Bank of Commerce & Trust Co. v. Pope

103 S.W.2d 586, 20 Tenn. App. 652, 1936 Tenn. App. LEXIS 56
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedFebruary 21, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 103 S.W.2d 586 (Bank of Commerce & Trust Co. v. Pope) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bank of Commerce & Trust Co. v. Pope, 103 S.W.2d 586, 20 Tenn. App. 652, 1936 Tenn. App. LEXIS 56 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

SENTER, J.

This is an appeal from tbe decree of tbe chancellor by Mrs. Lyde Pope Brown, individually, and by Lyde Pope Brown and Dean IT. Pope, executors, to so much of tbe decree of tbe chancellor as held that a conveyance executed on January 8, 1932, by Mary A. Pope to her daughter, Lyde Pope Brown, constituted a fraud in law, and in decreeing that said deed be set aside, and that tbe property be sold, and that out of tbe proceeds of tbe sale, Mrs. Brown be reimbursed for tbe amount that she bad paid or assumed to pay in tbe purchase of said property, plus certain taxes and interest that she bad paid on tbe property, and that tbe balance remaining be applied to a deficiency judgment in favor of complainant and against tbe defendants, except tbe defendant, Mrs. Lyde Pope Brown.

Tbe original bill sets out with considerable detail tbe transactions of Mrs. Pope and tbe indebtedness which Mrs. Pope bad assumed to pay to tbe bank as a part of tbe consideration in tbe purchase of certain property situated in tbe city of Memphis, consisting of two separate pieces of property securing tbe described indebtedness to tbe complainant bank, and tbe foreclosure sale of said property and tbe amounts realized therefrom and tbe amount of tbe deficiency remaining unpaid. Tbe bill with considerable detail attacks tbe conveyance made of tbe tract of 27% acres by tbe deed of January 8, 1932, and by which Mrs. Mary Pope conveyed to her daughter, Mrs. Lyde Pope Brown, the 27% acres as being both a fraud in law, and a fraud in fact. Tbe bill alleges that tbe conveyance was made by Mrs. Pope to her daughter for tbe purpose of hindering, delaying, and defeating tbe complainants in tbe collection of their just debt against Mrs. Pope, and that both Mrs. Pope and Mrs. Brown, by collusion, sought to hinder and delay and defeat tbe payment of said debts by Mrs. Pope by conveying this 27% acres to Mrs. Brown.

It is not necessary here' to consider any of tbe answers to tbe bill except tbe answers of Mrs. Brown and Mrs. Pope. Mrs. Brown by her answer stated that tbe conveyance was made to her by her mother in tbe utmost good faith and without any fraudulent intention either upon tbe part of her mother or by her to hinder or delay or defeat tbe collection of tbe bank’s debt against Mrs. Pope. By both their answers they denied all charges of fraud, either actual or constructive, and both insisted that Mrs. Brown paid to Mrs. Pope a fair and valuable consideration for tbe property, and denied that tbe bank was entitled to any of tbe relief sought against Mrs. Brown. There were also cross-bills filed by the defendants attacking tbe sale of tbe mortgaged property by tbe bank at tbe foreclosure sales. However, tbe attack made by the defendants on tbe mortgage foreclosure sales was not pressed or insisted upon at tbe bearing of tbe cause, and need not now be considered, as neither party appealed from *654 tbe decree of the chancellor on that subject. The chancellor filed an elaborate finding’ of the facts and also included therein his conclusions of law as well as of the facts. There are only two questions really presented on this appeal. The first question is with reference to the action of the court in sustaining exceptions filed by the complainant to the testimony of Foster V. Brown, the husband of Lyde Pope Brown, on the grounds that his testimony came within the rulé of hearsay evidence. The second and only other question presented for determination on this appeal goes to the action of the chancellor in finding, holding, and decreeing that the conveyance executed by Mrs. Pope to Mrs. Brown of the 27% acres situated in Memphis, Tennessee, by deed dated January 8, 1932, constituted constructive fraud, or a fraud in law, and in decreeing that said sale be set aside, and in decreeing a lien thereon in favor of Mrs. Brown for only the amount of the indebtedness which she had assumed in the deed, amounting to $2,650, and delinquent taxes which she had paid on the property, amounting to $731,85, and in denying any lien on the property of any indebtedness which Mrs. Pope owed her daughter, Mrs. Brown; or rather, any of the advances made by Mrs. Brown to her mother prior to the execution of the deed; and in denying the items advanced and paid by Mrs. Brown for her mother subsequent to the execution of the deed and the expenses incurred in the support and maintenance by Mrs. Brown of her mother to the time of her death.

It is not now neeessai*y or matérial to' consider the value of the Madison avenue property owned by Mrs. Pope and which secured the two notes of $5,000 and $5,500 respectively and the payment of which Mrs. Pope had assumed in the purchase of the Madison avenue property, except as it may reflect upon the intention of both Mrs. Pope and Mrs. Brown at the time Mrs. Pope conveyed to Mrs. Brown the 27% acres. After the foreclosure of the trust deeds on that property, there remained a balance owning to the complainant bank of $5,829.45, and with accrued interest thereon from April 11, 1932', to the date of the decree, amounting to $1,170.74.

The chancellor further decreed that "VV. R. Cox and Victoria Craft Cox, who conveyed the Madison avenue property, are entitled to recover of the executors of the estate of Mrs. Mary Pope, deceased, said deficiency. This, on the theory that Mrs. Pope had assumed for W. R. ,C,ox and Victoria Cox the payment of the encumbrance debt on the property as a part of the consideration in the purchase of same.

The chancellor specifically found and so decreed that neither Mrs. Mary A. Pope nor Mrs. Lyde Pope Brown were guilty of any actual or active fraud in the transaction by which Mrs. Pope conveyed to Mrs. Brown the 27%, acres. There was no appeal from this part of the decree of the chancellor by either of the parties. It does not, therefore, become necessary to consider the question of actual fraud in disposing of the questions made on this appeal.

*655 The chancellor seemed to predicate his holdings that the advances made by Mrs. Brown to her mother prior to the execution of the deed of January 8, 1932, did not constitute the relation of debtor and creditor between Mrs. Pope and Mrs. Brown and that such advances were not intended to be paid by Mrs. Pope or collected by Mrs. Brown from her mother, and upon the further theory that these advances, if debts, were barred by the statute of limitations. It was upon this theory that the chancellor did not allow to Mrs. Brown a lien on .the property covering said advancements.

On the first question presented by the assignments of error, which challenge the action of the court in sustaining the exceptions to the evidence of Poster V. Brown, and excluding the same on the theory that said evidence was hearsay and therefore incompetent, we cannot agree to the holding of the chancellor on this question.

It appears that Poster Y. Brown, representing his wife and his wife’s mother, was present on the night preceding the preparation and execution of the deed, and heard Mrs. Pope and Mrs. Brown discuss the question of making the conveyance. The scope of his testimony was practically confined to the matter of the consideration passing between Mrs. Brown and her mother for the conveyance of this property. The question of the actual consideration was one of the principal issues involved in the litigation under the pleadings by the respective parties. The consideration was sharply challenged, both by the bill and by the testimony offered by complainant.

Mr. Brown testified that Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
103 S.W.2d 586, 20 Tenn. App. 652, 1936 Tenn. App. LEXIS 56, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bank-of-commerce-trust-co-v-pope-tennctapp-1936.