of jurisdictions have vehemently criticized this opinion, emphasizing that it was decided without the benefit of the position of all parties because the plaintiff apparently failed to prosecute his case and did not file an opposition to the defendants’ motion to dismiss.15 The court adjudicated the motion to dismiss based exclusively on the defendants’ legal memorandum for dismissal, and without the benefit of full briefing on the issue. Given the continued strong criticism of the case’s outcome, a victim of identity theft with a claim against an issuer of credit for violation of the Fair Find out more The Tennessee Department of Safety and the Federal Trade Commission maintain thorough online guides for victims of identity theft, available at www.tennessee.gov/safety/idtheft.htm and www.consumer.gov/idtheft. Major credit reporting agencies offer comprehensive guides to repairing credit and preventing future theft. These guides can be found at the reporting agencies’ web sites: Equifax www.equifax.com Experian www.experian.com Trans Union www.transunion.com Credit Reporting Act may be successful in convincing a Tennessee court to revisit the issue. Counseling the client Numerous resources are available to help victims with the often frustratingly slow process of repairing damaged or destroyed credit. See the box at right for a list of helpful web sites. The attorney should counsel the client to file a police report immediately upon discovering the identity theft, and to obtain an official copy of the report. Additionally, the client should complete a fraud affidavit, such as the one provided by the FTC (available online at www.consumer.gov/idtheft/index.html). Credit issuers and the credit reporting agencies frequently request copies of the police report and the fraud affidavit as part of their investigation of the fraud claim. The client should immediately contact the credit issuer and the three major credit reporting agencies to report the fraud and request that a fraud alert be placed in his or her credit report. The client should follow up with written notice of the fraud. It is important to emphasize to the client from the beginning to record the name and phone number of every representative with whom the client speaks, and to retain copies of all correspondence. Finally, the attorney should encourage the client to file a complaint with the FTC, which acts as a national clearinghouse for identity theft information. An online complaint form is available at www.consumer.gov/idtheft/filing_ complaintwftc.html#45. Dealing with identity theft is a stressful, frustrating process. Attorneys find themselves in a unique position to combat and prevent identity theft – both as a resource for the victim and as an advisor (Continued on page 18) 16 TENNESSEE BAR JOURNAL, DECEMBER 2004 What’s new at TennBarU? TENNBARU ONLINE The TennBarU online CLE program continues to grow, with the addition of several new courses added just in time to help you meet your 2004 continuing legal education requirements. Management consultant Suzanne Rose has two new ethics programs on TennBarU. One offers guidance for helping you and your firm avoid ethics complaints and malpractice claims. A second takes a look at some of the ethical issues tied to new technologies that are sweeping the legal profession. Also new is a second course from Virginia Mayo, editor of the Tennessee Attorneys Memo. Her latest course is titled Recent Developments in Products Liability Law in Tennessee. TBA ETHICS EXPERTS RETURN WITH ANNUAL ETHICS ROADSHOW AND MORE Tennessee Bar Association members continue to play key roles in shaping the state’s ethics rules, and this month they are again bringing that expertise to CLE programs that will help you in your practice. The TBA Ethics Roadshow will travel across the state for the third straight year with a highly useful program on the Tennessee Rules of Professional Conduct. This year, the seminar is “Just Sign Here … Conflict Waivers and Engagement Letters Under Tennessee's New Rules.” Leading the discussion in each location will be either Lucian T. Pera or Brian S. Faughnan, both of Armstrong Allen, PLLC in Memphis. Lucian is chair of the TBA Standing Committee on Ethics and Professional Responsibility, and Brian practices law with Lucian in the area of ethics and professional responsibility and is a frequent CLE speaker. The Ethics Roadshow begins Dec. 8 in Memphis, followed by a Dec. 16 stop in Knoxville, a Dec. 9 session in Nashville and a concluding program on Dec. 17 in Chattanooga. You can find out more or register for any of these programs online at www.tba.org/onsiteinfo/ethics2004.html or by contacting the TBA at (800) 899-6993. Of course that’s not your only opportunity to earn ethics hours from TennBarU. Coming up earlier in December is the Corporate Ethics Update program and a program on Understanding the new Child Support Guidelines that includes a one-hour ethics component. In addition, the TBA Environmental Law Section is presenting a video conference on Environmental Ethics on Dec. 14, the TennBarU TeleSeminar program presents Ethical Issues for Estate Planners on Dec. 17 and the TennBarU Online program offers eight hours of interactive programming available 24/7 at www.tennbaru.com. A SERVICE OF THE TENNESSEE BAR A SSOCIATION SEMINAR OFFERS HELP UNDERSTANDING NEW CHILD SUPPORT GUIDELINES Learn what the new Child Support Guidelines will mean to your clients and your practice in this seminar presented by some of the most knowledgeable people in the field. This program offers the most current information on the guidelines, and will teach how you and your clients can get child support obligations calculated under the new guidelines for free, online, 24 hours a day. Don’t miss this one-time opportunity to attend the seminar in person and to have your questions answered directly by the experts. December programs will take place in Memphis, Jackson, Nashville, Chattanooga, Knoxville and Johnson City. Register or find out more at www.tba.org/onsiteinfo/ child_support_2004.html CLE SKI To celebrate the 20th year of this popular program, TennBarU’s CLE Ski returns to Park City, Utah, on Feb. 13 -19, 2005, for a week of great programs and great skiing. Reserve your lodging by Jan. 12. FIND OUT MORE www.tennbaru.com • www.tba.org (615) 383-7421 • (800) 899-6993 TENNBARU: CLE FOR TENNESSEE Tennessee Identity Theft Victims’ Rights Act (Continued from page 16) to businesses that may otherwise unwittingly provide easy access to discarded sensitive personal information. And remember that professionals are favorite targets of identity thieves: check your own credit report at least once a year to ensure that you do not join the growing numbers of people who fall victim to identity theft. Notes 1. Identity Theft Victim Complaint Data: Figures and Trends in Tennessee, Jan. 1 – Dec. 31, 2003. Federal Trade Commission Report, Jan. 22, 2004. The author was the victim of identity theft in Tennessee in 2001 despite having taken all of the recommended precautions. 2. 2004 Tenn. Pub. Acts 911; 2003 Tenn. HB 3404. 3. Tenn. Code Ann. §39-14-150(g)(2). Note that the definition of “personal identifying information” for purposes of the crime of identity theft is much broader. See Tenn. Code Ann. §39-14-150(e). 4. Tenn. Code Ann. §39-14-150(e). Note 18 that the definition of “personal identifying information” is narrower with respect to the requirements placed on businesses. See Tenn. Code Ann. §39-14-150(g). 5. Tenn. Code Ann. §40-38-101 (2004) et seq. 6. Tenn. Code Ann. §47-18-2104 (2004). 7. 15 U.S.C. §§1681 et seq. 8. The term “furnisher of information” is not defined in the Fair Credit Reporting Act, but has been defined by a Tennessee court as an entity “which transmits information concerning a particular debt owed by a particular consumer to consumer reporting agencies such as Experian, Equifax, MCCA and Trans Union.” Carney v. Experian Information Solutions Inc., 57 F. Supp. 2d 496 (W.D. Tenn. 1999). 