Buffi Lynne Stancil Ex Rel. Rebecca Mae Gentry v. Dominion Crossville, LLC ( 2022 )


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  •                                                                                                            07/29/2022
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
    AT KNOXVILLE
    June 21, 2022 Session
    BUFFI LYNNE STANCIL EX REL. REBECCA MAE GENTRY v.
    DOMINION CROSSVILLE, LLC, ET AL.
    Appeal from the Circuit Court for Cumberland County
    No. CC1-19-CV-6523       Jonathan L. Young, Judge
    ___________________________________
    No. E2021-01378-COA-R3-CV
    ___________________________________
    This is an interlocutory appeal from the trial court’s decision to deny a motion to compel
    arbitration. For the reasons stated herein, we affirm the trial court’s order.
    Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Circuit Court Affirmed and
    Remanded
    ARNOLD B. GOLDIN, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which JOHN W. MCCLARTY
    and THOMAS R. FRIERSON, II, JJ., joined.
    John B. Curtis, Jr., and Brie Allaman Stewart, Chattanooga, Tennessee, for the appellants,
    Kimberly Burgess Shallamer, Dominion Crossville, LLC, Dominion Group, LLC, and
    Dominion Senior Living, LLC.
    Lane Moore, Cookeville, Tennessee, M. Chad Trammell, Texarkana, Arkansas, and
    Deborah Truby Riordan, Little Rock, Arkansas, for the appellee, Buffi Lynne Stancil.
    OPINION
    BACKGROUND AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    This litigation commenced when Buffi Stancil (“Ms. Stancil”), as power of attorney
    and next of kin, filed suit to assert health care liability claims belonging to her mother,
    Rebecca Gentry (“Ms. Gentry”), a former resident at the assisted living facility Dominion
    Senior Living of Crossville (“Dominion Crossville”). The filed complaint averred that
    Dominion Crossville was “owned, operated and/or managed” by the named Defendants,1
    1
    Regarding the three named corporate Defendants, the complaint averred that two were the alter
    egos of the third. Alternatively, the complaint alleged that agency or joint enterprise relationships existed
    and it sought, among other things, punitive and compensatory damages in an amount to be
    determined by a jury. Because this appeal ultimately concerns the proper forum for
    resolving the asserted claims, as opposed to the substance of the claims themselves, we
    need not summarize the allegations in the complaint in any further detail.
    Following the filing of the complaint, the Defendants filed a motion to compel
    arbitration, citing an arbitration provision that was contained within the “Assisted Living
    Establishment Contract” (“the Admission Contract”) executed by Ms. Stancil, but not Ms.
    Gentry, in connection with Ms. Gentry’s admission to Dominion Crossville. Although
    there has been a dispute among the parties over the significance of Ms. Stancil’s
    involvement in signing the Admission Contract, Ms. Stancil, who had a durable general
    power of attorney and durable power of attorney for health care for her mother, executed
    the Admission Contract as the “Financially Responsible Party” and as “Resident’s
    Representative.”
    The relied-upon arbitration provision is found on pages eight and nine of the
    thirteen-page Admission Contract. The formatting of the provision’s heading is the same
    as other provision headings in the Admission Contract, and the formatting of the included
    text in the provision is also not distinguished relative to the text of other provisions in the
    Admission Contract, whether by bolded language, italics, increased font size, or otherwise.
    The arbitration provision states that disputes “in excess of $15,000” shall be determined by
    arbitration, but it does not explain what arbitration is, state how the arbitration procedures
    would work,2 or communicate that agreeing to arbitration involves the waiver of a right to
    a jury trial. As to the last point, there is, in a separate succeeding provision in the
    Admission Contract, language stating that the parties to the Admission Contract waive the
    “right to a trial by jury in any action, proceeding or counterclaim,” but the text of this
    language, like that appearing in the arbitration provision, is not presented with any
    distinguishing type or other emphasis relative to other text in the Admission Contract, and
    the provision in which it is included does not refer back to the arbitration provision.
    In addition, the arbitration provision provides no opt-out option. It is not disputed
    on appeal that agreeing to the arbitration provision within the Admission Contract was a
    necessary condition for Ms. Gentry’s admission to Dominion Crossville, and the arbitration
    provision contains no period for revocation as it concerns an agreement to arbitrate
    disputes. The arbitration provision concludes by stating that the arbitrator may award
    economic and non-economic damages,3 that the arbitrator shall have no authority to award
    punitive damages, and that each side shall bear an equal share of the arbitrator’s fees and
    among them.
