Bell v. Gailey

260 S.W.2d 300, 37 Tenn. App. 17, 1951 Tenn. App. LEXIS 119
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedOctober 10, 1951
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 260 S.W.2d 300 (Bell v. Gailey) 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
Bell v. Gailey, 260 S.W.2d 300, 37 Tenn. App. 17, 1951 Tenn. App. LEXIS 119 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1951).

Opinion

ANDERSON, P. J.

The defendant, Ben Block Jones, appealed from the decree of the Chancellor awarding the complainant, Sarah Bell, a recovery against him in the sum of $500. The theory of the recovery was that in the sale of her home, Jones owed the complainant a duty arising out of a confidential relationship, which said duty he had breached.

The material facts are as follows: The complainant is an aged and rather illiterate Negro woman, somewhere between 75 and 85 years of age. For 37 years she had worked as a servant for a Mr. and Mrs. Yories. About 1917, with the help of Mr. Vories, she acquired a small home, known as 1067 South Walk Place. When, apparently due to advancing years, she retired, her daughter Delia, continued in Mr. Yories’ employ. Mr. Yories for a time paid the complainant ,a pension of $6 a week. The complainant has a son by the name of Walter Prince, who, the preponderance of the proof shows, was an inebriate. After an absence from Memphis of a number of years, Walter returned and moved into the complainant’s home. He was out of work for a considerable period, during *20 which time lie apparently had no source of livelihood. Mr. Vories stopped the payment of the pension when he suspected that a good part of it was being dissipated by the indulgencies of Walker, who, he considered, should take care of his mother.

The defendant, Ben Block Jones, is a real estate broker, who was also in the “loan business”. Some time prior to the transaction here in question, the complainant and her son Walter approached Jones to get a loan on the property. This was arranged and a note or notes were executed aggregating $302, secured by a mortgage on the property. These notes were sold by Jones to C. A. Tindall for about $242, out of which the complainant was given $200, the $42 being applied to taxes and expenses and a small commission to Jones.

Later, the complainant decided to sell her home and called upon the defendant Jones to sell it for her. Jones was already familiar with the propriety by virtue of having procured the loan on it. He nevertheless went out to the house and had a conference with the complainant and her son Walter. He was informed that the complainant wanted the property sold for cash. He says that he told her she could get a much better price by selling it “on time”. He claims that she persisted in wanting cash, so he decided to buy it himself. He accordingly had her sign a contract for the sale on a printed form which he had brought with him, and which, significantly enough, had already been filled out, thus indicating his intention. This form is dated November 16,1949. It recites that the owner has received from Ben Block Jones $200 as earnest money in part payment for the property described, and further, that the owner had sold and agreed to convey the property to Jones or his nominee and that Jones agreed to purchase said property for the sum of $1140 payable *21 $850 in cash and the balance by the assumption of a mortgage in the principal snm of $290. The contract is signed by the complainant and her son Walter as sellers, and also by Jones as a purchaser. Walter had no interest in the property.

Apparently at the time the contract was signed, Jones made out and delivered to Walter a check for $200 in part payment of the purchase price. This cheek was payable to Walter and complainant jointly. Just why is not apparent. Walter cashed it at a liquor store in the neighborhood. The transaction was not consummated, however, until November 19th, (after Jones had re-sold the property), when the defendant Jones delivered to the complainant a check payable to her in the sum of $650', representing the balance of the purchase price after the mortgage debt had been satisfied.

In the meantime, Jones had advertised the property for sale in a newspaper. This came to the attention of one James Gailey on the morning of November 10, 1949, Gailey went to look at the property and found the complainant and her son Walter there. Upon inquiry, Walter told Gailey that it was his mother’s property and that if he was interested in buying it, “Mr. Jones was the man to see”. Thereupon Gailey called Jones’ concern, the Block Realty Company, and a salesman took him out to see the property again. A sale was agreed upon at a price of $2500, on terms of $300 cash and the balance in a series of notes secured by a mortgage on the property payable to bearer, 60 of which were in the sum of $20 each due monthly, and one in the sum of $1000 due November 19, 1954. This deal was consummated and Jones sold the notes to C. A. Tindall for $1500 or a discount of $700. The deed to Gailey was direct from complainant. The result was that Jones realized out of the transaction *22 $1800' in cash, whereas he had bought it from the complainant for $1140.

Following his deal with Gailey, Jones, as said, completed Ms transaction with the complainant by giving her the check for $650.

The complainant’s daughter, Delia, knew nothing of these transactions until after they had been consummated and her mother was homeless. Upon discovering what had happened, she consulted counsel and caused the bill in this case to be filed.

In addition to the defendant Jones, Gailey and wife, Tindall, and the complainant’s son Prince, were all made defendants. By way of relief the complainant sought to have the transaction set aside on the ground that a fraud had been perpetrated on the complainant. The son Walter was joined on the theory that he had aided and abetted Jones. The Chancellor dismissed the bill as to all the defendants except Jones, and of this there is no complaint. In awarding a recovery for $500 representing the profit made by Jones in the transaction, he allowed Jones credit for a 5% real estate agent’s commission and certain expenses.

The foregoing facts make a clear ease for relief against Jones under well settled principles of equity. McNeill v. Dobson-Bainbridge Realty Co., 184 Tenn. 99, 195 S. W. (2d) 626; Pomeroy’s Equity Jurisprudence, Vol. 2, Sec. 953; see also, Vol. 3, Sec. 1075; Gibson’s Suits in Chancery, Sec. 46. Here, we have upon the one hand, an aged Negress, ignorant of business transactions and property values, almost if not entirely illiterate. Her testimony indicates that if she were not senile she was fast approaching that state. Upon the other hand, Jones is a white man, fully versed in property values and in the negotiation of loans thereon. What he had in mind is in *23 dicated by tbe fact that he arrived on the scene with a form of contract already filled ont and ready for complainant’s signature whereby, when executed, complainant agreed to sell the property to him or his nominee.

Somewhere in the course of the conference about the matter, or the conference about the loan he had previously negotiated for complainant, he manifestly discovered that he could buy the property for cash at a figure that would enable him to make a substantial profit. He thereupon undertook to and in fact did switch his position from that of a confidential agent to that of a purchaser. He bought the property and resold it at the profit indicated before he actually completed the transaction of purchase from the complainant by the full payment of the amount due.

Equity will not tolerate such a deal.

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Bluebook (online)
260 S.W.2d 300, 37 Tenn. App. 17, 1951 Tenn. App. LEXIS 119, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bell-v-gailey-tennctapp-1951.