                                                                                           11/22/2017
                 IN THE SUPREME COURT OF TENNESSEE
                            AT KNOXVILLE
                               September 6, 2017 Session


                       IN RE: ESTATE OF J. DON BROCK

                  Appeal by Permission from the Court of Appeals
                        Chancery Court for Hamilton County
                 No. 15-P-245     Jeffrey M. Atherton, Chancellor

                       ___________________________________

                            No. E2016-00637-SC-R11-CV
                       ___________________________________


We granted permission to appeal to determine whether the contestants—five of the
decedent’s seven children—have standing to bring this will contest. The contestants
were expressly disinherited by a will dated October 1, 2013, and admitted to probate and
by a prior will, dated October 11, 2012, produced during this litigation. The trial court
dismissed this will contest for lack of standing, concluding that two prior decisions of this
Court—Cowan v. Walker, 96 S.W. 967 (Tenn. 1906) and Jennings v. Bridgeford, 403
S.W.2d 289 (Tenn. 1966)—required the dismissal. The Court of Appeals affirmed.
Although we agree with the courts below that Cowan and Jennings include imprecise
language that could be viewed as establishing a broad, bright-line rule that persons
disinherited by facially valid successive wills lack standing, we conclude that those
decisions are factually distinct and did not announce such a broad rule. We reaffirm the
general rule, long recognized in Tennessee, that to establish standing a contestant must
show that he or she would be entitled to share in the decedent’s estate if the will were set
aside or if no will existed. The contestants here have satisfied this requirement by
showing that they would share in the decedent’s estate under the laws of intestacy and
under prior wills. Thus, the judgments of the trial court and Court of Appeals dismissing
this will contest for lack of standing are reversed, and this matter is remanded to the trial
court for further proceedings consistent with this decision.

            Tenn. R. App. P. 11 Appeal by Permission; Judgments of the
            Court of Appeals and Trial Court Reversed; Case Remanded

CORNELIA A. CLARK, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which JEFFREY S. BIVINS,
C.J., and SHARON G. LEE, HOLLY KIRBY, and ROGER A. PAGE, JJ., joined.
Jerry H. Summers and Marya Lyn Schalk, Chattanooga, Tennessee, and William David
Cunningham, Lafayette, Georgia, for the appellants, Melissa Sue (Brock) Adcock,
Krystal Gail (Brock) Parker, Jennifer Rebecca Brock, Darryl William Brock, and Walter
Edward Brock.

Richard W. Bethea, Jennifer Kent Exum, Cameron A. Kapperman, Nathan L. Kinard,
Chattanooga, Tennessee, for the appellees, Sammye M. Brock and W. Norman Smith,
Co-Executors of the Estate of J. Don Brock.

John R. Branson, Memphis, Tennessee, for the amici curiae, Brenda Dattel Meece and
Lisa Ann Dattel.

Walter W. Bussart, Lewisburg, Tennessee, for the amicus curiae, David Edmundson
Rackley.

Albert W. Secor, Hixson, Tennessee, amicus curiae.


                                              OPINION

                                      I. Factual Background1

       Dr. J. Don Brock (“Dr. Brock”), a resident of Hamilton County, Tennessee, was
diagnosed with mesothelioma in May 2012, and died on March 10, 2015, leaving a
sizeable estate.2 Dr. Brock was survived by his spouse, Mrs. Sammye Sprouse Brock
(“Mrs. Brock”), by his seven children that he and his former wife adopted during their
marriage of more than thirty years, five of whom were biological siblings, and by his two
stepdaughters, Mrs. Brock’s children from a prior marriage.




        1
           This matter was dismissed for lack of standing before trial. Background facts are gleaned from
documents that have been filed in the will contest and are included in the record on appeal. Our recitation
of these facts does not amount to a determination of their accuracy or evidentiary weight.

        2
          Dr. Brock held a Ph.D. in mechanical engineering. He founded Astec Industries, Incorporated
(“Astec Industries”) in 1972 and remained its CEO until 2014. By 1995, Astec Industries had grown into
a “successful multi-national, multi-division corporation involved in the manufacturing and sale of asphalt
manufacturing plants, paving equipment, and other related equipment and products.” Astec Industries
stock has been traded publicly on the NASDAQ stock exchange since 1986.