    2
    The provision does reference the entity that would administer arbitration and further references
    that entity’s rules and procedures.
    3
    A separate provision in the Admission Contract, however, provides for a limitation on non-
    economic damages to an amount lower than otherwise provided by Tennessee law. See 
    Tenn. Code Ann. § 29-39-102
     (generally providing that such damages shall not exceed $750,000).
    -2-
    the costs of arbitration.
    Ms. Gentry died during the course of litigation, and a “Suggestion of Death and
    Motion to Substitute Party Plaintiff” was thereafter filed with the trial court asking that the
    court formally “substitute the Estate of Rebecca Mae Gentry, deceased, acting by and
    through its Personal Representative, Buffi Lynne Stancil, as the party Plaintiff.” Ms.
    Stancil was later substituted as the party plaintiff in her capacity as the personal
    representative of Ms. Gentry’s estate.
    The Defendants’ efforts to compel arbitration prompted discovery into the events
    surrounding the execution of the Admission Contract and Ms. Gentry’s admission to
    Dominion Crossville. The discovery conducted included the taking of Ms. Stancil’s
    deposition, as well as the taking of the deposition of Kellie Dodson, a former administrator
    at Dominion Crossville. These depositions, along with other materials, were filed with the
    trial court in advance of an eventual hearing that took place on the Defendants’ motion to
    compel arbitration.
    According to Ms. Stancil, her mother had been diagnosed with dementia around
    2010 and was later admitted to Fletcher House, an assisted living facility, in 2016. Ms.
    Stancil testified that her mother became unable to effectively communicate with her “soon
    after the time she went to Fletcher House.” Eventually, Ms. Stancil testified, her mother’s
    dementia got worse, causing her to on occasion wander away from the Fletcher House
    building. Ms. Stancil testified that this “wandering” actually occurred “two or three times,”
    giving her concern and prompting the need to move her mother to an assisted living facility
    with a memory care unit that could provide care. Ms. Stancil accordingly subsequently
    facilitated her mother’s admission to Dominion Crossville as the 2017 winter approached,
    and Ms. Gentry entered the facility on December 1, 2017. Elaborating on the need to move
    her mother to Dominion Crossville at that time, Ms. Stancil testified in relevant part as
    follows: “It was getting cold and my fear of her wandering outside and them not knowing
    where she is, because that was allowed there [at Fletcher House]. They could come and go
    as they wanted. So I wanted her somewhere where I knew she was safe.”
    Another memory care unit, Uplands, was affiliated with Fletcher House, but it had
    just recently been opened and was sharing an activities director with Fletcher House, which
    gave Ms. Stancil concern that “there wouldn’t be enough activity to try to stimulate her
    [mother’s] mind” there. Indeed, Ms. Stancil specifically stated that she was concerned
    “about the activities,” “[o]r lack thereof.”
    Ms. Dodson’s presence at Dominion Crossville also influenced Ms. Stancil’s
    decision to move her mother there, as Ms. Dodson had also previously worked at Fletcher
    House. According to Ms. Stancil’s testimony, Ms. Dodson had just started her job at
    Dominion Crossville. Ms. Dodson was the Executive Director at Dominion Crossville,
    and Ms. Stancil was comfortable with her, had considered her to be a friend, trusted her,
    -3-
    and had a lot of interaction with her when Ms. Gentry was at Fletcher House. Ms. Dodson’s
    testimony also pointed to the closeness existing among her, Ms. Stancil, and Ms. Gentry.
    She stated that she had been friends with both Ms. Stancil and her mother and had originally
    met Ms. Gentry when Ms. Gentry had volunteered at another facility that she had worked
    at previously. Ms. Dodson got emotional during the course of her testimony, stating that
    this was “because I loved her very much, and I haven’t been able to really grieve her death.”
    The accounts of Ms. Stancil and Ms. Dodson diverged when it came to the specifics
    of the events surrounding the execution of the Admission Contract. Ms. Stancil testified
    that she had never heard the term “arbitration” before this lawsuit started and that she
    signed the admission paperwork after she “got off work.” She testified that it was “late”
    and that most of the “up front” employees at Dominion Crossville had already left. Ms.
    Dodson, however, was still there but allegedly “in a hurry to get out.” Ms. Stancil testified
    that Ms. Dodson “pretty much had me sign paperwork and get out.”