9. 15 U.S.C. §1682s-2(a-b). 10. For example, an identity theft victim brought an unsuccessful pro se action against a credit card issuer in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York. Garay v. U.S. Bancorp, 303 F. Supp.2d 299 (E.D.N.Y. 2004). The identity theft victim asserted seven causes of action, including aid- ing and abetting identity theft under the federal Identity Theft and Assumption Deterrence Act of 1998 and state law claims for negligence (including “failure to provide due diligence,” “aiding and abetting in a conspiracy to commit conversion,” and “invasion of privacy”). The court dismissed all the federal claims because the statutes involved were criminal and did not provide for a private right of action. The court declined to exercise jurisdiction over the state law claims and dismissed those as well. 11. Huggins v. Citibank N.A., Capital One Services Inc. and Premier Bankcard Inc., 585 S.E.2d 275 (S.C. 2003). 12. Aylward v. Fleet Bank et al., 122 F.3d 616, 619 (8th Cir. 1997). The victim sued on a theory of tortious communication of “derogatory credit references.” Id. 13. See Nelson v. Chase Manhattan Mortgage Corp., 282 F.3d 1057, 1059-60 (9th Cir. 2002) (holding that consumer has private right of action); Vasquez-Garcia v. TransUnion de Puerto Rico, 222 F. Supp. 2d 150, 157-58 (D.P.R. 2002) (holding that Congress expressly provided consumers with a private cause of action for willful or negligent violations by furnishers of information); Dornhecker v. Ameritech Corp., 99 F. Supp. 2d 918 (N.D. Ill. 2000) (holding that consumer has private right of action); Campbell v. Baldwin, 90 F. Supp. 2d 754 (E.D. Tex. 2000) (holding that consumer has private right of action). See also 15 U.S.C. §§1681n and 1681o. 14. Carney v. Experian Information Solutions Inc., 57 F. Supp. 2d 496 (W.D. Tenn. 1999). 15. Stafford v. Cross Country Bank, 262 F. Supp. 2d 776, 783 (D. Ky. 2003); Ayers v. Equifax Info. Servs., 2003 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 23271 (D. Va. 2003) (noting that Carney’s holding is “contrary to virtually all holdings by courts that have considered this issue”); Vazquez-Garcia, 222 F. Supp. 2d at 156; McMillan v. Experian Info. Servs., 119 F. Supp. 2d 84, 86 (D. Conn. 2000); Dimezza v. First USA Bank Inc., 103 F. Supp. 2d 1296, 1301 (D.N.M. 2000) (calling the Carney court’s conclusion “baffling”); Gordon v. Greenpoint Credit, 266 F. Supp. 2d 1007 (D. Iowa 2003); Johnson v. United States-DOD, 2000 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 21087 (D. Minn. 2000) (noting that the Carney decision “stands, apparently alone, against a significant number of decisions finding that both the plain language of the FCRA and its legislative history compel the opposite conclusion”). TENNESSEE BAR JOURNAL, DECEMBER 2004 Cut straight to the historical text of your statute! State Legislative History** Westlaw® StatutesPlus™ StatutesPlus now offers PastStat Locator™* so you can instantly view your statute exactly as it existed on a particular date. That means you can still find, verify, read and interpret statutes with amazing efficiency, and be even more confident that your research is historically accurate and complete by eliminating the need to locate and reconstruct historical statutory text. StatutesPlus now offers you crucial state legislative histories in addition to our comprehensive federal legislative history information, updates and recent developments. ** State legislative history is available in select jurisdictions for 2004. * PastStat Locator is available in select jurisdictions for 2004. Skip the statutes research maze and go with the amazing Westlaw StatutesPlus. Experience it yourself! Visit west.thomson.com or call 1-800-762-5272 today. © 2004 West, a Thomson business L-308281/8-04 Differences that matter. TENNESSEE BAR JOURNAL, DECEMBER 2004 19 A R T I C L E Hillbilly Homicides The ‘Stringbean’ Murder Trial By Donald F. Paine f we had been listening to WSM between 10:15 and 10:30 p.m. on Saturday, Nov. 10, 1973, we would have heard David “Stringbean” Akeman’s final performance on the Grand Ole Opry. Before midnight he and wife Estelle were dead — murdered upon return to their farmhouse in northwest Davidson County, Tenn. Motive? Stringbean was reared in Depression Kentucky and didn’t believe in banks. Word got around that he had some $20,000 cash at home from “Hee Haw” earnings. Here’s what happened. Cousins John and Doug Brown drove to the small Akeman dwelling while the owners were at the Opry. They didn’t realize that they had triggered Stringbean’s “burglar system,” a length of fishing line he had stretched across the driveway. They ransacked the house looking for the rumored cash. Finding none, they lay in wait. At around 11:30 p.m., Stringbean and Estelle returned and noticed the broken fishing line. Stringbean put down his banjo case on the porch, drew a pistol and entered the darkened house. He fired toward a human form (Doug Brown), a struggle ensued, and John Brown killed him with a single fatal shot. Then John chased the screaming Estelle across the yard, felled her with one shot, and then I 20 pumped two more into her as she begged for life. The killer was later quoted: “I didn’t mind shooting Stringbean, but I kinda hated shooting his wife.” Please … Grandpa Jones, Stringbean’s best friend and neighbor, discovered the bodies early the next morning. Suspicion quickly focused on the Brown boys, largely because Doug ran his mouth to a coworker at American Marine. After they were jailed and Stringbean and Estelle Akeman, taken in Kansas City, Kan. 1962. PHOTO COURTESY OF COUNTRY MUSIC HALL FAME® AND MUSEUM OF charged with murder, each gave selfserving confessions that blamed the other cousin. These statements were published in the newspaper. The trial of State v. Brown opened on Oct. 28, 1974. Judge Allen Cornelius presided, General Tom Shriver prosecuted, Arnold Peebles defended John Brown, and Joe Binkley Sr. defended Doug Brown. For constitutional reasons the death penalty was not available as punishment.1 On Nov. 2 the jury returned double guilty verdicts against each defendant. The court ordered the 99-year sentences to run consecutively. Doug died at Brushy Mountain in 2003; John remains imprisoned at Nashville. Where was the $20,000 cache of cash? Lt. Tommy Jacobs, one of the lead investigators,2 told me that in late 1996 he was alerted by the thenoccupant of the farmhouse to drive out for a look-see at “confetti” falling from the chimney in the fireplace. During two decades mice had used the hidden treasure trove as building material! One final fact I owe to Steve Gibson of the Wilson County Bar, whose father Curt Gibson was Stringbean’s guitar player at the Opry. After the final show that fatal Saturday evening, Stringbean and Mr. Gibson went backstage alone to sing the old hymn, (Continued on page 26) TENNESSEE BAR JOURNAL, DECEMBER 2004 “I didn’t mind shooting Stringbean, but I kinda hated shooting his wife.” ABOVE: Murderer John Brown on “perp” walk with Detective Tommy Jacobs, left, and Sherman Nickens, right. PHOTO COURTESY THE TENNESSEAN. RIGHT: Farmhouse where the Akemans were murdered. PHOTO BY DON PAINE Stringbean Akeman performs at the Grand Ole Opry on the stage of the Ryman Auditorium, Nov. 2, 1973. He and his wife were murdered after his Opry performance just eight days later. PHOTO TENNESSEE BAR JOURNAL, DECEMBER 2004 COURTESY OF COUNTRY MUSIC HALL OF FAME® AND MUSEUM 21 W H E R E T H E R E ‘ S A W I L L Free Money: How insurance + annuity = big profit By Dan W. Holbrook n recent years, insurance advisors