                                                   -2-
        On March 31, 2015, Dr. Brock’s attorney filed a petition in the Chancery Court of
Hamilton County (“Probate Court”)3 for testate administration of Dr. Brock’s October 1,
2013 Will (“2013 Will”). In accordance with paragraph two of the 2013 Will, the
Probate Court named Mrs. Brock and W. Norman Smith as co-executors of Dr. Brock’s
estate (collectively “Proponents”), and letters testamentary were issued to them on April
6, 2015.

       The 2013 Will divided Dr. Brock’s estate (“Estate”) among Mrs. Brock, Dr.
Brock’s stepdaughters, Christie Sprouse Gleeson and Devin LeAnn Sprouse, and Dr.
Brock’s eldest two children from his first marriage—Elizabeth Foster Brock and
Benjamin Garrison Brock. The 2013 Will expressly excluded Dr. Brock’s five other
children from his first marriage—biological siblings Walter Edward Brock, Jennifer
Rebecca Brock, Darryl William Brock, Melissa Sue Brock Adcock, and Krystal Gayle
Brock Parker (collectively “Contestants”). As for the Contestants, the 2013 Will treated
them as “having predeceased [Dr. Brock] without surviving descendants.”

       On September 3, 2015, the Contestants filed a notice of will contest as to the 2013
Will, alleging improper execution or attestation, lack of testamentary capacity, and fraud
and/or undue influence. Specifically, the Contestants challenged the authenticity of Mr.
Brock’s signature, which appeared only on the last page of the 2013 Will, alleging that
Mrs. Brock had signed Dr. Brock’s name for decades, having worked at Astec Industries
as his receptionist and assistant for twenty years before their marriage in 1998. The
Contestants further alleged that the attesting witnesses to the 2013 Will “were not
disinterested witnesses” but were officers or employees of Astec Industries with a
financial interest in the company. The Contestants pointed out that the first twenty-four
pages of the 2013 Will were not signed or initialed, including the pages that disinherited
the Contestants. The Contestants also averred that Dr. Brock lacked testamentary
capacity, stating that the 2013 Will had purportedly been prepared and signed more than
a year after Dr. Brock had been diagnosed with mesothelioma in 2012 and after he had
undergone aggressive treatments for the disease. Lastly, the Contestants alleged fraud
and undue influence. The Contestants claimed that Mrs. Brock as well as Elizabeth and
Benjamin Brock had confidential relationships with Dr. Brock and used their
relationships to exert undue influence over him in the procurement of the 2013 Will. The
Contestants claimed that Mrs. Brock had been Dr. Brock’s mistress, receptionist, and
assistant for approximately twenty-four years before their 1998 marriage. After the
marriage, the Contestants claimed, Mrs. Brock acted to isolate Dr. Brock from the
Contestants and interfere with their ability to see or speak with him. The Contestants
alleged that Mrs. Brock had fraudulently conspired with her own daughters, with

       3
          The Chancery Court for Hamilton County served as the probate court. See Tenn. Code Ann. §
16-16-201(a) (2009 & Supp. 2017).

                                               -3-
Benjamin and Elizabeth Brock, and with others to deprive them “of their rightful
inheritances” by exerting undue influence over Dr. Brock while he was under the
physical and mental disabilities caused by mesothelioma. The Contestants alleged that
they were unaware Dr. Brock had disinherited them until the Proponents produced the
2013 Will after his death, and they claimed that their disinheritance conflicts with
statements Dr. Brock made indicating that they would be provided for after his death.

       On September 14, 2015, the Contestants and the Proponents entered an agreed
order acknowledging that the Contestants had standing to challenge the 2013 Will and
transferring the case to the Circuit Court for Hamilton County (“Circuit Court”).4
Subsequently, however, counsel for the Proponents provided the Contestants with signed
copies of the following four wills dated before Dr. Brock’s 2013 Will: (1) an October 11,
2012 Will (“2012 Will); (2) a December 27, 2006 Will (“2006 Will); (3) an April 28,
1998 Will (“1998 Will”); and (4) a March 18, 1994 Will5 (“1994 Will”).6 Additionally,
on November 12, 2015, the Proponents filed a motion asking the Circuit Court to transfer
the case back to the Probate Court for a determination of the Contestants’ standing.

