Brown v. Weik

725 S.W.2d 938
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedFebruary 11, 1985
StatusPublished
Cited by54 cases

This text of 725 S.W.2d 938 (Brown v. Weik) 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
Brown v. Weik, 725 S.W.2d 938 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1985).

Opinions

CRAWFORD, Judge.

This is an action by a 75-year old widow to set aside a deed of gift to a 6-acre tract of land. The plaintiff, Mrs. Etheline Brown contends that she did not have sufficient mental capacity to make the deed, and that she was subjected to undue influence by the defendants Donald J. and Carolyn Weik. The trial court sitting without the intervention of a jury found that the plaintiff was mentally capable of understanding her act, that the deed was made voluntarily, that plaintiff was not subjected to undue influence by the defendant, and plaintiff’s suit was dismissed.

Plaintiff, in her brief, presented the following issues for review:

1. Whether a deed of gift should be set aside when the donor is in a weakened physical and mental condition and without the benefit of independent advice, and the circumstances indicate that the donees participated, encouraged and had a voice in the transaction.
2. Whether the acknowledgement of plaintiff’s signature on the deed constituted full consultation and advice. ”
3. Whether the plaintiff should be granted a new trial on the grounds that (A) the trial court erred in refusing to , allow lay witnesses to express their opinion of plaintiff's mental condition after stating facts to support their opinion; (B) [941]*941newly discovered and material evidence which could not have been obtained at trial by the exercise of reasonable diligence.

However, the issues can be narrowed somewhat, and we perceive them to be:

1. Whether the evidence preponderates against the findings of the trial court.
2. Whether the trial court erred in not permitting lay witnesses to testify as to their opinion as to Mrs. Brown’s mental capacity.
3. Whether the trial court erred in failing to grant Mrs. Brown a new trial in order for her to present newly discovered evidence.

Our review of the record reveals the following:

Prior to October 4, 1979, Mrs. Brown owned 71 acres of land near Dyersburg on State Highway 104. On October 4, 1979, Mrs. Brown conveyed by deed a 6-acre tract of pasture land located between her home and the home of her neighbors, Donald J. and Carolyn H. Weik. A real estate broker in Dyer County was qualified as an expert appraiser of property values in the area and testified that the 6-acre tract had a 30 feet X 40 feet bam on it and had a fair market value of approximately $20,000 to $22,000 on October 4, 1979. Mrs. Weik, on the other hand, offered the opinion that the property was only worth approximately $3,000 to $5,000.

Lerlene Lewellyng, Mrs. Brown’s 66-year old cousin from Newbem, Tennessee, which is approximately 10 to 12 miles from Dyersburg, testified that her parents were in the same nursing home where Mrs. Brown’s brother lived and that she saw Mrs. Brown there every day up to the day that Mrs. Brown suffered a stroke, September 15,1979. Mrs. Lewellyng testified that prior to her stroke Mrs. Brown had been taking care of her brother. She visited Mrs. Brown in the hospital after her stroke and observed that her speech was slow, that she was weak, that her face was drawn, and that she could not see well or walk without assistance. She particularly noticed that she had very little to say.

On October 10, 1979, after Mrs. Brown had been discharged from the hospital, Mrs. Lewellyng took her to Memphis to visit her brother in the hospital. She appeared confused and disoriented at this time. Some time later, Mrs. Lewellyng assisted Mrs. Brown in completing her medicaid forms to pay for her hospital costs incurred while being treated for her stroke, because Mrs. Brown apparently did not know how to complete the forms, although she had always conducted her own business in the past.

Marshall Williams, the 62-year old housekeeper at Parkview Hospital in Dyersburg, testified that he had known the plaintiff since he was 10 years old and that he visited her in September and October, 1979, both before and after Mrs. Brown was hospitalized and discharged. He noticed that her condition after she was hospitalized was substantially different than before the time she entered the hospital because she didn’t talk and “didn’t really know anything.”

Mrs. Brown’s 62-year old niece from Huntsville, Alabama, Hazel Marchant, testified that she saw Mrs. Brown on an average of three times per year and that she saw her three months prior to the death of Mrs. Brown’s brother in October, 1979. At that time Mrs. Brown appeared to be mentally alert and active, but the next time she saw her on October 11, 1979, she was unstable and needed assistance to walk.

Karon Elam testified that she was a cousin of Mrs. Brown and that she lived in Memphis, but tried to see her once a month. She testified that prior to her hospitalization for the stroke she was deteriorating physically, but that she noticed a marked difference in Mrs. Brown’s physical condition after she was hospitalized. Mrs. Brown could not speak plainly, her speech was slurred, she could not see well out of one eye, and she was unresponsive to questions. Irene Brown, another elderly distant relative of Mrs. Brown, substantially echoed the testimony of Mrs. Elam.

Evie Robins testified that she was not related to Mrs. Brown, but that she had been a close friend of Mrs. Brown for 30 [942]*942years. She was employed at the nursing home where Mrs. Brown’s brother resided and saw Mrs. Brown in the hospital in September, 1979, when she was being treated for the stroke. Mrs. Brown did not recognize her when she came to visit her in the hospital, nor did she recognize Mrs. Robins when she visited her at home after her brother had died. Mrs. Robins testified that Mrs. Brown apparently could not remember things as well as she could prior to her stroke.

Plaintiff, Mrs. Etheline Brown, testified that she was 78 years old at the time of trial in 1982, and that she had been a widow since 1954. She testified that she was exhausted from trying to care for her brother who was in a nursing home and that as a result she suffered a stroke and was hospitalized from September 15 to September 23, 1979.

On the day that she was hospitalized she attempted to call a neighbor who lived down the highway from her, but she was unable to reach her. Mrs. Brown then called Mrs. Weik, and told her that she was “sick as a horse.” Mrs. Weik came to the home of Mrs. Brown and attempted to feed her and then offered to take her home with her. Mrs. Brown asked her to take her to the hospital instead.

Mrs. Weik did take Mrs. Brown to the hospital where she was treated for a stroke and was released approximately one week later.

Mrs. Brown testified that she had no recollection of transferring the property to the Weiks, nor did she have any recollection of any of the events or circumstances surrounding the transfer of the property to the Weiks, including visiting her attorney and requesting a survey of the property. She testified that the first notice that she had that the Weiks claimed ownership of the property occurred in the spring of 1980 when the Weiks began to plant a garden on the property. She learned from the county register’s office that the Weiks had in fact recorded a deed to the property. She claimed that the Weiks had an agreement with her that they would mow the pasture in exchange for a portion of her pecan crop of 1980.

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Bluebook (online)
725 S.W.2d 938, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-weik-tennctapp-1985.