have figured out a marvelous way for certain clients to get money out of the insurance industry, completely above board and legal. As attorneys, we may be asked whether it really works. The answer so far is yes, and it’s been done many times successfully. In fact, it seems to require a rephrasing of tax attorneys’ usual refrain: “If it’s too good to be true, it ain’t … unless, of course, it is.” Consider a client between ages 75 and 90, with above average health and wealth, who will never need any more life insurance. That client might well have a valuable unutilized asset, namely, his insurability. Here’s how to convert that asset into cold cash. I STEP 1: Your client agrees to submit to an insurance medical examination. Because his health is generally good for his age, he is likely to qualify for standard rates. Because his wealth is significant, he can qualify for a lot of life insurance. [Insurance companies limit the amount of insurance they will underwrite on any one person, typically around 11/2 times net worth.] STEP 2: Your client’s insurance agent shops around for the best deal on life insurance. The life insurance contract will generally be guaranteed, that is, a fixed annual premium for the insured’s entire life, with a guaranteed death benefit no matter how long he lives. The insurance company should be top-rated. STEP 3: The agent then takes the same medical exam information and shops around for the best deal on a life annuity contract. A single premium insured annuity (often referred to as a SPIA) is a contract issued by an insurance company, in exchange for one lump sum, to pay a guaranteed annual annuity for the life of a person, no matter how long that person lives. Again, the company should be toprated. This is where the fun begins. Companies issuing annuities look at the underwriting data differently than do companies issuing life insurance policies. Almost anyone over age 75 has had some medical history that may shorten his life expectancy, justifying a larger annuity payment. This is typically referred to as an “age-rated SPIA.” In other words, while a life Dan W. Holbrook practices estate law with Holbrook & Peterson PLLC, in Knoxville. He is certified as an Estate Planning Specialist by the Tennessee Commission on Continuing Legal Education and Specialization, is a Fellow of the American College of Trust and Estate Counsel, and serves on the TBA Probate Study Group reviewing and recommending legislation involving trusts and estates in Tennessee. He can be reached at dholbrook@hpestatelaw.com. 22 insurance company competes in a market that values living beyond life expectancy, the annuity company competes in a market that values dying sooner. Both companies review the same data, but they calculate their expected profits on different products in different markets. The difference creates a financial spread and therefore an opportunity. [Current rule-ofthumb is that for every three clients who submit to this medical underwriting, only one will obtain a “spread” on the numbers sufficient to create enough profit to justify closing on this transaction. For the other two, the numbers just don’t work well enough.] Example 1: Based on her medical information, Doris, age 75, can qualify for $10 million of life insurance, for an annual premium of $600,000 per year, first payment due immediately. She can also qualify for an annuity contract that pays $1,200,000 per year for a lump sum payment of $8 million, first payment to begin a year from now. STEP 4: Your client goes to a bank and borrows to finance the deal. Your client may be wealthy, but he is not interested in contributing cash to make this happen. A bank loan, secured by the life insurance policy and the annuity contract, closes the deal without any money invested by your client. Example 2: Doris finds that her local bank is happy to loan her $9 million, at 4 percent annual interest TENNESSEE BAR JOURNAL, DECEMBER 2004 W H E R E payable during her life, with principal due only at her death. She closes on the bank loan, the insurance policy, and the annuity contract all on the same day. She uses $600,000 of the loan to pay the first year’s insurance premium and $8 million to buy a SPIA that will pay $1,200,000 per year starting a year later. She can pocket the remaining $400,000 immediately, free of income tax. This also covers any “transaction costs” in setting up the whole deal. STEP 5: As the years go by, the annual annuity payment will be sufficient to pay both the annual insurance premium and the interest on the note. During the years of the client’s life expectancy, some of the annual annuity payment will be taxable income, but most will be tax-free return of principal. After the end of the life expectancy, all of the annuity income every year will be ordinary income. This is the one place where the client is exposed to potential liability. Usually at least some of the prior positive cash flow should be invested as a reserve to cover this contingency. A modest return on the reinvested cash flow should more than cover any late-year potential negative cash flow through the maximum insurance age of 110. Example 3: At the end of each year, Doris receives an annuity payment of $1,200,000. She writes a check to the life insurance company for $600,000 to pay the annual premium and a check to the bank for $360,000 to pay the 4 percent annual interest on the $9 million loan. That leaves her with pre-tax cash flow of $240,000. Doris’s life expectancy is 12 years, so 1/12 of $8 million, or $667,000 per year, is tax-free to her as a return of basis, and the rest of the annuity, $533,000, is taxable income. After T H E R E ‘ S A paying incremental income taxes of about $178,000, she will have an after-tax net annual cash flow of about $62,000 for the first 12 years. The total positive cash flow for the first 12 years, including the first $400,000 at the closing, and disregarding any earnings from re-investing, will be about $1,144,000. Beginning in the 13th year, or starting at Doris’s age 88, the annuity payment of $1,200,000 will be entirely ordinary income, on which the income taxes may be about “Free money indeed. The client has not invested a cent, yet can reap a huge benefit regardless of whether he dies sooner or later.” $400,000. So beginning at age 88, Doris’s annual after-tax cash flow may be negative $160,000. Whether or not this would be a problem for Doris depends on whether or not she has invested her prior positive cash flow as a reserve for this purpose or else has other liquid assets. STEP 6: Upon the client’s death, the life insurance death benefit will pay off the loan and any accrued interest. The death benefit will exceed the payoff, creating a windfall for the client’s testamentary beneficiaries. Example 4: Doris dies in mid-year. W I L L The life insurance company pays her estate $10 million. Her executor pays off the bank debt of $9 million, along with $180,000 of accrued interest. The difference of $820,000 passes to the beneficiaries under her will. Summary of net benefits to Doris or her estate: $400,000 upon closing the deal. After-tax positive cash flow of about $62,000 per year for 12 years, totaling $744,000. After-tax negative cash flow of about $160,000 per year thereafter. $820,000 upon her death. Free money indeed. The client has not invested a cent, yet can reap a huge benefit regardless of whether he dies sooner or later. Arbitrage This technique is known as “arbitrage,” a term often carrying a negative connotation. Arbitrage is merely profiting from a spread, which for example is exactly how banks make all their money. The insurance industry is all about allocation and assumption of risk. So long as the insurance arbitrage is legal and fully disclosed to all participating parties, the fact that