        On November 24, 2015, the Circuit Court granted the motion, and less than a
month later, December 22, 2015, the Proponents filed in the Probate Court a motion to
amend or set aside the agreed order recognizing the Contestants’ standing and a motion to
dismiss the Contestants’ will contest action for lack of standing. As support for this
motion, the Proponents attached a copy of Dr. Brock’s 2012 Will, which also disinherited
all the Contestants. The Proponents argued that under this Court’s decisions in Cowan
and Jennings, a party disinherited by facially valid successive wills lacks standing to
bring a will contest challenging the most recent will.



        4
           See Tenn. Code Ann. § 16-10-103 (2009) (“The circuit court has jurisdiction to try and
determine all issues made up to contest the validity of last wills and testaments.”); Tenn. Code Ann. § 32-
4-109 (2015) (“Any court of record that has probate jurisdiction, whether a chancery court or other court
of record established by private or public act, has concurrent jurisdiction with the circuit court to conduct
a trial upon the validity of a will in the manner and to the extent prescribed in this chapter.
Notwithstanding law to the contrary, prior to the certification of the fact of the contest pursuant to § 32-4-
101(a)(2), the contestant shall elect, in the notice of contest, either the circuit court or the chancery court,
or other court of record having such concurrent jurisdiction, to conduct a trial upon the validity of the
will.”).

        5
          Although the 1994 Will was dated March 18, 1994, the affidavit attached to it and purporting to
prove it was not signed until March 22, 1994.
        6
          Counsel for the Proponents also turned over unsigned copies of a 1983 Will and a 1997 Codicil
to the 1994 Will.

                                                     -4-
       On December 31, 2015, the Contestants moved to expand the scope of their will
contest to include the 2012 Will, the 2006 Will, the 1998 Will, and the 1994 Will, in
addition to the 2013 Will. The Contestants asserted that, while none of them would
inherit under the 2012 Will, only two of them were excluded under the 2006 and 1998
Wills and only one of them was excluded under the 1994 Will. The Contestants
additionally pointed out that, as Dr. Brock’s children, they would inherit under the laws
of intestacy should all of the wills be declared invalid. The Contestants argued that
Cowan and Jennings are factually distinct and should not be interpreted as announcing a
broad, bright-line rule that persons disinherited by facially valid successive wills lack
standing to bring a will contest.

       The Probate Court held a hearing on the motions on February 3, 2016, set aside
the agreed order recognizing the Contestants’ standing, ruled, based on Cowan and
Jennings, that the Contestants lacked standing, and dismissed their will contest. But the
Probate Court did so reluctantly and was “extremely troubled . . . that the status of the
Tennessee law in its current form is harsh[,] neither fair nor equitable, and promotes the
potential for fraud by simply creating two wills and [having] one insulate the other.”
Having ruled that the Contestants lacked standing, the Probate Court declined to rule on
the Contestants’ motion to amend their will contest, finding it moot. The Contestants
filed a motion to alter or amend, again arguing that Cowan and Jennings are factually
distinct. The Probate Court denied the motion, and the Contestants appealed.

       The Court of Appeals affirmed the Probate Court’s judgment. In re Estate of
Brock, No. E2016-00637-COA-R3-CV, 2016 WL 6503696, at *7 (Tenn. Ct. App. Nov.
3, 2016), perm. app. granted (Mar. 8, 2017). But, like the Probate Court, the Court of
Appeals also was “troubled that standing could potentially be used by a wrongdoer to
insulate his or her wrongdoing from being challenged.” Id. at *6. Nevertheless, the
Court of Appeals concluded that Cowan and Jennings controlled and required it, as an
intermediate appellate court, to affirm the judgment of dismissal. Id. We granted the
Contestants’ application for permission to appeal.

                                II. Standard of Review

       Whether a contestant has standing to bring a will contest is a threshold question of
law separate and apart from the merits of the will contest itself. See Tenn. Code Ann. §
32-4-101(a) (2015) (“If the validity of any last will or testament, written or nuncupative,
is contested, then the court having probate jurisdiction over that last will or testament
must enter an order sustaining or denying the contestant’s right to contest the will.”);
Crocker v. Balch, 55 S.W. 307, 307 (Tenn. 1900); see also In re Estate of Boote, 198
S.W.3d 699, 714 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2005) (“As soon as the probate court is made aware of
a contest, it must halt the . . . probate proceedings and determine whether the person
seeking to contest the will has standing to pursue a will contest.”); Jolley v. Henderson,
                                           -5-
154 S.W.3d 538, 542–43 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2004). This Court reviews de novo the
determination of questions of law and affords no presumption of correctness to lower
court rulings. Johnson v. Hopkins, 432 S.W.3d 840, 844 (Tenn. 2013).

