Arbuckle v. Arbuckle

129 Tenn. 485
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 129 Tenn. 485 (Arbuckle v. Arbuckle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Arbuckle v. Arbuckle, 129 Tenn. 485 (Tenn. 1914).

Opinion

Mu. Justice Lansdeu

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This case is before us upon a petition for writs of <certiorari to a decree of the court of civil appeals, which reversed the decree of the chancellor confirming an agreed sale between the guardian and the defendant Frazer of an undivided one-sixth interest of a tract of land in which Frazer and Edith Arbuckle, a minor, were tenants in common.

It appears that Mrs. Arbuckle is now guardian in California of her daughter Edith, who was nine years [487]*487old at the time of the filing of the original bill, and that they had removed their residence from Shelby county, Tenn., to Los Angeles, Cal., about one year prior to the filing of the bill. The bill seeks to confirm an agreed sale entered into between Mrs. Arbuckle, as guardian of her daughter, and the 'defendant Frazer, by which Frazer agreed to pay to the guardian $500 net for the ward’s undivided one-sixth interest in the land. The proof is overwhelming that the sale was an advantageous one, because the price offered was the full value of the land, and the guardian was receiving a very small income from the investment in the land, and, she and her daughter having removed to California to reside permanently, it was inconvenient to her to look after the land in Tennessee. This is not questioned.

The sole error assigned in the court of civil appeals, and which that court sustained, was that the sale to Frazer was void because he testified in the case as a witness for the guardian in violation of section 5088 of Shannon’s Code. Proceedings of the nature of this bill are regulated by chapter 3 of Shannon’s Code, sec. 5072, et seq. Section 5078 requires that the pleadings should set forth “fully and particularly the age, circumstances, and condition of the party under disability ; what other property, if any, such person owns, or is in any way entitled to, and the cause or reason why a sale of the particular property is sought.”

Section 5088 provides:

[488]*488“No guardian, next friend or witness, in such cause, shall purchase at such sale, or at any time afterwards, until five years from the removal of the existing disabilities; and if any such person shall make such purchase, the original sale shall become void, and the infant or married woman may bring ejectment for the land, as if no sale had been made.”

In Starkey v. Hammer, 1 Baxt., 445, it was said:

“The object of the statute was to prevent purchases by witnesses who had given evidence tending to show the necessity of the sale, and for this purpose they are forbidden to buy, and their purchase declared void, and we can but enforce the provisions of the statute. ’ ’

The case cited also held that the remedy of the infant or a married woman was not limited to ejectment as provided in the statute. The remedy enforced in that case, while not technical ejectment, was in effect so, as it was a bill to remove cloud. In Hunt v. Glenn, 11 Lea, 16, it was said that the purpose of the foregoing section of the Code “is to protect persons under disability from the artifices of persons who may desire to own their property and may resort to unfair means, even upon the witness stand, to bring it to a sale that they may purchase.” In that case it was held that a witness who testified only that he agreed with the trustee to purchase, and was .willing with the approval of the court to purchase at an agreed price, was not within the. prohibited class described by section 5088., Shannon’s Code. Certainly such a witness would not [489]*489fall -within the declaration of the purpose of that section of the Code made by the court in Hunt v. Glenn.

We hold that the statement of 'the pnrpose of the legislature in enacting the prohibition contained in section 5088 is corieetly stated in Hunt v. Glenn. The statement of the legislative pnrpose made in Starkey v. Hammer was evidently not intended to be fall or complete, and isolated from the remainder of the opinion ; the statement quoted is too broad, and is certainly not in harmony with the later case of Hunt v. Glenn. Hunt v. Glenn expressly held that it was not every witness who gave testimony in such a casé that was prohibited from buying. It is only witnesses who resort to their testimony in the case as an artifice to bring about a sale of the infant’s property in order that they may purchase who are forbidden to buy. It is not meant that the artifice itself must appear from the testimony of the witness, or necessarily from extrinsic facts; but it would be sufficient if the witness who afterwards became the purchaser should testify to material facts which it could be seen would reasonably influence the judgment of the court in ordering or confirming a sale.

The jurisdictional facts and those which must control the discretion of the court are set out in section 5078., supra, and relate to the age of the minor, his circumstances in life, and his condition, what other property he owns or is entitled to, and the cause or reason why sale of the particular property is sought. A witness who becomes a purchaser, in order to fall [490]*490within the prohibition of section 5088, must testify to facts which would reflect in some material degree upon the jurisdictional facts included in section 5078, and his testimony must have influenced the judgment of the court in the decision of those questions.

The witness Frazer testified in substance that he was familiar with this property, and was the owner of five-sixths, and the minor was the owner of the other one-sixth; that he and the guardian, who is the minor’s mother and an intelligent, competent woman, had made a contract by which he agreed to pay $500 net for the minor’s interest in the land, and that he had deposited with the court $25 as earnest money; that he had bought land in the neighborhood of this land both before and since the filing of the bill; that for some of his other purchases he had paid more, and for others he had paid less, than he was agreeing to pay for this land; that he had paid $1,000’ for an undivided one-third interest in this particular property, and he had paid $650 for an undivided one-sixth interest; that he thought the price he proposed to pay for this one-sixth was fair, and the rental received by the guardian is small. He exhibited with his deposition the correspondence he had had with the guardian, and which resulted in the agreement of sale sought to be confirmed.

The court of civil appeals held that the purchase by this witness was void because he testified as above set out.

[491]*491We think this was error. It should he stated that this witness was called by the guardian, and most all of the facts detailed by him were brought out by counsel representing the guardian. His testimony relates to facts which he could not in good faith have withheld from the court, whether he had been called by the guardian or not. One significant fact testified to by him is that only a few months previous to his making the contract with the guardian he purchased a one-sixth undivided interest of the identical tract for $150 more than he proposed to pay for this interest.

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Related

Carter v. Carter
144 Tenn. 628 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1921)

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Bluebook (online)
129 Tenn. 485, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/arbuckle-v-arbuckle-tenn-1914.