two different insurance companies are willing to enter into two separate contracts that create profit for the client is their risk, not the client’s. Note that the arbitrage comes in three phases: first, a possible immediate profit upon closing; second, a possible positive after-tax cash flow during the client’s life; and third, a death benefit. Any specific transaction may be designed to include all three, or only one or two in any combination. This depends on the client’s goals and can be determined after the underwriting by selecting the relative amounts of insurance, SPIA, and (Continued on page 27) TENNESSEE BAR JOURNAL, DECEMBER 2004 23 A R T I C L E Promissory Estoppel The enforcement of gratuitous promises to prevent injustice By Steven W. Feldman party seeking to prove the existence of a contract must show the agreement was supported by adequate consideration, and that the parties have a mutuality of obligation. “Consideration” in this sense means either a benefit to the maker of the promise or a detriment to, or obligation upon, the promise. Calabro v. Calabro, 15 S.W.3d 873, 876 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1999); Dobbs v. Guenther, 846 S.W.2d 270, 276 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1992). Suppose, however, that A makes a gratuitous representation or other promise to B, and there is no express contract. Thereafter B relies upon that representation or promise by taking some substantial action or making some significant forbearance, but A refuses to make good on the commitment. For example, in Engenius Entertainment Inc. v. Herenton , 971 S.W.2d 12 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1997), the plaintiff, a real estate developer, alleged that the defendant, a city agency, had induced the plaintiff to incur more than $1 million in costs for developing a feasibility study and related efforts at the city’s request when city officials represented that they would soon be entering into a long-term property development agreement with the plaintiff, but the city reneged on the promise. Does the lack of consideration in this situation flowing from the real estate developer/promisee A 24 to the city/promisor necessarily deprive the promisee of a remedy? The answer in Tennessee is that such a gratuitous promise can be binding in the interests of justice, through the theory of promissory estoppel. Alden v. Presley, 637 S.W.2d 862, 864 (Tenn. 1982). Accordingly, the Engenius court reversed and remanded the trial court’s determination that the plaintiff had failed to state a claim upon which relief could be granted. Promissory estoppel explained “Promissory estoppel” — also known as “detrimental reliance” — is defined as a promise that the promisor should reasonably expect to induce action or forbearance on the part of the promisee or a third person and that does induce such action or forbearance. The promise will be binding if injustice can be avoided only by its enforcement. The remedy granted for the breach may be limited as justice requires. Calabro, 15 S.W.3d at 878. The doctrine takes its name because a promisor that induces a promisee in these circumstances to change its position substantially is “estopped” — precluded — from denying the binding nature of the promise because of the absence of consideration from the promisee. Id. In applying this remedy, several Tennessee decisions have adopt- TENNESSEE BAR JOURNAL, DECEMBER 2004 ed the influential definition of promissory estoppel in the Restatement (Second) of Contracts, Section 90. E.g., Amacher v. Brown-Forman Corporation, 826 SW.2d 480, 482 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1991). Promissory estoppel is a substitute for consideration, or a sufficient reason for enforcement of the promise without consideration. Smith v. Harriman Utility Board, 26 S.W.3d 879, 886 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2000). The traditional elements of a claim for promissory estoppel are: (a) a promise, clear and unambiguous in its terms; (b) the claimant’s reliance on the promise; (c) the reliance was reasonable and foreseeable; and (d) injury stemming from the reliance. Anderson, Inc. v. Consol, Inc., 348 F.3d 496, 503 (6th Cir. 2003). Tennessee decisions follow a similar standard: (a) the detriment suffered in reliance must be substantial in an economic sense; (b) the substantial loss to the promisee in acting in reliance must have been foreseeable by the promisor; and (c) the promisee must have acted reasonably in justifiable reliance on the promise as made. Calabro, 15 S.W.3d at 879. The promise: the key element The doctrine’s key element is the promise or representation, because a court must know what induced the plaintiff’s action or forbearance and whether justice requires a remedy. Amacher, 826 S.W.2d at 482. As the Restatement (Second) of Contracts, Section 2(1), explains, a “promise” manifests an intention to act or to refrain from acting in a specified way, so made as to justify a promisee in understanding that a commitment has been made. A “representation” is a presentation of fact made to induce someone to act. Shoshone Indian Tribe of Wind River v. United States, 58 Fed. Cl. 542, 546 (2003). Promissory estoppel can apply to all varieties of representations or promises, including sales transactions governed by the Uniform Commercial Code. Amacher, 826 S.W.2d at 482. The Tennessee Court of Appeals has commented that American jurisdictions have not employed a uniform approach in deciding when a defendant’s words or actions will justify the defendant’s reliance for promissory estoppel. Some courts hold that the promise must be definite and unequivocal. Other decisions state that the court may infer the promise from the general statements of the promisee. Id. The Tennessee Court of Appeals has strongly indicated that the second view is more persuasive, based on the second approach’s closer adherence to the Restatement (Second) of Contracts’ definition of a “promise,” referenced above. Id. In this regard, the “inference” standard better tracks the Restatement (Second) formulation, because a “promise” under the Restatement (Second) may be inferred from a person’s manifestation of an intention that will justify a promisee in understanding that a promisor has made a commitment. Id. Furthermore, the “inference” standard is preferable because a promise is not an offer; the traditional theory of promissory estoppel differentiates between a promise, an offer, and a bargain. Neuhoff v. Marvin Lumber and Cedar Co., 370 F.3d 197, 203 (1st Cir. 2004). On the other hand, a person’s mere statement of an opinion or a future intent is not a “promise,” and so courts will reject promissory estoppel with only such proof. See Richard A. Lord, Williston on Contracts, § 8:5 (4th ed. 1991). In any event, these questions are fact intensive and will usually raise genuine issues of material fact, Shah v. Racetrac Petroleum Co., 338 F.3d 557, 57071 (6th Cir. 2003); Calabro, 15 S.W.3d at 879, which should preclude summary judgment on promissory estoppel claims in most instances. See Shah, 338 F.3d at 57071; Operations Management International, Inc. v. Tengasco, Inc., 35 F. Supp. 2d 1052, 1057 (E.D. Tenn. 1999). Regardless of how a court decides whether a party has made a promise, the TENNESSEE BAR JOURNAL, DECEMBER 2004 This article gives examples of where the courts have accepted or rejected promissory estoppel and summarizes the key principles in Tennessee so that practitioners may better represent their clients in these cases. (Continued on page 26) 25 Discover These Great TBA BENEFITS As a member of the Tennessee Bar Association, you have access to a wealth of member benefits, ranging from great rates on insurance to discounts on legal research and overnight package