                                             III. Analysis

        The province of courts “is to decide, not advise, and to settle rights, not to give
abstract opinions.” Norma Faye Pyles Lynch Family Purpose LLC v. Putnam Cnty., 301
S.W.3d 196, 203 (Tenn. 2009) (quoting State v. Wilson, 70 Tenn. 204, 210 (1879)
(internal quotation marks omitted)). To ensure that judicial power remains within these
constraints, Tennessee courts utilize justiciability doctrines. Id. at 202–03. The
justiciability doctrine at issue in this appeal—standing—ensures that a particular litigant
has a sufficiently personal stake in litigation to warrant an adjudication. Am. Civil
Liberties Union of Tenn. v. Darnell, 195 S.W.3d 612, 619 (Tenn. 2006); Knierim v.
Leatherwood, 542 S.W.2d 806, 808 (Tenn. 1976). Establishing standing does not require
a litigant to show a likelihood of success on the merit[s]” of the underlying claim. Am.
Civil Liberties Union of Tenn., 195 S.W.3d at 620.

        This appeal, of course, requires us to consider the standing requirement in the
context of a will contest. A will contest allows a court to make a determination, once and
for all, about how a decedent’s estate should be distributed. Jones v. Witherspoon, 187
S.W.2d 788, 791 (Tenn. 1945); see In re Estate of Barnhill, 62 S.W.3d 139, 143 (Tenn.
2001). The procedures governing the probate and contest of wills originally derived from
the ecclesiastical courts of England but are now governed by statute. Petty v. Call, 599
S.W.2d 791, 793 (Tenn. 1980). As a result, the standing requirement for will contests has
been included in will contest statutes in “all but a handful of states.” Eunice L. Ross &
Thomas J. Reed, Will Contests § 3:2 (2d ed. June 2017 Update) [hereinafter Will
Contests]. These statutes “are divided into two classes: (1) those which confer [standing]
on anyone who is ‘interested’ or ‘aggrieved’ by the probate of a will; and (2) those which
have no statutory standard for standing.” Id. (footnotes citing statutes omitted).7 Statutes
of the first type, which expressly confer standing on “interested” or “aggrieved” persons,
have generally been interpreted as requiring a showing of “a direct pecuniary interest in

        7
          The Uniform Probate Code falls into the first class by conferring standing to bring a will contest
on any “interested party” but goes further by defining that term as including the decedent’s surviving
spouse, children and heirs, as well as devisees and personal representatives under former wills. See Unif.
Probate Code § 3-401 (stating that “[a] formal testacy proceeding,” the term the Uniform Probate Code
uses to refer to “litigation to determine whether a decedent left a valid will,” “may be commenced by an
interested person filing a petition as described in Section 3-402(a)”) (emphasis added); Unif. Probate
Code § 1-201 (defining “‘Interested person’” as including “heirs, devisees, children, spouses, creditors,
beneficiaries, and any others having a property right in or claim against” a decedent’s estate and “persons
having priority for appointment as personal representative”); see also Will Contests § 3:3 (discussing
standing under the Uniform Probate Code).

                                                   -6-
denying probate to the will, because he or she would receive a greater share of the
decedent’s assets if the will were not probated.” Id. (footnote citing cases omitted).
Statutes that do not include a specific standard have nevertheless been interpreted in the
same manner as statutes that do. Id. As a result, “[t]here is little difference between the
[S]tates on the practical meaning of standing to object to probate of a will.” Id.