    According to her testimony, the meeting with Ms. Dodson lasted about fifteen to
    twenty minutes. Ms. Stancil claimed that Ms. Dodson did not go over any of the Admission
    Contract, including its agreement to arbitrate, stating, “She told me she was new and it was
    a lot of paperwork to sign and she’d show me where to sign. And nothing was filled out.
    Nothing was completed.” She later specifically testified that Ms. Dodson never mentioned
    anything about a waiver of jury trial or that the Admission Contract contained any
    limitations on liability.
    Ms. Dodson claimed to have gone through the Admission Contract with Ms. Stancil,
    which Ms. Stancil asserted was a lie, but Ms. Dodson’s own testimony revealed that several
    aspects of the arbitration provision were not explained or discussed. According to Ms.
    Dodson, her meeting with Ms. Stancil was in the morning, not the evening, and it was the
    first time she had done a permanent resident application at Dominion Crossville. She did
    not remember the specific words she used with Ms. Stancil regarding arbitration, but she
    stated that it probably would have been no more than “in some cases, if you wanted to sue
    Dominion Crossville, this is an agreement to arbitrate instead of going through the courts.”
    She was not even aware at the time that arbitration was triggered by a threshold amount,
    nor did she discuss with Ms. Stancil the cost of arbitration. Ms. Dodson further testified
    that she did not know anything about JAMS,4 which the arbitration provision references as
    the entity that will administer arbitration. According to her, she did not know what the
    applicable arbitration rules and procedures were, and she did not discuss JAMS with Ms.
    Stancil, nor give her a copy of its rules and procedures. Ms. Dodson’s testimony indicated
    that she did not discuss with Ms. Stancil that punitive damages could not be awarded.
    Further, Ms. Dodson testified that she did not discuss the Admission Contract’s monetary
    limitation of non-economic damages. Later in her testimony, Ms. Dodson stated that she
    4
    The Admission Contract identifies JAMS as “formerly Judicial Arbitration and Mediation
    Services.”
    -4-
    “didn’t discuss arbitration other than to say that arbitration was something . . . they agreed
    to.”
    The trial court ultimately denied the Defendants’ motion to compel arbitration and
    made a number of alternative rulings in its written order to support its holding. In addition
    to ruling that the arbitration provision was a contract of adhesion and unconscionable, the
    court alternatively ruled, among other things, that Ms. Stancil had not signed the Admission
    Contract on behalf of her mother and that “[t]he Estate of Rebecca Gentry is not bound by
    Buffi Stancil’s signature.” This appeal followed.5
    DISCUSSION
    In their principal appellate brief, the Defendants challenge the trial court’s denial of
    their motion to compel arbitration, raising a number of specific issues with respect to the
    various alternative holdings the trial court made in support of its ruling. The general
    standards governing our review are well-settled:
    [W]e review a grant or denial of a motion to compel arbitration under the
    same standards that apply to bench trials. Therefore, we will review the
    record de novo and will presume that the findings of fact are correct “unless
    the preponderance of the evidence is otherwise.” We will review the trial
    court’s resolution of legal issues without a presumption of correctness.
    Mitchell v. Kindred Healthcare Operating, Inc., 
    349 S.W.3d 492
    , 496 (Tenn. Ct. App.
    2008) (internal citations omitted); see also Cabany v. Mayfield Rehab. & Special Care Ctr.,
    No. M2006-00594-COA-R3-CV, 
    2007 WL 3445550
    , at *3 (Tenn. Ct. App. Nov. 15, 2007)
    (noting that the “same standards that apply to bench trials” are used when reviewing the
    denial of a motion to compel arbitration).
    As an initial matter, we observe that the trial court did not appear to specify in its
    order the applicable law governing the case, i.e., whether the case is governed by the
    Federal Arbitration Act (“FAA”) or the Tennessee Uniform Arbitration Act (“TUAA”).
    We address the issue now at the outset of our review for clarity.
    As this Court has previously explained:
    5
    Tennessee Code Annotated section 29-5-319 provides that an interlocutory appeal may be taken
    from, among other orders, “[a]n order denying an application to compel arbitration.” 
    Tenn. Code Ann. § 29-5-319
    . This procedural provision of the Tennessee Uniform Arbitration Act applies even in cases where
    the underlying agreement is governed by the Federal Arbitration Act. See SJR Ltd. P’ship v. Christie’s
    Inc., No. W2013-01606-COA-R3-CV, 
    2014 WL 869743
    , at *3 (Tenn. Ct. App. Mar. 5, 2014) (“As our
    Supreme Court recently explained, Section 29-5-319 determines the appealability of interlocutory orders
    involving arbitration agreements, including agreements within the Federal Arbitration Act.”).