delivery. Here’s a sample of what you can expect with your membership. LIABILITY INSURANCE AND MORE The TBA sponsors a select number of insurance programs for you and your firm’s financial security. Auto insurance from GEICO is also available. LEGAL RESEARCH FROM LEXISNEXIS™ Flexible research and savings on services for lawyers from LexisNexis™. DISCOUNTS AT OFFICE DEPOT When TBA members sign up for this program, they will receive pricing as if they were a large volume purchaser. In addition, Office Depot is offering ordering by fax, phone, the internet or in person at an Office Depot location and free next-day delivery. Find out more at http://www.tba.org/tbinfo/main.html TRAVEL SERVICES Visit the TBA’s online travel center for one-stop travel shopping. CONFERENCING MADE SIMPLE Information Logistics helps make conference calls and web conferencing affordable for all TBA members. Hillbilly Homicides (Continued on page 20) “Lord, I’m Coming Home”: I’ve wandered far away from God Now I’m coming home. The paths of sin too long I’ve trod. Lord, I’m coming home. Coming home, coming home Never more to roam. Open wide thine arms of love. Lord, I’m coming home. Thirty minutes later, Stringbean and Estelle Akeman came home. May their souls rest in peace. Notes 1. See the appendix in Miller v. State, 584 S.W.2d 758 at 762 (Tenn. 1979). 2. Lt. Jacobs is now retired from the Metro force. He is a tenacious detective who always gets his man. You can hire him through his private company in Nashville, The Jacobs Group, by calling (615) 367-3659. Donald F. Paine is a past president of the Tennessee Bar Association and is of counsel to the Knoxville firm of Paine, Tarwater, Bickers, and Tillman LLP. He lectures for the Tennessee Law Institute, BAR/BRI Bar Review, Tennessee Judicial Conference, and University of Tennessee College of Law. He is reporter to the Supreme Court Advisory Commission on Rules of Practice and Procedure. Promissory estoppel (Continued on page 25) resulting commitment cannot be unenforceably vague or ambiguous. The Tennessee Court of Appeals followed this view in Amacher v. Brown-Forman Corporation. In Amacher, the Jack Daniels Distillery promised some Moore County, Tennessee, cattle farmers that if they took substantial action and made such expenditures as were necessary for approved cattle feeding sites as Jack Daniels directed, then the farmers would have a continuing supply of stillage for their cattle. The Amacher court found the promise unenforceable based on vagueness; the promise was missing essential details on quantities of stillage, duration of the arrangement, and the price. Accordingly, the Tennessee Court of Appeals found no injustice in refusing to enforce the promise. Amacher, 826 S.W.2d at 482. Conclusion Promissory estoppel is a valuable remedy for compensating a plaintiff who reasonably relies to his detriment on the gratuitous promise or representation of another party, and where justice requires compensation for the breach. This article has given examples of where the courts have accepted or rejected promissory estoppel. It also has summarized the key principles in Tennessee so that practitioners may better represent their clients in these cases. SERVICES TO HELP YOUR PRACTICE TnBar Management Services provides members practical information on law office management issues. To find out more or sign up for a benefit, visit TBALink at www.tba.org/tbinfo/main. Or contact Megan Rizzo, our membership coordinator, by phone at (800) 899-6993 or mrizzo@tnbar.org 26 Steven W. Feldman is an attorney-advisor for the U.S. Army Engineering and Support Center in Huntsville, Ala. He received his bachelor’s degree from SUNY at Stony Book, his law degree from Vanderbilt University. He is the author of Government Contract Awards: Negotiation and Sealed Bidding (Thomson/West 1994 & Supp. 2003). The opinions expressed in this article are solely the Feldman personal views of the author and do not express the positions of the Department of the Army or of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. TENNESSEE BAR JOURNAL, DECEMBER 2004 W H E R E T H E R E ‘ S A W I L L (Continued from page 23) bank loan. The initial loan proceeds can also be used to make a larger initial payment to the insurance policy to reduce the subsequent premiums and therefore invest less in a SPIA. Or the lifetime cash flow can be used to purchase additional life insurance death benefit. Obviously, a range of models should be prepared, and the client should be advised on how to structure the deal to best meet his objectives. Do these huge “spreads” in underwriting really exist? Yes, and billions of dollars of insurance are already in force based on this arbritrage. Does the client assume risks? Some. The worst risk would be if either insurance company became insolvent and defaulted in its obligation. This is highly unlikely given the relatively short duration of the program, that is, the client’s remaining life, especially if excellent insurance companies are selected at the start. Moreover, the client’s risk of a default on the life insurance death benefit can be minimized if the bank will accept the life insurance policy and annuity contract as their only collateral, without any personal guarantee by the client. For example, an irrevocable trust could be the non-recourse borrower as well as the owner of both the life insurance policy and the annuity contract, so that the client’s risk is essentially zero. Can the client avoid estate tax on the death benefit arbitrage? Yes. If the beneficiary is charity, there is no estate tax owed because of the charitable deduction. If the beneficiary is a family member, then the life insurance may be excluded from estate taxation by using a life insurance trust. Can the client deduct the interest on the note? Normally, no. However, there are some creative possibilities to consider, such as structuring the note as a mortgage on the client’s primary or secondary home. Does the insurance agent make money? Yes, significant commissions on both the insurance and the annuity. No wonder insurance agents and brokerage houses have become quite sophisticated in packaging this program over the last several years.1 Bottom line: insurance/annuity arbitrage is a viable technique for certain older clients to convert their excess insurability into additional wealth for themselves, their families, or charity, but only if the underwriting numbers work in each particular case, the clients are fully informed, and the risks are managed. Notes 1. Some recent innovations involve committing all of the death benefit arbitrage to charity. Under almost all state laws, including Tenn. Code Ann. Section 56-7-314, charities have an insurable interest in their donors and can therefore own the insurance and annuity. However, if a charity finances the deal by borrowing from a bank, it can create “unrelated business taxable income” (UBTI) to the charity under Internal Revenue Code Section 511. Recent approaches attempt to eliminate the charity’s tax exposure, and perhaps also to reduce the other risks to the client and to charity, by including trusts, partnerships, or other legal entities, usually in consideration for some or all of the lifetime cash flow. There has been some national debate over whether such innovations are desirable as a matter of public policy. However, in 2004 the Tennessee legislature amended Tenn. Code Ann. Section 56-7-314 virtually unanimously to enable such arrangements to include both charitable and non-charitable entities, following similar statutory changes in Texas, North Carolina, Nebraska and Virginia, with other states likely to follow. The Tennessee statute seems a bit overbroad compared to those other states, but if the marketed programs generate no more than a reasonable return