       The law of Tennessee well illustrates this point. As already explained, standing is
a threshold issue in a will contest, and the probate court is statutorily required to “enter an
order sustaining or denying the contestant’s right to contest the will.” Tenn. Code Ann. §
32-4-101(a). Although our statute does not include either the word “interested” or the
word “aggrieved,” prior Tennessee decisions have explained that a contestant must show
that he or she would be entitled to share in the decedent’s estate if the will were set aside
or if no will existed. See, e.g., Warmath v. Smith, 279 S.W.2d 257, 258 (Tenn. 1955)
(“Only such persons as would be entitled to share in the real and personal estate of
decedent, if there were no will, or if the will was set aside, are entitled to impeach its
validity.”); Cowan, 96 S.W. at 970 (stating that to establish standing “a contestant must
have a substantial interest which is to be served by his [or her] contest”); Bowers v.
McGavock, 85 S.W. 893, 896 (Tenn. 1905) (“No one can question the validity of a will,
or any provision in it, unless he stands in such relation to the testator that, in the event the
provision is invalid, he will be entitled to an interest in the property involved in the
controverted provision.”); Ligon v. Hawkes, 75 S.W. 1072, 1073 (Tenn. 1903) (“No one
except those directly interested in the estate of a decedent has the right to call in question
the validity of his or her will.”); In re Estate of Boote, 198 S.W.3d at 714 (“Standing to
pursue a will contest is limited to those who would benefit under the terms of another will
or codicil or the laws of intestate succession if the will contest is successful.”); Jolley,
154 S.W.3d at 543 (stating that to establish standing a contestant must have a “substantial
interest which is to be served by” the contest and concluding that a ten dollar bequest is
“a de minimis interest” and insufficient to establish standing); In re Estate of West, 729
S.W.2d 676, 677–78 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1987) (“[I]t is well settled in this [S]tate that before
[a contestant] may go forward with a will contest he must show that he would take a
share of the decedent’s estate if the probated will were set aside.”); Allred v. Allred, 5
Tenn. App. 200, 201 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1927) (“The general rule is that any person who
would have an interest in the estate, should the will be denied probate, may contest the
will whether his interest is that of an heir, or that of a legatee or devisee under a prior will
superseded by the later will.”). On the other hand, “[a] stranger to an estate, one who
would take nothing if the will was set aside,” lacks standing to bring a will contest.
Warmath, 279 S.W.2d at 260 (citing Wynne v. Spiers, 26 Tenn. (7 Hum.) 394, 407
(1846)); see also Bowers, 85 S.W. at 896 (“It has been held by this [C]ourt that a stranger
will not be permitted to contest the execution of a will . . . .”); Ligon, 75 S.W. at 1073
(“A stranger will not be permitted to disturb the existing probate.”).



                                              -7-
       In this case, the Contestants’ standing was not initially contested, and an agreed
order acknowledging standing was entered. This is understandable, as Contestants
clearly would have standing if the only testamentary document at issue were the 2013
Will admitted to probate. As Dr. Brock’s children, all of the Contestants would take a
share of his estate under the laws of intestate succession if the 2013 Will were set aside
and no other will admitted to probate. Tenn. Code Ann. § 31-2-104(a)–(b)(1) (2015 &
2017 Supp.). Thus, the question presented in this appeal is whether, based on Cowan and
Jennings, the Contestants lack standing because the facially valid signed copy of the 2012
Will that immediately preceded the 2013 Will also disinherited them. After carefully
considering Cowan and Jennings, we agree with the Contestants that those decisions are
factually distinct and do not deprive the Contestants of standing to bring this will contest.

        We begin with Cowan. There, the decedent’s will of November 30, 1901 (“1901
Will”) was submitted for probate. Cowan, 96 S.W. at 967. The 1901 Will disinherited
the decedent’s nephew, who would have received one-twelfth of the decedent’s estate
under the laws of intestacy. Id. at 968. The decedent’s nephew contested the 1901 Will,
alleging undue influence and lack of testamentary capacity. Id. at 967. The proponents
of the 1901 Will denied these allegations and also asserted that the nephew lacked
standing because an earlier will, dated September 22, 1900, and its April 10, 1901 codicil
(collectively “1900 Will”) had also disinherited the decedent’s nephew. Id. at 968. The
proponents of the 1901 Will produced “uncontroverted testimony” of the “due legal
execution and publication” of the 1900 Will and of “the fact that, at the time of the
execution [of the 1900 Will], the [decedent] was of sound mind and disposing memory.”
Id. The trial court excluded this “uncontroverted testimony” and allowed the nephew’s
will contest action to proceed. Id. But the Cowan Court reversed, concluding that the
trial court had erred by excluding the 1900 Will and the evidence of its validity. Id. at
971. In doing so, the Cowan Court acknowledged that the nephew, “being one of the
next of kin of the deceased,” had “prima facie” standing to contest the 1901 Will. Id. at
970. Nevertheless, the Cowan Court explained, the nephew’s “prima facie” right had
been “met and destroyed” by the 1900 Will disinheriting the nephew because it was
“confessedly valid in every respect.” Id. at 970–71 (emphasis added). Based on the
uncontroverted evidence of the 1900 Will’s validity, it was “clear” to the Cowan Court
that the decedent’s nephew “had no substantial interest” in the decedent’s estate and
therefore lacked standing to maintain the will contest. Id. at 971.