    -5-
    The Federal Arbitration Act . . . “is a congressional declaration of a
    liberal federal policy favoring arbitration agreements, notwithstanding any
    state substantive or procedural policies to the contrary.” Asplundh Tree
    Expert Co. v. Bates, 
    71 F.3d 592
    , 595 (6th Cir.1995) (quoting Moses H. Cone
    Mem’l Hosp. v. Mercury Constr. Corp., 
    460 U.S. 1
    , 24, 
    103 S.Ct. 937
    (1983)). It mandates that arbitration clauses in commercial contracts “shall
    be valid, irrevocable, and enforceable, save upon such grounds as exist at law
    or in equity for the revocation of any contract.” 
    9 U.S.C. § 2
    . The FAA
    applies to all state and federal cases in which the contract at issue requiring
    arbitration involves or affects interstate commerce.
    Webb v. First Tenn. Brokerage, Inc., No. E2012-00934-COA-R3-CV, 
    2013 WL 3941782
    ,
    at *15 (Tenn. Ct. App. June 18, 2013).
    Here, we determine that the FAA governs the arbitration provision in the Admission
    Contract, not the TUAA. In support of this conclusion, we observe that the arbitration
    provision specifically recites that the Admission Contract “evidences a transaction
    involving interstate commerce” and further indicates that the arbitration provision shall be
    governed by the “U. S. Arbitration Act.” Inasmuch as the FAA applies, the arbitration
    provision shall, as noted above, “be valid, irrevocable, and enforceable, save upon such
    grounds as exist at law or in equity for the revocation of any contract.” 
    9 U.S.C. § 2
    .
    “Applicable grounds for refusing enforcement may include the defenses of laches,
    estoppel, waiver, fraud, duress, and unconscionability.” Webb, 
    2013 WL 3941782
    , at *16.
    In this case, as we have already outlined, the trial court specifically denied the motion to
    compel arbitration upon concluding, among other things, that the arbitration provision was
    an adhesion contract and unconscionable.
    We turn first to the trial court’s determination that the agreement was adhesive. In
    discussing what constitutes an adhesion contract, the Tennessee Supreme Court has
    explained in relevant part as follows:
    An adhesion contract has been defined as “a standardized contract
    form offered to consumers of goods and services on essentially a ‘take it or
    leave it’ basis, without affording the consumer a realistic opportunity to
    bargain and under such conditions that the consumer cannot obtain the
    desired product or service except by acquiescing to the form of the contract.”
    Black’s Law Dictionary 40 (6th ed. 1990); Broemmer, 840 P.2d at 1015.
    Professor Henderson has observed that “the essence of an adhesion contract
    is that bargaining positions and leverage enable one party ‘to select and
    control risks assumed under the contract.’” 58 Va.L.Rev. at 988. Courts
    generally agree that “[t]he distinctive feature of a contract of adhesion is that
    the weaker party has no realistic choice as to its terms.”
    -6-
    Buraczynski v. Eyring, 
    919 S.W.2d 314
    , 320 (Tenn. 1996).
    We agree with the trial court that the arbitration provision at issue in this case
    constitutes an adhesion contract. Ms. Stancil and Ms. Gentry were clearly in a weaker
    position relative to Dominion Crossville, and it is undisputed that agreeing to the arbitration
    provision was a necessary condition for Ms. Gentry’s admission to the facility. Ms. Stancil
    was concerned with her mother’s placement at Fletcher House in light of Ms. Gentry’s
    elopements, the coming winter months, and Ms. Gentry’s advancing dementia, and not
    signing would have prevented Ms. Gentry from receiving the needed care and attention
    that Ms. Stancil was seeking for her. Relatedly, and as discussed in more detail infra, we
    conclude that Ms. Stancil had no realistic meaningful choice to not sign.
    Our agreement with the trial court that the arbitration provision constitutes an
    adhesion contract is, however, not dispositive of the overall enforceability inquiry.
    “Enforceability generally depends upon whether the terms of the contract are beyond the
    reasonable expectations of an ordinary person, or oppressive or unconscionable.” 
    Id.