to third-party lenders or third-party investors while delivering a fair and reasonable share to charity, there is ample reason to believe both state and federal laws will continue to encourage their popularity. P R E S I D E N T ’ S P E R S P E C T I V E (Continued from page 4) sleep and awakened into my daughter’s Beauty and the Beast book. To enter the Grand Ball, it was necessary to present the guards at the gate (with machine guns slung over their shoulders at a time before we in this country were accustomed to such sights) with an invitation and identification. To my surprise, we were passed through the gates and herded towards large white tents set up on the lawn. Having been to a couple of pretty fancy parties in East Tennessee, I assumed that they were having the party in these big tents. Instead, TENNESSEE BAR JOURNAL, DECEMBER 2004 this was the coat check location. Having shed our coats, we were directed into the Palais where we joined a line of folks headed down a long flight of stairs. As we waited in line, we learned from our neighbors in line that the area in which the ball was to be held was the same area where Marie Antoinette was held prior to her execution. This was a place with some pretty serious history to go with it! At the bottom of the steps, the guests would tender to a gentleman in tuxedo and chain sash their invitation and be announced to the crowd. Now, I have to admit that, for a boy born next to a coal mine in West Virginia and raised next to a cattle barn in North Carolina, this was pretty heady stuff. You might forgive me if, for just a moment, I began to think that I had arrived and that I really was somebody. As my head swelled and my bride smiled, we handed our invitation to the gentleman, who turned and shouted to the assemblage “Monsieur and Madame Pam Reeves!” Yes, I was somebody all right. I was the guy who was “Drivin’ Ms. Pammy.” 27 Actions from the Board of Professional Responsibility (Continued from page 11) to all parties in the action. The board filed a petition for discipline pursuant to Rule 9, and he filed an answer and amended answer where he admitted all allegations against him and agreed to a two-year suspension. He must notify all clients being represented in pending matters, all co-counsel and all opposing counsel of the suspension. He also must deliver to clients any papers or property to which they are entitled. In October 2006 McAlexander may petition for reinstatement of his license but must prove by clear and convincing evidence that such action would not be detrimental to the integrity and standing of the bar and the administration of justice or be subversive to the public interest. ••• On Oct. 26, the Tennessee Supreme Court suspended Scott Eric Crawford from the practice of law for nine months retroactive to March 19, 2004, the date of his temporary suspension in an unrelated matter. Between 2001 and 2002 Crawford engaged in a pattern of deceptive conduct in two legal matters. In the first matter, Crawford improperly instructed his secretary to sign the opposing party’s name to a final decree of divorce without the opposing party’s consent. This action led to the wrongful assessment of court costs against this pro se opposing party. In the second matter, Crawford improperly assisted a non-licensed attorney engage in the unauthorized practice of law in the Shelby County General Sessions Court. The Board of Professional Conduct filed a peti- 28 tion for discipline in November 2002 and appointed a hearing panel to decide the matter. After extensive discovery and several pre-hearing motions, Crawford agreed to the nine-month suspension. He must notify all clients being represented in pending matters, all co-counsel and all opposing counsel of the suspension. He also must deliver to clients any papers or property to which they are entitled. If the original temporary suspension is dissolved or modified, Crawford need not initiate reinstatement proceedings after the completion of the nine-month period. However, if the initial suspension is not amended, Crawford will be eligible to petition the court for reinstatement on Dec. 19, 2004. ••• Also on Oct. 26, the Supreme Court of Tennessee suspended Christopher Robin Fox for a six-month period to run consecutively with the suspension resulting from his Feb. 6, 2004, disbarment. Fox filed no answer to the Board of Professional Responsibility’s petition for discipline, did not attend the discipline hearing and did not appeal the panel’s recommendation. Rule 9, section 18 of the Tennessee Supreme Court Rules requires that Fox notify all clients being represented in pending matters, all co-counsel and all opposing counsel of the suspension. He also must deliver to clients any papers or property to which they are entitled. After the passage of his suspension, Fox may petition for reinstatement of his license but must prove by clear and convincing evidence that such action would not be detrimental to the integrity and standing of the bar and the administration of justice or be subversive to the public interest. ••• On Oct. 26, Douglas P. Nanney of Centerville was temporarily suspended from the practice of law by the Tennessee Supreme Court pending a final recommendation for disciplinary action from the Board of Professional Responsibility. The court’s order follows Nanney’s guilty plea and conviction of a Class E felony for possession of drug paraphernalia. The Board of Professional Responsibility now must institute formal proceedings to determine the sole issue of final discipline. Nanney must notify all clients being represented in pending matters, all cocounsel and all opposing counsel of his suspension. He also must deliver to clients any papers or property to which they are entitled. Censured Tipton County attorney Richard D. Cartwright received a public censure from the Board of Professional Responsibility on Oct. 14 for neglecting several clients’ legal matters and failing to communicate adequately with them. The board issued the censure in response to two complaints and found Cartwright in violation of Rules 1.1, 1.3, 1.4 and 8.4 of the Tennessee Rules of Professional Conduct. Cartwright did not request a hearing in the matter. The censure declares his actions to be improper ethical conduct but does not limit his right to practice law. ••• On Oct. 18, the Board of Professional Responsibility publicly censured Columbia attorney William C. Barnes Jr. for neglecting a client’s legal matter and failing to adequately communicate with his client. In May 2003 the client’s case was dismissed for failure to prosecute, but Barnes failed to advise his client of the dismissal. His failure to notify his client violated Rules 1.3, 1.4 and 8.4(d) of the Tennessee Rules of Professional Conduct. The censure declares Barnes’s actions to be improper ethical conduct but does not limit his right to practice law. ••• Also on Oct. 18, the Board of Professional Responsibility publicly censured Knoxville attorney John A. Willis for multiple counts of improper ethical conduct. In his representation of a client, Willis failed to prepare for trial, failed to seek relief from the trial date, failed to file responses to adverse motions for summary judgment and failed to advise his client that one motion for summary judgment had been overruled. Willis also entered into preliminary mediation discussions on behalf of his client without advising the client of his activities. He attended a formal mediation session without authority from his client although he intimated that he did have authority to do so. He made an offer to settle two claims against his client and a third unsuccessful offer on behalf of a second client without authority. In addition, Willis requested that the case be removed (Continued on page 30) TENNESSEE