        As the discussion in Cowan reveals, the contestant had not challenged the validity
of the 1900 Will and its validity actually was established in the trial court by
“uncontroverted testimony.” Id. at 969. Given these facts, the Cowan Court’s holding
that the nephew lacked standing to challenge the 1901 Will is unremarkable. Even if the
nephew had succeeded in contesting the 1901 Will, he still would not have been entitled
to any part of the decedent’s estate because the 1900 Will, “confessedly valid in every


                                            -8-
respect” and proven so with “uncontroverted testimony,” also had disinherited him. Id. at
970–71.

        The facts of Jennings are even more distinguishable. Jennings involved a
collateral attack by an heir of the decedent upon a judgment rendered in a prior will
contest case. 403 S.W.2d at 289. The prior will contest involved two wills, and “the sole
question was whether a paper writing, dated February 13, 1953, or a paper writing, dated
March 31, 1961, was the Last Will and Testament of [the decedent].” Id. at 289–90. The
1961 will was contested on the grounds of the decedent’s mental incompetence, duress,
and undue influence. Id. at 289. “A jury found in favor of the writing dated March 31,
1961;” and the Court of Appeals affirmed the jury’s decision in a reported decision. Id.
(citing Williams v. Bridgeford, 383 S.W.2d 770 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1964)). Nevertheless, an
heir of the decedent filed a collateral attack upon the judgment the Court of Appeals had
affirmed. Id. at 291. The heir argued that the judgment in the prior will contest had been
procured by fraud because the person who submitted the will for probate knew the
decedent did not have the required mental capacity to make a will. Id. at 290. The trial
court rejected the heir’s collateral attack, and the Jennings Court affirmed. Id. at 293.
The Jennings Court emphasized that the validity of the March 31, 1961 will as the
decedent’s last will and testament had been judicially established in the prior will contest
and that the heir had failed to prove extrinsic fraud—a necessary showing to any
successful collateral attack on a final judgment. Id. at 292–93. Thus, the validity of the
will challenged by a collateral attack in Jennings had already been judicially established
in a prior will contest.

        As the foregoing discussion illustrates, in both Cowan and Jennings the validity of
wills disinheriting those who brought the legal actions had already been judicially
established either by admission and uncontroverted evidence, as in Cowan, or by a final
judgment in a prior will contest, as in Jennings. The same certainly cannot be said of this
case. No court has made any determination as of yet about the validity or invalidity of
any of Dr. Brock’s wills. Thus, Cowan and Jennings simply do not control the outcome
of the standing issue in this appeal. The Proponents point out, correctly, that Cowan8 and
Jennings9 contain language that could be viewed as creating a broad, bright-line rule that


        8
           The Court in Cowan stated: “[W]e think this prima facie case [of standing] is necessarily met
and destroyed by the existence of the earlier, valid, but unprobated, will. This leaves him a stranger to the
estate, and as such without any right of contest.” 96 S.W. at 970.

        9
            The Jennings Court stated:

        We, therefore, hold that where a Will, which on its face is valid and is not challenged as
        being improperly executed, and which leaves nothing to one who is attempting to attack

                                                    -9-
persons disinherited by facially valid successive wills lack standing.10 But, a review of
the facts reveals that the wills involved in Cowan and Jennings had already been
judicially determined to be valid in all respects, not only facially valid.11 We therefore
decline to perpetuate an erroneously broad interpretation of Cowan and Jennings and hold
that their discussion of successive wills must be understood within and confined to the
factual circumstances in which it originated. State v. Lancaster, 105 S.W. 858, 862
(Tenn. 1907) (“Decisions must be construed in the light of the question with which the
court is dealing, and of the facts before the court.”).

        collaterally the probate of a subsequent Will, that person has no interest entitling her to
        set aside the probate of the later Will.

