Arnett v. Lillard

436 S.W.2d 106, 245 Ark. 939, 1969 Ark. LEXIS 1383
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJanuary 13, 1969
Docket5-4708
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 436 S.W.2d 106 (Arnett v. Lillard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Arnett v. Lillard, 436 S.W.2d 106, 245 Ark. 939, 1969 Ark. LEXIS 1383 (Ark. 1969).

Opinion

John A. Fogleman, Justice.

Appellants are the daughter and son-in-law of appellee, the plaintiff in a suit to cancel a deed by which she had conveyed certain lands to them. She alleged that the deed was made in order that appellants might arrange the refinancing of an indebtedness she had secured by a mortgage on the land, but that contrary to their agreement, appellants had refused to reconvey the lands. This refusal, she contended, amounted to fraud.

Appellee Nancy Lillard owned 120 acres of land on which she had lived since 1918. In 1964 it was subject to a mortgage indebtedness in excess of $8,000 bearing interest at the rate of 10% per annum on an original debt of $6,000. Her payments were in arrears, making the debt subject to acceleration, but she was not being pressed for payment. She was nearly 70 years of age and unable to farm the lands herself, so had rented them to a tenant for a year or more. She also owed $1,000 on a tractor she had used on the farm. Appellant Beatrice Arnett and one other daughter were the only ones of her nine living children who did not live in St. Louis. Robert Arnett was living in the vicinity, farming rented lands.

The parties do not agree on the preliminaries to the refinancing arrangement leading to the conveyance of the lands. Mr. Earl Wilson, the county supervisor of the Farmers Home Administration in Phillips County, testified that in October 1964, Nancy Lillard made an application to his agency for a loan. She listed debts of $9,200 on her application. She was not eligible for a loan because she did not operate the farm herself. This application was withdrawn. Appellants then made application to the FHA on November 2, 1964, to purchase the farm and to refinance an indebtedness of $416.64 on their home and the two acres of land on which it was situated. The application indicated that Robert Arnett would farm the land. On November 9, 1964, Nancy Lillard signed an option to appellants to purchase the land for $8,000. The FHA appraisal showed a normal, or loan value, of $8,600, but the loan actually made was $8,380. The objective of the appraisers was to arrive at a loan value amounting to about 70% of the market value. When the loan closing costs, land clearing costs, repair costs and the balance of the debt on the Arnett home had been paid, there remained $8,000 to pay on the mortgage on the land. The loan was closed on March 15, 1965, on which date Nancy Lillard conveyed the lands to the Arnetts by the warranty deed which she now seeks to cancel. The loan proceeds were not sufficient to pay the mortgage in full. On March 30, 1965, the FHA made a production loan of $3,000 to Robert Lillard, from which a $1,000 balance on this indebtedness was paid and the Lillard farm equipment was then transferred to him by a bill of sale signed by Nancy Lillard. The FHA mortgage loan was at 5% interest, payable in annual installments of $488 over a period of 40 years. All of the annual payments becoming due prior to the institution of this suit were made by Robert Arnett. Due to an illness suffered by him, he was granted permission by the FHA to rent the lands to a tenant in 1967. Mr. Wilson stated that Robert Arnett was present on one occasion when Nancy Lillard’s application was discussed. Although Mr. Wilson understood from conversation among the parties that appellee “would live out her days” in her home on the lands, no collateral agreement between the parties to the deed came to his attention. Nancy Lillard did continue to live on in her home and was living there at the time of the trial.

Nancy Lillard had a sixth-grade education and could read and write, but said that she could not now see well ■enough to read. She testified that she understood when the loan was closed that she was signing a contract for Robert to “work it out of debt,” get “Mm some money back,” and then “turn it back.” Sbe stated that be told ber sbe was signing a contract and that for over a year sbe knew nothing of tbe deed. Sbe denied that anyone in tbe FHA office told her sbe was signing a deed. Sbe said that sbe intended for Arnett to work tbe land long enough to pay it out of debt, make a living for himself, and make enough money to satisfy him. Nothing was said about tbe payment of any rent to ber.

Nancy Lillard admitted: making tbe application for tbe FHA loan; receiving $13 from tbe proceeds of timber sold by Robert Arnett; that Arnett bad made repairs to ber home; that be bad cleared about 3 acres of land with a bulldozer; that tbe $8,000 loan proceeds went to pay ber debt; that sbe never asked Arnett to pay her any rent.

Appellee’s version of tbe manner in which tbe proposal for refinancing arose is that Robert Arnett suggested tbe FHA application and took ber to tbe office. Sbe testified that he also proposed the arrangement to which sbe agreed after sbe was told that ber loan application would not be approved.

Sbe first expressed dissatisfaction when Arnett proposed to sell 80 acres of the land. Sbe stated that sbe learned of this from sources other than appellants.

Seanes Boyce, tbe husband of a step-daughter of appellee, testified that Robert Arnett bad told him that be was taking tbe place under a lease and was going to work it out of debt. He was unable to say whether this was before or after the deed was signed. Boyce’s wife admitted telling Arnett that sbe was glad for him to take tbe place and lease it for a number of years because of her inability to do anything. It was not until Arnett proposed to sell some of tbe land that sbe discovered that tbe transaction involved a deed, not a lease. Sbe testified that when all of tbe brothers and sisters objected to the sale, Arnett told her, appellee, and one of appellee’s daughters that if they would give him $3,000 he would relinquish all rights and that if he had realized that heirs were involved, he would never have ‘‘fooled” with it. She denied knowing that Arnett proposed the sale in order to pay off the debt.

Evie Mallett, a daughter who had lived in St. Louis since 1942, said that Arnett told her in August of 1966 that he was going to work the place out of debt and turn it back to appellee just like it was. She testified that when they protested the proposed sale, Arnett said that he would turn the land over to them for $3,800, $300 of which was for the tractor he had taken over.

Edmond Lillard, a son of appellee, recalled that Arnett called him before anything was done, advising of his proposal to take the place and work it out of debt. His version of the conversation was that Arnett was going to return the land and wanted nothing for himself. He admitted a dislike for Robert Arnett.

Robert Arnett’s version is somewhat different. He testified that he and appellee usually discussed their respective farming operations each fall. In the fall of 1964 he learned that Nancy Lillard did not know how much cotton she produced in 1963 and had no statement of her status. He said that he admonished her to attend to her business, and advised her to get a statement from her mortgagee, who apparently handled the disposition of her crops. He further stated that after she obtained one statement and lost it, he went with her to get another.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
436 S.W.2d 106, 245 Ark. 939, 1969 Ark. LEXIS 1383, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/arnett-v-lillard-ark-1969.