BAR JOURNAL, DECEMBER 2004 B U T S E Rvisible I ObyUtheS bench. L Y ,NowF clearly O L oh-ki-yah!” K S ! like Howard Dean. Hang in there. Now you folks got to get along now, ya heah? Don’t mess with Texas justice By Bill Haltom irst there was Judge Wapner presiding over “The People’s Court.” Then came Judge Judy, and then Judge Joe Brown, and ultimately Judge Mills Lane, who actually refereed the fight when Mike Tyson bit off a piece of Evander Holyfield’s ear. Then came Judge Lance Ito and O.J., and why before you knew it, there were more judges on TV than you could shake a gavel at. And now, make way for America’s newest TV judge, Judge Larry Joe Doherty, star of “Texas Justice”! “Texas Justice” is the latest daytime court TV program. It’s sort of a cross between “The People’s Court” and “Gunsmoke.” The stars of “Texas Justice” are Judge Larry Joe and his affable sheriff/bailiff, William. He’s sort of a cowboy version of Doug Llewellyn. Sheriff William looks like he could rope, hawg-tie and brand you if you got out of hand. On the show, Judge Larry Joe dispenses cowboy justice in a Texas courtroom. How do we know it’s a Texas courtroom? Well, for starters, there’s a cactus in the courtroom, F that’s something I’ve never seen in a Tennessee courtroom. “… and why before you knew it, there were more judges on TV than you could shake a gavel at.” And then there’s the wardrobe. Judge Larry Joe appears in his courtroom each day dressed like a cowboy judge. He wears black robes, but they’re trimmed with the same sort of western piping that Roy Rogers and Gene Autry used to have on their cowboy shirts. And while Judge Larry Joe doesn’t wear a cowboy hat or a holster (at least on the air), he looks like he could saddle up and lead a cattle drive, while screaming, “Yippee-ya- Bill Haltom is a podnah with the Memphis firm of Thomason, Hendrix, Harvey, Johnson & Mitchell. He is president-elect of the Tennessee Bar Association and is a past president of the Memphis Bar Association. I don’t know if Judge Larry Joe can yodel like Gene Autry (“I’m back in the courtroom again”). But he definitely looks like a Cartwright who went to law school — the Honorable Hoss. The format for “Texas Justice” is the tried-and-true court TV format originally developed by “The People’s Court.” But there’s a nice southern twang in Judge Larry Joe’s voice as he dispenses justice, and Sheriff William may be the nicest bailiff ever to appear in a courtroom. Each episode of “Texas Justice” ends with Sheriff William bringing the litigants together for a hearty Texas handshake. (“Now you folks got to get along now, ya heah?”) But while “Texas Justice” borrows liberally from “The People’s Court,” the show has some decidedly Texas twists. For example, “Texas Justice” features interviews not only with the litigants, but with members of the audience. There’s a regular Texas peanut gallery sitting in Judge Larry Joe’s courtroom, and these folks are as opinionated and rowdy as the people you see on the “Jerry Springer Show.” They are not hesitant to express their opinions about the litigants and Judge Larry Joe’s rulings, although they tend to be highly (Continued on page 30) TENNESSEE BAR JOURNAL, DECEMBER 2004 29 B U T S E R I O U S L Y, Actions from the BPR F O L K S ! (Continued from page 28) (Continued from page 29) respectful of Judge Larry Joe and supportive of his decisions. Wouldn’t want old Judge Larry Joe to hold you in contempt now, would ya, podnah? Moreover, when Judge Larry Joe issues a ruling, he often gets a standing ovation from the peanut gallery. Again, that’s something I’ve never seen in a Tennessee courtroom. But all the little cowboys and cowgirls in the “Texas Justice” peanut gallery just love to hear Judge Larry Joe rule for the plaintiff or the defendant and then bang his Texassized gavel before breaking for a commercial, brought to you by the Law Offices of J. Cheever Loophole, who is not licensed in Tennessee and has never been certified by anybody, anywhere, in any area, but is ready to get you the money you deserve! And now, back to Judge Larry Joe, who is turning out to be the most popular cowboy judge since Roy Bean. They didn’t have TV back when Judge Bean was on the bench. Too bad. He would have piled up big Nielsen rating numbers as he promised the defendants to give ’em a fair trial and then hang ’em, as the peanut gallery cheered! Well, I think Judge Larry Joe and “Texas Justice” are on the cutting edge of court TV these days. Why before you know it there will be regional court TV shows across America. Depending on where you live, you will be able to tune in to “Mississippi Justice,” starring Judge Bobby Joe Earl or “Georgia Justice,” starring Judge Lester Jimmy Zell Barnes, as he tries to resolve one dispute after another over the Confederate flag. If you live in Birmingham, you can tune in to “Alabama Justice” and see daily fights over the 10 Commandments. Judge Lurleen will rule, “I find you guilty of adultery and sentence you to death by stoning!” And around these parts, you can watch “Tennessee Justice,” as Judge Buford Pusser breaks up legal fights involving residents of trailer parks. All of this makes me long for the good ole days when the only judge on TV was on the one trying to decide a case between Perry Mason and Hamilton Burger. And all he had to do was wait for the real killer to jump up from the peanut gallery and confess. from the docket without the knowledge or permission of his client. After the mediation Willis attempted to obtain settlement authority from his client by informing the client that the mediation had been scheduled but had not yet occurred. He also falsely advised his client that a summary judgment motion was pending and that the client likely would lose. The client declined to approve settlement authority except for nominal offers. At this point, Willis informed his firm of the situation. The firm removed Willis from the case, advised the client of his actions and agreed to pay the client the full settlement amount. Willis has agreed to reimburse the firm for the payment. The board found that these actions violated Rules 1.1, 1.2, 1.3, 1.4, 4.3 and 8.4(a)(c)(d) of the Tennessee Rules of Professional Conduct. The censure declares Willis’s actions to be improper ethical conduct but does not limit his right to practice law. Information regarding these disciplinary actions was obtained from the Board of Professional Responsibility of the Tennessee Supreme Court. Feb. 13 -19, 2005 Save the date! To celebrate the 20th year of this popular program, TennBarU’s CLE Ski returns to Park City, Utah, on Feb. 13 -19, 2005, for a week of great programs and great skiing. Go to https://www.tba.org/onsiteinfo/ cleski2005.html for details. TennBarU CLE FOR TENNESSEE 30 TENNESSEE BAR JOURNAL, DECEMBER 2004 C L A S S I F I E D SERVICES CERTIFIED FORENSIC DOCUMENT EXAMINER Tennessee’s only ABFDE certified private document examiner. Formerly with U.S. Postal Inspection Service Crime Laboratory. Certified by American Board of Forensic Document Examiners. American Society of Questioned Document Examiners. Substantial civil, criminal and trial experience. Thomas Vastrick (PMB #147), 6600 Stage Road, Suite 107, Bartlett, TN 38134; (901) 383-9282. BUSINESS VALUATION/ ECONOMIC DAMAGE ANALYSIS/ FORENSIC ACCOUNTING Business Valuation services for FLP’s and other tax and business purposes; Economic Damage Analysis for wrongful death, employee discrimination, personal injury and commercial damages; Forensic Accounting and Expert Testimony services for fraud, divorce and other commercial cases; Litigation Support services for a variety of cases involving unusual and complex financial and accounting issues. D. Michael Costello, CPA•ABV, Costello Forensic Accounting, P.C. 1100 Tallan Building, Two Union