Id. at 291 (emphasis added).
        10
             We do not agree with the Proponents, however, that the Court of Appeals applied such a
broad rule in Keasler v. Estate of Keasler, 973 S.W.2d 213 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1997). There, the decedent’s
son filed an action contesting her 1986 will, alleging undue influence and lack of testamentary capacity.
The proponents of the will denied these claims and also alleged lack of standing based on the decedent’s
1984 will, which also left nothing to the decedent’s son. The trial court granted summary judgment to the
proponents of the will on the claims of undue influence and lack of testamentary capacity to make the
1986 claim. The Court of Appeals affirmed the trial court’s decision. Even though the Court of Appeals
had already rejected the merits of the son’s challenges to the 1986 will, it also explained that the son
actually lacked standing to contest the 1986 will because he had not challenged the validity of the 1984
will that also disinherited him. 973 S.W.2d at 222 (emphasis added). Therefore, in concluding that the
son lacked standing, the Court of Appeals in Keasler properly applied the limited rule that Cowan and
Jennings announced.

         Similarly, we do not view the Court of Appeals’ decision in Jolley as applying such a broad rule.
The Court of Appeals noted that the decedent had disinherited each of the contestants in his 1998 and
1997 wills, yet the Court of Appeals actually ruled that the contestants lacked standing because they had
received only a de minimis ten dollar cash bequest in the decedent’s 1985, 1977, and 1975 wills, which
was insufficient to confer standing to contest the subsequent wills disinheriting them. 154 S.W.3d at 543.
The Court of Appeals did not base its determination of no standing in Jolley on facially valid successive
wills disinheriting the contestants.

        11
            This factual distinction was emphasized in at least one Court of Appeals’ decision. See In re
Estate of Otte, No. 02A01-9402-PB-00023, 1995 WL 116013, at *2 (Tenn. Ct. App. Mar. 15, 1995) (“In
Cowan, the [S]upreme [C]ourt held that the right of the petitioner therein, one of the next of kin of the
deceased, to contest the validity of the will of the deceased was eliminated by the existence of an earlier
valid, but unprobated, will; thus making him a stranger to the estate and as such, without any right to
contest the will. The rule adopted in Cowan was later affirmed in [Jennings].” (emphasis added)).




                                                  - 10 -
        Furthermore, even if Cowan and Jennings were not limited by their distinct factual
circumstances, we would not embrace such a broad, bright-line rule that would deprive
litigants of any opportunity to litigate the validity of either will. As the trial court here
explained, such a rule would be harsh, unfair, inequitable and promote “the potential for
fraud by simply creating two wills and [having] one insulate the other.” Not only does
such a broad rule create a potential for fraud, it lacks a logical basis. The Kansas
Supreme Court succinctly described the logical pitfalls, stating:

       How an unprobated will could be said to be a valid will and used in
       litigation as a valid will to the prejudice of an heir who has never had a
       chance to question its validity calls for a subtlety of reasoning which we
       would not care to follow.

Marr v. Barnes, 267 P. 9, 10 (Kan. 1928) (emphases altered). Indeed, although only a
few courts in other jurisdictions have addressed this precise issue, the majority of courts
to do so have rejected such a broad rule. See In re Robinson’s Estate, 27 Cal. Rptr. 441,
442 (Cal. Ct. App. 1963) (holding that heirs had a sufficient interest to qualify as
contestants of the will which substantially diminished their rights to succeed as heirs,
despite “a prior will, or a number of prior wills,” which “might affect their rights to
succeed as heirs to the same extent, or to a greater extent than did the will before the
court”); Stephens v. Brady, 73 S.E.2d 182, 184 (Ga. 1952) (“The mere existence of a
prior unprobated will could have no effect on the interest of the husband, as an heir, to
[contest] the second will.”); In re Jack Wong Yuen & Lei Young Wong Yuen Revocable
Living Tr. Dated April 22, 1996, 312 P.3d 1240, 1244 (Haw. Ct. App. 2013) (declining to
hold that persons disinherited by a prior testamentary instrument lack standing to contest
a subsequent testamentary instrument because “an heir-at-law who successfully
challenges a testamentary instrument has the possibility of taking via intestacy,
depending on the outcome of this proceeding and further proceedings”); In re Estate of
Schlenker, 808 N.E.2d 995, 999 (Ill. 2004) (stating that an heir is an “interested person”
under an Illinois statute and, as such, has standing to contest a will even though the
decedent executed prior wills disinheriting the heir); Estate of Malcolm, 602 N.E.2d 41,
43 (Ill. App. Ct. 1992) (holding that legatees under three wills of the decedent were
“interested persons” for purposes of standing to contest the third will, even though they
would receive the same amount under both the second and third wills because the
legatees anticipated contesting the second will and could not contest the second will
before the third will was invalidated); Marr, 267 P. at 10 (declining to deny standing to a
person disinherited by successive wills); Murphy’s Ex’r v. Murphy, 65 S.W.165, 166
(Ky. 1901) (stating that an “heir of the decedent ha[s] the right to contest the will which
was probated, without reference to the provisions of any previous will, which might
never be offered for probate, or, if so offered, might also be the subject of contest”). But
see In re Estate of Keener, 521 N.E.2d 232, 234 (Ill. Ct. App. 1988) (holding that a
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person disinherited by several consecutive wills was not an “interested person” for
purposes of the will contest statute).

