Fender v. Helterbrandt

142 S.W. 184, 101 Ark. 335, 1911 Ark. LEXIS 463
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedDecember 18, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 142 S.W. 184 (Fender v. Helterbrandt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fender v. Helterbrandt, 142 S.W. 184, 101 Ark. 335, 1911 Ark. LEXIS 463 (Ark. 1911).

Opinion

Hart, J.

On the 22d of February, 1910, John Rasdon instituted this suit in the chancery court against Joe Helterbrandt to cancel certain notes. John Rasdon died in May, 1910, and the suit was revived in the name of the administrator of his estate.

Joe Helterbrandt and John Rasdon were stepbrothers. John Rasdon was 29 years old when he died.

The deposition of Joe Helterbrandt was taken in August, 1910, and he testified that he was 51 years old. Joe Helterbrandt’s father died during the civil war, and in 1865 his mother married Wiley Rasdon, and they lived together until she died in 1867. Subsequently, Wiley Rasdon married again, and John Rasdon was the fruit of this marriage. After his mother’s death, Joe Helterbrandt was taken to the home of an uncle, and lived with him until he reached the age of maturity. Wiley Rasdon died intestate in Randolph County in 1908. After his death, Joe Helterbrandt made a claim against his estate for moneys which he alleged that Wiley Rasdon had received from his (Helterbrandt’s) mother. It was in settlement of this claim that the notes in controversy were executed. The notes are four in number, and bear date of February 2,1910. The first note is for $100 due November 1,1910; the second for $800 due November 15, 1911; the third for $400 due November 15, 1912, and the fourth for $400 due November 15, 1913. The complaint alleges that these notes are without consideration, and were procured by the false and fraudulent representations of Joe Helterbrandt to John Rasdon. The prayer of the complaint is for a cancellation of the notes.

The defendant, Helterbrandt, filed an answer, in which he denied all the material allegations of the complaint, and alleged that the notes were executed by John Rasdon as a compromise of Helterbrandt’s claim against the estate of Wiley Rasdon, the father of John Rasdon. The witness introduced by the plaintiff, who accompanied John Rasdon when the compromise between John Rasdon and Joe Helterbrandt was made and the notes were executed, was W. H. Arnold, and we quote his testimony as given in the abstract of the plaintiff, as follows: “Am 57 years old; knew John Rasdon in his lifetime; know Joe Helterbrandt; know H. L. Ponder and Willis Ponder. About the 1st or 2d of February, me and Rasdon went to Ponder’s office. Harry Ponder got around by Rasdon, and asked him if he saw Helterbrandt coming to town, and he said he saw him; we saw him and talked with him. Harry Ponder asked him if he said anything to him about this matter of the estate, ever talked anything to him about it; John Rasdon told him he hadn’t. They talked a right smart about it; Harry asked him how much money his father left him, and he told him about $1,200 that he got; he asked John Rasdon if it was not a fact that he told him and other parties that he had money buried, and Johnny said he had not told him about having money buried. Harry then asked him if it was not a fact that his father had told him that he had $1,200, and that he intended for Joe Helterbrandt to have it? Johnny said he never said anything to him about it, that he never heard him speak anything about Helterbrandt’s estate, or that he owed Helterbrandt. Harry asked Willis Ponder about what time it was before he died that he told these parties that he owed $1,200 to Joe Helterbrandt? Willis Ponder said about two months. Johnny says they must be mistaken, for we were right by him. Johnny asked where these parties were. I know I never heard of Johnny’s father owing a dollar to anybody that he didn’t pay, and I’ve known Johnny ever since I saw him running along behind his father’s plow picking up grub worms. As we went home, we drove up to' Helterbrandt’s barn lot, and Johnny asked Joe what he wanted to see him about. Joe'and Willis Ponder came out to the fence, and Johnny and those two talked a good little bit. Joe asked Johnny if he did not remember about his father using his mother’s estate, and Johnny said he didn’t.

“Ponder said he was a lawyer, made his living pleading the law, and that he would advise him, as everything was like it was, to come to some agreement without going into a lawsuit; that not many lawyers would advise a man that way, but he would rather do it than to get up a lawsuit.

“Johnny told Helterbrandt if he knew his father used his mother’s money he would be willing to pay it, and asked if he couldn’t do that next week; says when I have investigated and see it is justly due you I will give you the notes. Ponder told him that they must come to some agreement there, or they were going to enter suit. He then drew up the notes, and Johnny signed them. Joe Helterbrandt and John Rasdon are stepbrothers, and have always been on good terms so far as I know.

“Johnny was not the brightest man in the world. He was just a good easy turned fellow. He had been attending to his own affairs a little over a year. His father always looked after his business, even rented his place for him. He moved down into one room of his father’s house with his wife and child, and kept them there, never lived on his home place but about two months. His father said he would bring him back home and see after him.

Joe Helterbrandt told Johnny that he knew that his mother had some money and about $600 worth of personal property, but that he would take $1,200 in notes for it, and give him four years’ time to pay, and said: ‘Now, if you happen to have bad luck and don’t make a good crop and want to borrow any money, I’ll handle the loan for you; I’ll loan you the money to pay either of these notes off when they come due, but don’t give a mortgage on the land to anybody else. I’ll take a mortgage on the land, and let you have the money.’ This was after the notes were given.

“Was anything said by either of the attorneys for Helterbrandt about the result of a suit if it should be brought?

“Yes, sir; Willis Ponder said that Johnny had better make a good compromise than to have a bad lawsuit; that it would ruin him, might lose his home if he went into a lawsuit. Rasdon didn’t know anything about law, didn’t even know what an attorney at law was.

CROSS EXAMINATION BY MR. PONDER.

“I remember that Ponder said that he did not know the amount, and that they would have to go to Helterbrandt’s house and go over the matter. When we got out there, we saw Willis Ponder and Joe Helterbrandt, and Johnny called to Joe and asked him what he wanted. Joe and Willis Ponder came out to the wagon.

“ I think it was after Rasdon said that he could not come back to town the next Saturday that it was suggested that he meet Helterbrandt at his home. Willis Ponder and Joe Helterbrandt did the talking there. Willis Ponder said they had to come to some agreement. Johnny said: ‘Give me until next week to see about the thing, and if it is justly due you I’ll give my notes with security next week.’ And Willis said he had to do something right now or he would have to bring suit. Joe said he had waited long enough, had to see about the estate and get it.

“ Rasdon asked Joe who the witnesses were who had heard his father say that he owed him $1,200, and Joe did not tell him. Joe did not tell Rasdon that Wiley Rasdon had stated. to Helterbrandt himself that he owed it. Rasdon had some sense, enough to get along with, but he had never been around much, didn’t know anything about law.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
142 S.W. 184, 101 Ark. 335, 1911 Ark. LEXIS 463, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fender-v-helterbrandt-ark-1911.