Cash v. Ryan, Sr.

5 Tenn. App. 575, 1927 Tenn. App. LEXIS 92
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMay 21, 1927
StatusPublished

This text of 5 Tenn. App. 575 (Cash v. Ryan, Sr.) 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
Cash v. Ryan, Sr., 5 Tenn. App. 575, 1927 Tenn. App. LEXIS 92 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

PORTRXJM, J.

Mrs Edna M. Minnick owned a tract of land in Carter county near the town of Elizabethton, which formerly was the home of Hon. Hamilton Smith, who served as the Chancellor of the first chancery division, and who erected a large brick building upon this tract of land and lived there for a long time.

The farm lay on Doe river and the brick mansion faced the river and the road which ran between the river and the house; the building contained twelve large rooms, the dimensions of the rooms being twenty feet by twenty feet, and eight of them are located in the main building and four in a wing, the latter four being used for kitchen and dining room on the lower floor and for bed rooms above. After Chancellor Sinith’s death his family continued to own and occupy the building for some years. In the year 1907 Judge "W. R. Allen purchased the property and improved the building by replacing practically the. whole of the old foundation, also making some other improvements; he moved into the premises in the year 1910 for the purpose of making the building his residence, but the roads from the place1 to Elizabethton where he practiced his profession soon became almost impassable and he became discouraged and removed to Elizabethton. In 1911 he sold the farm for $6,000, and at the time it contained 190 acres. Later, the exact time not being at hand, Mrs. Minnick purchased the farm, paying $11,500 for it, She improved the farm by building a barn at the cost of $1200, *577 and putting a metal cover upon the bouse; she also'.built fences and improved the land generally. She sold off a portion of this land for the sum of $4500, leaving her sixty acres upon which was located the buildings and bottom land.

Mrs. Minnick was a widow and the mother of several children, the majority of whom are minors, but she had two married daughters, if not more. One of the sons-in-law, Mr. W. Ray Hyder, was a. rural carrier out of Elizabethton. Mrs, Minnick wanted to sell the farm and she asked $10,000 for it. Her son-in-law, Mr. Hyder, negotiated a sale of the land for her.

The purchaser was one John F. Ryan, who at that time was engaged in the coal business in Elizabethton, as a partner with another. He also was interested in a drug store, and it is said he dealt in real estate. After some negotiation he agreed to purchase the farm at the sum of $9,000. His offer was accepted and a deed was executed and he made a cash payment of $3,000, and represented the balance by promissory notes, two of $1,000 each and two of $2,000 each. The first two notes of $1,000 each were later paid, and the other two are due and unpaid. This suit is brought to collect these notes.

It is shown that soon after the trade Mrs. Minnick died, that is, she died on April 30, 1923, and the deed was executed March 24, 1923. Her son-in-law, W. Ray Hyder, qualified as the administrator of her estate and has administered it and received his discharge. Mr. W. T. Cash was appointed guardian for her minor children, who are named in the caption of the 'bill, and, presumably, under the terms of the administrator’s settlement, these two notes of $2,000 each were turned over to the guardian as the distributive share of his wards in their mother’s estate. One of the notes being past due and unpaid, he brings this suit as guardian, asking a sale of the property to satisfy the judgment. And pending this suit the other note matured and he files an amended and supplemental bill, tasking judgment on the two notes and the foreclosure of the lien securing them.

Prior to the institution of the suit John F. Ryan was declared insane in an inquisition of lunacy and committed to the Eastern 'Insane Asylum at Bearden, Tennessee. George W. Ryan is his guardian, having succeeded one Collier, who was first appointed and resigned.

The guardian filed an answer to the original bill and amended bill, admitting the transaction and the execution of the notes,, but alleging that at the time of the transaction his ward John F. Ryan, Sr., was a person of unsound mind and that Mrs. Minnick and her agent, the son-in-law, well knew the fact, or should have known it by the exercise of ordinary care, and because of the insanity of his *578 ward and the knowledge of the opposing parties his ward’s estate was not liable for the outstanding notes, and he was entitled to recover for his ward the payments theretofore made. He then assumed the character of cross-complainant and sued to recover the $5,000 paid, and a cancellation of the notes outstanding, and prayed for the sale of the farm in satisfaction of the judgment, in the event it was not paid in a specified time. The cross-bill was answered, denying the material allegation.

The case went to trial upon the pleadings and proof, when the Chancellor held that John P. Ryan was in fact insane when the transaction took place, but that Mrs. Minnick, nor her son-in-law, knew of the insanity, and therefore the sale was voidable. The issue then presented is, was the guardian in a position to place the sellers in statu quo as a condition precedent to the avoidance of the contract?

Upon this issue it was shown that Ryan, while he was in possession of the property, and before he had been committed to the asylum, had torn down the brick wing of the building and destroyed four large rooms. He had also left the end of the building where the wing was torn away exposed and had calcimined the place. He had turned the face of the house1 around so that the front would face in ian opposite direction and towards the new pike road, making the back face on Doe river. lie built two porches to the old house and constructed concrete walks, painted the house and put in a delco system. Now it is insisted that while the guardian cannot return the house in its original condition, that he can return the property in as valuable condition as formerly. The guardian of the minors, Mr. Cash, insists that Ryan has no right to change the character of the property and return it without reference to the value of the improvements being as great as the damage done. He insists that he does not want concrete walks and the delco system.

The law applicable to the case is well settled and is not in dispute. In the recent case of Pritchett v. Plater & Company, 144 Tenn., 432, 232 S. W. 961 the court said:

“The weight of authority also is to the effect that where a contract with an insane person has been entered into in good faith, without fraud or imposition, for a fair consideration, without notice of the infirmity, and before an adjudication of insanity, and has been executed in whole or in part, it will not be set aside unless the parties can be restored to their original position. Such contracts are enforced against the insane person, not so much because they possess the legal essential of. consent as because by means of an apparent eontraot has gained fin advantage or benefit that cannot be re *579 stored, and that therefore it would be inequitable to permit him, or those in privity with him, to repudiate it. ’ ’

And in the older ease of Bank v. Sneed, 97 Tenn., 121, 36 S. W. 716 the court said:

“It is conceded that, as a genera], rule, the contract of a lunatic may be avoided.

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Related

Pritchett v. Thomas Plater & Co.
144 Tenn. 406 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1920)

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Bluebook (online)
5 Tenn. App. 575, 1927 Tenn. App. LEXIS 92, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cash-v-ryan-sr-tennctapp-1927.