       Thus, we conclude that, when properly distilled to the factual circumstances in
which they arose, Cowan and Jennings establish only that, if the validity of a will
disinheriting the person bringing the will contest has already been established either by
admission or judicial determination, then the person lacks standing. Jennings, 403
S.W.2d at 290–91; Cowan, 96 S.W. at 970.12 This rule clearly does not require dismissal
of Contestants’ will contest for lack of standing. None of Dr. Brock’s wills have been
judicially determined to be valid. Nor have the Contestants admitted or conceded the
validity of any of Dr. Brock’s wills. To the contrary, the Contestants have filed a notice
of contest as to Dr. Brock’s 2013 Will and have sought to amend the notice to contest all
of the prior wills the Proponents produced after this will contest was filed. All but one of
the Contestants would share in Dr. Brock’s estate under at least one of the wills predating
2012, and all of the Contestants would receive a share of Dr. Brock’s estate under the
laws of intestacy. Thus, the Contestants have shown that they would be entitled to share
in Dr. Brock’s estate if no will existed and the 2013 Will were set aside. Nothing more is
required to establish standing to pursue this will contest.

        It is true, as the Proponents point out, that it will be no easy task for Contestants
to mount a successful will contest on the 2013 and prior wills. But, as already noted, a
litigant need not establish a likelihood of success on the merits to establish standing.
Furthermore, although the Proponents are correct that expeditious and inexpensive
administration of estates is a laudatory objective, “fraud should never be insulated from
the reach of the court because the court may have more work to do to detect and correct
the fraud.” Estate of Malcolm, 602 N.E.2d at 44. Thus, on remand, and consistent with
the purpose of a will contest, a determination will be made, once and for all, about how
Dr. Brock’s estate should be distributed. See In re Estate of Barnhill, 62 S.W.3d at 143;
Jones, 187 S.W.2d at 791. Where, as here, the parties dispute which testamentary
documents, if any, represent the decedent’s last valid will and testament, the competing
instruments must all be submitted for adjudication in the will contest. Bearman v.
Camatsos, 385 S.W.2d 91, 95 (Tenn. 1964); Durell v. Martin, 110 S.W.2d 316, 318
(Tenn. 1937); Lillard v. Tolliver, 285 S.W. 576, 582 (Tenn. 1926); In re Estate of Boote,
198 S.W.3d at 714.




       12
            See also Mitchell v. Redvers, No. MMXCV094010266S, 2009 WL 5511262, at *2–3 (Conn.
Super. Ct. Dec. 17, 2009) (discussing Jennings and concluding that the plaintiffs lacked standing to
contest a 2002 will because they had failed to challenge the execution and validity of a 1990 will
disinheriting them).

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                                     IV. Conclusion

        For the reasons stated herein, the judgments of the trial court and Court of Appeals
are reversed, and this matter is remanded to the trial court for further proceedings
consistent with this decision. Costs of this appeal are taxed to Sammye M. Brock and W.
Norman Smith, as co-executors of the Estate of J. Don Brock, for which execution may
issue if necessary.



                                                    _________________________________
                                                    CORNELIA A. CLARK, JUSTICE




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