    “Courts are more likely to find that contracts of adhesion are unconscionable,” Mitchell,
    
    349 S.W.3d at 499
    , and when there is an adhesion contract, the party seeking enforcement
    of the arbitration provision must demonstrate that the provision was bargained for or was
    reasonable. Diagnostic Ctr. v. Steven B. Stubblefield, M.D., P.C., 
    215 S.W.3d 843
    , 847
    (Tenn. Ct. App. 2006). Unconscionability is a factually-driven inquiry, and “[w]hether a
    particular contract is unconscionable is a question of law.” Mitchell, 
    349 S.W.3d at
    498-
    99. Procedural unconscionability may be implicated from a lack of meaningful choice by
    one party, and “[a] contract is substantively unconscionable when its ‘terms are
    unreasonably harsh.’” 
    Id. at 499
    . “Enforcement of a contract is generally refused on
    grounds of unconscionability where the ‘inequality of the bargain is so manifest as to shock
    the judgment of a person of common sense, and where the terms are so oppressive that no
    reasonable person would make them on the one hand, and no honest and fair person would
    accept them on the other.’” Taylor v. Butler, 
    142 S.W.3d 277
    , 285 (Tenn. 2004). “Courts
    will not enforce adhesion contracts which are oppressive to the weaker party or which serve
    to limit the obligations and liability of the stronger party.” Buraczynski, 
    919 S.W.2d at 320
    .
    Past decisions from Tennessee case law provide helpful illustrations for evaluating
    the enforceability of adhesion contracts. For instance, in Buraczynski, the Tennessee
    Supreme Court discussed as follows when finding the adhesion contracts at issue there to
    be enforceable:
    Our examination of the arbitration agreements at issue in this case
    reveals none of th[e] oppressive provisions [which would potentially prevent
    enforcement]. The agreements were not contained within a clinic or hospital
    admission contract, but are separate, one page documents each entitled
    “Physician–Patient Arbitration Agreement.” A short explanation was
    -7-
    attached to each document which encouraged the patient to discuss questions
    about the agreement with Eyring. The arbitration procedure specified by the
    agreements gives no unfair advantage to Eyring. Each side chooses an
    arbitrator, and the two arbitrators chosen appoint the third arbitrator. Eyring
    is bound by the arbitrators’ decision, and any claim he has for payment of
    fees is subject to arbitration when a medical malpractice action is asserted.
    The patient is clearly informed by a provision in ten-point capital letter red
    type, directly above the signature line, that “by signing this contract you are
    giving up your right to a jury or court trial” on any medical malpractice claim.
    The agreements contain no buried terms. All terms are laid out clearly,
    including Article 2 of the agreements, which binds the spouse and heirs of
    the patient to the arbitration agreement. The retroactive effect provision of
    the agreements was addressed in a distinct clause and required the patient to
    separately initial it, making the provision more obvious than any other
    portion of the agreement. Patients signing these agreements did not
    immediately relinquish access to the courts, but could revoke the agreements
    for any reason within thirty days of its execution and regain that
    right. Finally, and perhaps most importantly, the agreements did not change
    the doctor’s duty to use reasonable care in treating patients, nor limit liability
    for breach of that duty, but merely shifted the disputes to a different forum.
    None of the above described provisions can be construed as
    unconscionable, oppressive, or outside the reasonable expectations of the
    parties. As such, the agreements, though contracts of adhesion, are
    enforceable.
    
    Id. at 321
     (internal footnotes omitted).
    Of course, a different set of facts can compel a different conclusion, as is evident in
    this Court’s decision in Raiteri ex rel. Cox v. NHC Healthcare/Knoxville, Inc., No. E2003-
    00068-COA-R9-CV, 
    2003 WL 23094413
     (Tenn. Ct. App. Dec. 30, 2003). In holding that
    the arbitration provisions at issue in the case were unenforceable, the Raiteri court
    discussed as follows:
    [U]nlike [Buraczynski], the dispute resolution procedures in this case are a
    part of an eleven page contract dealing with many issues, including financial
    arrangements and consent to care, rather than being set forth in a separate
    stand-alone document; the dispute resolution procedures do not contain any
    type of “short explanation” encouraging patients to ask questions; essential
    terms in the mediation and arbitration provisions are “buried” and not clearly
    “laid out”; there are no provisions addressing how mediation and arbitration
    work; most significantly, the provision waiving a patient’s right to a jury trial
    is buried-and in no way highlighted-in the third paragraph of the mediation
    -8-
    and arbitration provisions; the dispute resolution procedures seem to imply
    that the defendant alone is responsible for choosing the arbitrator; and, unlike
    the arbitration agreement in [Buraczynski], the dispute resolution procedures
    before us, including the provision waiving a jury trial, are printed in the same
    font size, type, and color as the rest of the agreement.
