Bridges v. Freshour

12 Tenn. App. 188, 1930 Tenn. App. LEXIS 52
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJuly 26, 1930
StatusPublished

This text of 12 Tenn. App. 188 (Bridges v. Freshour) 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
Bridges v. Freshour, 12 Tenn. App. 188, 1930 Tenn. App. LEXIS 52 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1930).

Opinion

SENTER, J.

The complainant filed her original bill in this cause seeking to recover against the defendant on a note dated October 31, 1919, and due and payable on or before the 31st day of October, 1922, for the principal sum of $835, and accrued interest thereon. This note is as follows:

*189 “White Pine, Tennessee,
“October 31,1919. •
“On or before the 31st day of October, 1922, I promise to pay to Mary Ruth Kyker Bight Hundred and Thirty-five Dollars with 6 % interest from date till paid.
“D. R. Bridges.

Mary Ruth Kyker afterwards married a Mr. Freshour. After the suit was brought and the answer and the cross-bill was filed by the defendant, D. R. Bridges, and after his deposition in the cause was taken, he died and the suit was properly revived against his administratrix, Mrs. Bertie Bridges, and her appearance was duly entered.

The answer of defendant, D. R. Bridges, to the original bill denies that the complainant is entitled to recover against him on said note. He admits the execution of the note by his answer, but alleges that he borrowed the money represented by said note from J. M. Kyker, now deceased, and executed a trust deed on certain real property to secure the note; that the note was made payable to Mary Ruth Kyker upon the suggestion and by the direction of said J. M. Kyker, who explained to him at the time the loan was negotiated and the note and trust deed securing the same were executed, that he desired the note to be made payable to his daughter, Mary Ruth Kyker, so that he would not have to pay taxes on the note. The answer further alleges that before the note became due he negotiated a sale' of the property upon which the trust deed to secure the note was given, and that the sale was on deferred payments, and that he arranged with J. M. Kyker, father of complainant, to discount the deferred payment notes and to settle the $835 note secured by the trust deed. The trust deed which he had given to secure the note had not at that time been placed to record. It is further alleged that at the time he settled and paid off the note to J. M. Kyker, that Kyker did not have the note present, but agreed to go' through his papers and find the note and trust deed and mail same to him. Kyker was then sick, and before he could get the note and trust deed and mail same to him, Kyker died.

The answer also denies that the note sued on is in fact the property of the complainant; and denies that there was any consideration passing between complainant and defendant for the note, and that the note was never in fact, delivered by J. M. Kyker to the complainant, and that his payment of the note to J. M. Kyker was a payment to the real owner, and that the note was made payable to the complainant by direction of J. M. Kyker to avoid paying taxes thereon and no title to the same ever in fact vested in the complainant.

*190 The answer is also filed as a cross-bill, and the administrator and the heirs at law of J. M. Kyker, deceased, are all made parties defendant to the cross-bill, including the complainant in the original bill. By the cross-bill the cross-complainant, D. R. Bridges, alleges that if for any reason he should be held liable on the note to the original complainant, and judgment decreed against him for the same, that he is entitled to recover against the administrator of the estate of J. M. Kyker, deceased, and the heirs at law of J. Ml. Kyker, any amount that may be decreed against him. The original complainant filed an answer to the cross-bill by which she asserted'that she was the rightful owner of the note sued on; that her father had given to her the money which was loaned to cross-complainant and had the note made in her name as an investment for her, and that she was an innocent holder of the note, and that the note was negotiable, and denied that cross-complainant was entitled to any relief against her. An order pro confesso was taken against the administrator of the estate of J. M. Kyker, and all the other defendants, heirs at law, children of J. M. Kyker, deceased, answered the cross-bill, and denied that cross-complainant was entitled to any recovery against the estate of J. M. Kyker, or against them as heirs at law of J. M. Kyker, deceased, and alleged that the note which the original complainant had sued on was the property of J. M. Kyker, and that J. M. Kyker frequently transacted business in that way for personal reasons, and had on other occasions made loans in which some of his children were named as the payee in the notes so taken by him, and this was done for reasons personal to himself, but without any intention of making a gift of the money so loaned or the notes taken to such children. One of the sons of J. M. Kyker, deceased, J. W. Kyker, and one of the cross-defendants, makes certain allegations in the joint and several answer of the defendants to the cross-bill which purports to be matters of his personal knowledge. These allegations are to the effect that his father consulted with him and informed him of his various business transactions, and that he had personal knowledge that his father frequently did business with certain or various individuals in the name of his children, and that he has a personal recollection of the incidents of the transaction in which the note in the particular case was taken in the name of the original complainant; that the original complainant nevdr had any interest in the funds loaned by his father to Bridges, and never had any knowledge of said transaction until after the death of the said J. M. Kyker, and that Mary Ruth Kyker was then a mere school girl, and that it was never intended by his father that she would be the beneficiary of the loan made to Bridges. He further alleges that his father made a will in which he settled all *191 matters and obligations as between himself and his various children, and that his said will does not disclose any obligation due to Mary Ruth Kyker as having been collected by him from said Bridges in settlement of any loan made for her use and benefit, and avers that if such had been the case some mention would have been made of it in the’ will.

At the hearing of the cause the Chancellor found, and so decreed, that the original complainant was the lawful owner and holder of the note sued on; that the note was negotiable and that she was an innocent holder thereof, and was entitled to recover the amount of the note and accrued interest thereon against the administratrix of the estate of D. R. Bridges, and decreed accordingly.

The Chancellor further held and decreed as follows:

“However, under the averments of the cross-bill of D. R. Bridges and the proof taken in the cause in support thereof, the court is of the opinion and finds that said D. R. Bridges paid said note, together with the interest to the said J. M. Kyker, during his lifetime, as alleged in the cross-bill, believing that he was making the payment to the true holder and owner of said note, and in this connection the court finds that there is proof in the record to sustain the contention of cross-complainant that the money loaned to said D. R. Bridges by J. M. Kyker was loaned in the name of Mary Ruth Kyker for the purpose of avoiding payment of taxes on ‘personalty. That the courts are slow to recognize such evasions of law and in this respect the hands of J. M.

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Bluebook (online)
12 Tenn. App. 188, 1930 Tenn. App. LEXIS 52, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bridges-v-freshour-tennctapp-1930.