Square, Chattanooga, TN 37402; (423) 7567100. MikeCostello@Decosimo.com TRAFFIC ACCIDENT RECONSTRUCTION & HIGHWAY EVALUATION Former State Traffic Engineer. Licensed as Professional Engineer in Tennessee, with national accreditation in traffic accident reconstruction. Traffic accidents, highway design and traffic control, including construction work zones. Computer-assisted reconstruction analy- A D V E R T I S I N G sis and drawings. Richard Fitzgerald, PE, 4545 Winfield Drive, Nashville, TN 37211; (615) 331-1212. FORENSIC HANDWRITING EXPERT www.HandwritingForensics.com Qualified in all Courts. Handwriting Identification, Forgery, Anonymous Letters, Graffiti. Diplomate / ABFE, NC Dept. of Justice U.S. Secret Service QDC. Theresa F. Dean, Handwriting Expert Hendersonville, NC (828) 891-4263 PO Box 414, Horseshoe, NC 28742 Terri@handwritingforensics.com IMMIGRATION PROBLEMS? Call Barry L. Frager, former Trial Attorney for the Immigration & Naturalization Service (INS) of The Frager Law Firm P.C. at 5100 Poplar Ave., Clark Tower Suite 2204, Memphis, TN 38137-2207; (901) 7633188; toll-free (888) 889-VISA; 24Hour Answering Service (901) 3715333. Also in Nashville at 1040 Murfreesboro Pike, Suite 206; (615) 366-1000. The emphasis of his practice is in immigration legal matters for clients in Tennessee, Arkansas and Mississippi. INTERPRETER French - Spanish - English. Registered Tennessee State Court Interpreter. Consecutive interpretation (only occasional and limited simultaneous interpretation), limited sight reading, depositions, translations into English. Parttime. Knoxville and within 3-hour drive. Substantial experience. Retired from University of Tennessee. Phone: (865) 560-1247. POSITIONS AVAILABLE NASHVILLE Insurance Defense Attorney with general liability experience needed in Brentwood, Tenn., area office. Salary and benefits commensurate with experience. Send cover letter with résumé and salary history to Box 240, Tennessee Bar Association, 221 Fourth Ave. N., Suite 400, Nashville, TN 37219-2198. JACKSON Growing insurance defense law firm seeks attorney for workers’ compensation and/or general liability claims. Excellent salary package and benefits. Great opportunity to join a rapidly growing firm. Send résumé including letter with salary requirements to Box 250, Tennessee Bar Association, 221 Fourth Ave. N., Suite 400, Nashville, TN 37219-2198. KNOXVILLE Local insurance defense firm seeks workers’ compensation and/or general liability attorney. Great location in West Knoxville. Salary commensurate with experience. Please send cover letter, résumé and salary history to Box 260, Tennessee Bar Association, 221 Fourth Ave. N., Suite 400, Nashville, TN 37219-2198. GROWING EAST MEMPHIS LAW FIRM seeks family law associate attorney with 3 years’ minimum family law litigation experience. Competitive compensation. Send résumé and salary history in confidence to Miles Mason, Crone & Mason, PLC, 5100 Poplar Ave., Suite 3200, Memphis, TN 38137. (Continued on page 32) RATES The classified advertising rate is $78 for up to 50 words and $1.50 per word thereafter. Payment for classified advertisements must accompany advertising message. As a service to our members, there is no charge for advertisements up to 50 words for full-time job openings. For information about classified or display advertising, write to Advertising Coordinator, Tennessee Bar Association, 221 Fourth Avenue North, Suite 400, Nashville, TN 37219-2198; See classifieds online at http://www.tba.org (800) 899-6993 (in Nashville, 383-7421); fax (615) 297-8058; email lbutler@tnbar.org. TENNESSEE BAR JOURNAL, DECEMBER 2004 31 C L A S S I F I E D A D V E R T I S I N G (Continued from page 31) SMALL MURFREESBORO LAW FIRM seeks an experienced litigation paralegal with three or more years of experience. Candidate should have experience with file management, exhibit organization, document preparation, and client contact. A legal assistant/paralegal degree and/or a four-year college degree in appropriate studies preferred. Salary commensurate with experience and training. Please send cover letter and résumé to: Blankenship & Blankenship, 811 S. Church Street, Murfreesboro, TN 37130. LEGAL OPPORTUNITIES MEDTRONIC SOFAMOR DANEK is a leading developer, manufacturer and marketer of products used in the treatment of spinal disorders and trauma. We currently have openings for the positions below. Senior Patent Paralegal: This position will manage, monitor and coordinate all aspects of intellectual property practice with US Patent and Trademark Office, Medtronic, Inc., and Outside Counsel as it relates to patents under the supervision of MSD Chief Patent Counsel. (Job #39430) Patent Administrative Assistant: Position will perform administrative duties for the patent practice area attorneys. (Job #39429) Requirements: Associates degree required and a minimum of ten years in-depth patent experience with an emphasis on patent applications/prosecutions and USPTO rules; or equivalent combination of education and experience. Bachelors degree preferred. Requirements: High school diploma and one to two years patent experience required or equivalent combination of education and experience. Associates degree or greater preferred. Proficiency in Microsoft Office 2000 and other software applications required. Patent Paralegal: Position will manage, monitor and coordinate all aspects of intellectual property practice as it relates to patents under the supervision of an Intellectual Property lawyer. (Job #39427) For more details and/or to apply online, visit the career opportunities section of our web site at: www.medtronic.com . EOE M/F/H/V Requirements: Associates degree or paralegal certificate and five years related law firm experience with an emphasis on patent applications/prosecutions and USPTO rules; or equivalent combination of education and experience. ETHICS EXPERTS The Tennessee Bar Association’s TennBarU CLE program has the ethics programs you need when you need them. • Nearly 30 ethics CLE hours offered in December • Programming available at sites across the state, online and by teleconference • Courses taught by ethics experts, many who helped draft the Tennessee Rules of Professional Conduct. TennBarU • www.tba.org/tennbaru ASSOCIATE POSITION. BRENTWOOD LAW FIRM Federal and State civil litigation specializing in insurance fraud, arson, and civil rights. 1-2 years’ experience. Send résumés to: P.O. Box 24969, Nashville, TN 37202-4969, or fax to (615) 221-1581. Get the word out! Reach nearly 9000 Tennessee lawyers with a Tennessee Bar Journal advertisement. CLE FOR TENNESSEE 32 TENNESSEE BAR JOURNAL, DECEMBER 2004 THE BEST BAR IN TENNESSEE? Throw out that topic anywhere in Tennessee and you’ll get an ear full of answers. In Nashville, there’s the famous Tootsie’s Orchid Lounge. In Memphis, fans of Sleep Out Louie’s will make their case. Knoxville — don’t forget the O.C.I. And Chattanooga, well everyone knows that’s where Big River Brewing got its start. Other towns have their favorites too, but we know one bar that’s popular all over Tennessee. Yep, since 1881 the Tennessee Bar Association has been the favorite of Tennessee lawyers. It’s the place where attorneys can turn for conversation, contacts and community. And with our TBALink web site, we’re open 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, so you’ll never have to worry about missing the last call. WE KNOW THE BAR For more information, visit our web site at http://www.tba.org For membership information, contact our membership coordinator at (800) 899-6993. AFFORDABLE AFFORDABLE PROFESSIONAL PROFESSIONAL LIABILITY LIABILITY INSURANCE INSURANCE IS IS JUST JUST ONE ONE CALL CALL AWAY. AWAY. Mainstreet©© is the Nation’s Small Firm Expert. 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