    
    Id. at *8
    .
    Similarly, in another decision, we held an agreement to be unenforceable where it
    was presented on a “take-it-or-leave-it” basis, was “not adequately explained regarding the
    jury trial waiver,” and where the following features surrounding the arbitration clause were
    present:
    The Agreement is eleven pages long, and the arbitration provision is on page
    ten. Rather than being a stand-alone document, it is “buried” within the
    larger document. It is written in the same size font as the rest of the
    agreement, and the arbitration paragraph does not adequately explain how
    the arbitration procedure would work, except as who would administer it.
    Howell v. NHC Healthcare-Fort Sanders, Inc., 
    109 S.W.3d 731
    , 734-35 (Tenn. Ct. App.
    2003).
    In view of these authorities, a review of the Admission Contract in this case compels
    the conclusion reached in Howell and Raiteri, and not the one in Buraczynski. As noted
    earlier in this Opinion, the arbitration provision at issue here was buried within the
    Admission Contract, appearing on pages eight and nine of the thirteen-page agreement.
    Moreover, as discussed earlier, the text and heading of the provision are not distinguished
    in any way relative to the text and headings utilized in other provisions. The same lack of
    emphasis, therefore, is also true of the waiver of jury language, which as it turns out, is not
    even included in the arbitration provision itself but is instead included in a separate
    provision that does not cross-reference the arbitration provision. Moreover, the arbitration
    provision does not explain what arbitration is, state how the arbitration procedures would
    work, or provide any opt-out option or period for revocation. In order to admit Ms. Gentry
    to Dominion Crossville, agreeing to the arbitration provision was required. We further
    note that, as it pertains to the execution of the Admission Contract, even accepting Ms.
    Dodson’s account of things, it is clear that she “didn’t discuss arbitration other than to say
    that arbitration was something . . . they agreed to.” In light of all of these facts and the
    general principles discussed in cases such as Howell, Raiteri, and Buraczynski, we
    conclude that the arbitration provision at issue here is unenforceable.
    The primary argument that the Defendants appear to pursue on appeal, both in
    relation to the adhesion inquiry and unconscionability inquiry, is that there was a
    reasonable choice to not sign the Admission Contract and that there was not any urgency
    -9-
    attendant to its execution. The Defendants’ advancement of the notion that Ms. Gentry’s
    placement in an assisted living memory care unit carried no urgency whatsoever fails to
    appreciate Ms. Stancil’s concern related to her mother’s past elopements from Fletcher
    House and that the winter months were approaching. Indeed, as outlined previously, Ms.
    Stancil testified as follows pertaining to the subject of her mother’s admission to Dominion
    Crossville: “It was getting cold and my fear of her wandering outside and them not knowing
    where she is, because that was allowed there [at Fletcher House]. They could come and go
    as they wanted. So I wanted her somewhere where I knew she was safe.” As for the
    purported availability of another reasonable option for care, the Defendants posit that the
    Uplands memory care facility, which was affiliated with Fletcher House, could have
    reasonably been chosen as well. Ms. Stancil, however, did not regard Uplands as providing
    the same level of care or as being sufficient for her mother’s needs in light of her advancing
    dementia. Indeed, Ms. Gentry’s advancing dementia and elopements at Fletcher House
    had prompted Ms. Stancil’s decision to seek a different level of care, and Uplands, which
    was a new facility affiliated with Fletcher House, was sharing an activities director with it.
    As noted earlier, this gave Ms. Stancil legitimate concern that “there wouldn’t be enough
    activity to try to stimulate her [mother’s] mind” there. In light of these facts, we agree with
    the trial court that Ms. Stancil reasonably determined that there was no adequate alternative
    to Dominion Crossville to provide assisted living care for her mother and her worsening
    condition. The agreement had to be signed in order to obtain this care, and as noted earlier
    in connection with our discussion of the principles illustrated in Howell, Raiteri, and
    Buraczynski, this adhesive agreement is not enforceable.
    CONCLUSION
    Based on our discussion herein, the trial court’s order denying the motion to compel
    arbitration is hereby affirmed.6
    s/ Arnold B. Goldin
    ARNOLD B. GOLDIN, JUDGE
    6
    Based on our disposition herein, we pretermit consideration of the Defendants’ raised issue
    pertaining to the other, alternative basis upon which the trial court denied the motion to compel arbitration,
    that is, that Ms. Stancil’s signature was not binding on her mother.
    - 10 -