Clark v. Wilburn

7 Tenn. App. 46, 1927 Tenn. App. LEXIS 7
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedDecember 20, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 7 Tenn. App. 46 (Clark v. Wilburn) 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
Clark v. Wilburn, 7 Tenn. App. 46, 1927 Tenn. App. LEXIS 7 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

SENTER, J.

This litigation grows out of certain conveyances made by Alfred Clark, colored, deceased, to his daughter Ruth Wilburn, conveying to his said daughter certain lots or parcels of real estate situated in Shelby county, Tennessee. It appears that the deceased Alfred Clark died intestate in Shelby county, Tennessee, on or about January 30, 1926. Some years prior to his death he was the owner of a tract of land containing a fraction, over twenty-four acres. This tract of land was near the City of Memphis. Several years prior to his death he sold off ten acres from the tract, leaving him the owner of fourteen and a fraction acres.

In the latter part of 1919 and in 1920, Alfred Clark gave to each of his living children a lot, ranging in size from about an acre and: one-half to an acre and three-quarters. He had had the property platted, and conveyed to each of these children the respective lots, so that they could each build homes on the respective lots.

F[or many years, nearly a half a century, Alfred Clark had been teaching school in the public colored schools, of Shelby county, Tennessee. At the time of his death he was an old man, probably *48 seventy-five or eighty years of age, his exact age is not definitely shown by the record. After he quit teaching school he lived on this tract of land and had a small home on the tract. It appears that he desired to do something for each of the children and to settle them near him on this tract of land, and for this reason conveyed to each of them the respective lots. It appears that at or about the time the deceased conveyed to the other' four of his children the respective lots or parcels, he conveyed to the defendant, Ruth Wilburn, a lot seventy feet fronting on Mendenhall avenue, running back east between parallel lines 286 feet. This lot did not include all of Lot No. 1. Lot No. 1, as shown on the plat, being* seventy feet fronting west on Mendenhall avenue, and running back between parallel lines 331 feet. Lots 2, 3, and 4 also fronted on Mendenhall avenue, and each of these ran back 331 feet east between parallel lines. Between Lots 4 and 3 andi extending from Mendenhall avenue east through the entire fourteen and a fraction-acre tract, there is an avenue shown on the plat thirty feet wide.

The deed conveying the portion of Lot No. 1 to defendant Ruth Wilburn is not attacked in this proceedings, as it seems to be conceded that at the time this conveyance was made the deceased was in-possession of his faculties and capable of conveying his property. It also being conceded that at about the same time or shortly thereafter he conveyed to each of the other children the lots before referred to.

On December 22, 1920, Alfred Clark and his wife, who was then living, executed a deed to the defendant Ruth Wilburn, to two small parcels for the recited consideration of “$10' and other valid considerations to them in hand paid by the said Ruth Wilburn the receipt whereof is hereby acknowledged!. ” The first parcel described in this conveyance is one-half of Lot No. 2 on the plat, being the south one-half of Lot No. 2 fronting* sixty-one feet on Mendenhall avenue and running back 331 feet. The second parcel described in this conveyance is the east forty-five feet of Lot No. 1. This lot or parcel is forty-five feet east and west and seventy feet north and south, and is the remainder of Lot No. 1 first conveyed to Ruth Wilburn. This dieed is one of the conveyances attacked in this suit, and will be later referred to.

In December, 1924, Alfred Clark executed a deed to the defendant Ruth Wilburn for the recited consideration of “$10 and other valid considerations to him in hand paid by the said Ruth Wilburn, the receipt, whereof is hereby acknowledged,” to an additional part of the fourteen and a fraction-acre tract. This parcel being 110 feet north and south at the west end and running back 649.36 feet to the east boundary of said tract, and being 121 feet at the east end. This lot does not front on Mendenhall avenue, but begins at a point 800 feet east of the east line of Mendenhall avenue, but is bounded *49 on the south by the thirty-foot avenue, which runs east and west through the entire tract from Mendenhall avenue to the east boundary of the tract. This avenue does not seem to have ever been opened and recognized as a street, unless probably the distance of Lot No. 4 of the tract.

This deed is another one of the conveyances attacked in this suit.

On July 20, 1925, Alfred Clark executed a deed to the defendant Ruth Wilburn for the recited consideration of “one ($1) dollar, love and affection, and the agreement by the party of the second part to support and care for the party of the first part during the remaining portion of his natural life,” conveying another portion of the fourteen and a fraction-acre tract, which is 307.3 feet north and south and 400 feet east and west. This being a lot out of the southeast corner of the tract, and fronting on the thirty-foot avenue, unopened, above referred to. This conveyance is also attacked.

After the death of Alfred Clark four of his children, all married, filed the original bill in this cause, seeking to set aside all of the conveyances made by Albert Clark to his daughter Ruth Wilburn, except the first lot conveyed in 1919.

It is alleged in the bill that for several years prior to the death of Albert Clark he had been in bad health, and of weak mentality; that for two or three years prior to his death his condition, physically, was very bad and that he was confined to his home and bed the greater portion of the time; and that for three or four years prior to his death his mentality was greatly impaired, and to such an extent that he was mentally incapacitated to transact any business, or to know anything about his own affairs, and that he was an easy subject for imposition; that the defendant Ruth Wilburn, his daughter, intimidated him, and coerced him, and by undue influence procured him to execute the three conveyances, conveying the four pieces of property, and which conveyances the complainants sought to have set aside.

The defendants Ruth Wilburn and her husband, Jessie Wilburn, filed an answer to the original bill, and in which they deny all the material allegations, and deny that there was any fraud or deceit or coercion or any other improper methods used to induce Alfred Clark to execute the conveyances in question. The answer denies that Alfred Clark was of weak mentality, but admitted that during the later years of his life, he was in failing health, but was at all times in full possession of his mental faculties, and was of sound mind when he executed these other conveyances made the subject of this litigation. The answer claims that the consideration for the conveyance of December, 1920, was $75, which the defendant Ruth Wilburn paid to her father, and that her father at the time knew that he was selling the property to her at a cheap price. In this connection it is insisted in the answer that the strip of property *50 forty-five feet east and west by seventy feet north and south, being the east end of Lot No. 1 which had previously been given to her by the deceased only made her lot the full depth as the other lots adjoining and which had been given to the respective complainants, and that the first parcel described in that conveyance was really the property actually bought by her for the $75.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Schlickling v. Georgia Conference Ass'n Seventh-Day Adventists
355 S.W.2d 469 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1961)
Schlickling v. GEORGIA CONF. ASS'N SEVENTH-DAY ADV.
355 S.W.2d 469 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1961)
Tennessee Consol. Coal Co. v. Layne
176 S.W.2d 369 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1943)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
7 Tenn. App. 46, 1927 Tenn. App. LEXIS 7, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clark-v-wilburn-tennctapp-1927.