Fly v. Woods

13 Tenn. App. 310, 1931 Tenn. App. LEXIS 75
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMarch 13, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 13 Tenn. App. 310 (Fly v. Woods) 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
Fly v. Woods, 13 Tenn. App. 310, 1931 Tenn. App. LEXIS 75 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

OWEN, J.

The defendants have appealed from a decree, sustaining complainant’s bill. The bill in this cause was filed March 4, 1929.

*311 The complainant was a married woman. She was formerly Mamie King. She had been married to one King, but had procured a divorce. The defendants are Eugene Woods, Sr., and G. E. Patterson, Trustee, residents of Shelby County, and W. IT. Cocke, a resident of Fayette County.

During the pendency of the suit W. T. Haynie appeared and filed his answer. The bill sought to set aside and cancel as clouds on her title to certain real estate a trust deed given to secure four notes of $1,000 each, payable annually one, two, three and four years after date, respectively, and dated August 30, 1922, on the ground that they had been obtained by the fraudulent acts of the defendant, Eugene Woods, Sr., and his attorney, the late Percy Biggs of the Memphis Bar.

The deed of trust having been foreclosed and a trustee’s deed executed to W. H. Cocke as the purchaser at said foreclosure sale, he was made a party, and a cancellation of said trustee’s deed was also sought upon the same grounds.

Complainant averred that her name was formerly Mamie King, and that on August 26, 1922, she purchased the property involved for the sum of $4,000 in cash and exhibited her original deed as evidence thereof, and that, at the time of the transaction, Mr. W. Percy Biggs, an attorney, represented her, and that a gross fraud was practiced upon her by her said' attorney and defendant Eugene Woods, Sr., in that, notwithstanding the fact that the full purchase price of said property was paid in cash, as shown by said deed Exhibit “A” to the original bill, that her said attorney, Percy Biggs, and the defendant Woods procured from complainant, without her knowledge or consent, four notes of $1,000 each and the trust deed securing the same, and that subsequently there had been a foreclosure of said deed of trust.

The answer of the defendants was called for under oath, with the result that defendant Eugene Woods answered denying any knowledge of the execution of said notes or deed of trust or that he had any interest in the same, or any interest in the property.

Defendant W. H. Cocke answered disclaiming any interest in the property under the trustee’s deed, but asserting the fact that he purchased the property at a foreclosure sale for his friend, W. T. Haynie, the owner and holder of the aforesaid notes.

The said W. T. Haynie, who, at the beginning, was not made a defendant to the bill, entered his appearance and was, by consent of all the parties, made a defendant and treated as such, and filed an answer asserting that he had advanced to the complainant said sum of $4,000, the purchase price of said property; that she had *312 executed the notes in question and the trust deed on the property to secure the payment of the same; that he was and had been at all times the bona fide owner and holder of said notes and deed of trust; that the complainant had defaulted; that a proper foreclosure had been had; and that defendant W. IT. Cocke had purchased the property at a foreclosure sale for him, and was holding title for his benefit; and that the entire transaction, from beginning to end, was, as to him in good faith, legal and proper.

The complainant gave her deposition. She was recalled for a rebuttal deposition. The defendant W. T. Haynie testified. A number of exhibits were introduced and are found in the record in their regular form, consisting of the deed to complainant, the trust deed she executed. The day she received the deed four notes of $1,000 each, executed by complainant, payable to the order of “myself,” a check for $4,000, drawn August 29, 1922 by the Bank of Millington, on the Bank of Commerce of Memphis, and payable to the order of W. T. Haynie. The deed, trust deed and notes all bear date- of August 30, 1922.

The witness Mrs. J. H. Mabry knew nothing of the execution of the deed, trust deed and notes. She and the complainant had lived in the same apartment, and this witness testified that Eugene Woods, Sr., often came to see complainant, took her out riding, and that very shortly before complainant moved to the house involved in this controversy, on the corner of Jackson Avenue and Hawthorne Street, Woods made one of his visits to the complainant, and the complainant was so rejoiced that she had received the house and lot, that she met Woods crying, and he asked her, “what was the matter with her,” she said, “she was so full of joy,” and he said, “well if you are going to cry I will take it away from you, in a joking manner.”

The Chancellor, upon final hearing, granted the complainant the relief prayed for and found the following facts, which are set out in a memorandum in the Transcript, and are as follows:

“The complainant’s charges of fraud and conspiracy on the part of Percy Biggs, who was a lawyer in good standing at this bar, are not sustained by the proof; it was not necessary to complainant’s case to make any such charges against her attorney, and the charges should not have been made in'a suit in which his Administrator or heirs were not made parties, and in which no relief was sought against his estate, and this is especially true when there was no real effort to sustain the charge.
“The defendant Woods having disclaimed all interest in the notes, trust deed and property has no interest in the litigation and a decree may be entered as against him.
*313 “The claim of the defendant Haynie that he loaned to the complainant the $4,000 for the purchase of the property; and that he has at all times since the purchase been the owner and holder of the four notes of $1,000 each secured by the trust deed, is palpably false and unreasonable. The notes so far as he is concerned were without consideration; and he derived no interest in the property under the foreclosure sale.
“The defendant Cocke who disclaims any personal interest in the property or the notes derived no interest under the foreclosure sale, either for himself or his friend Haynie.
“A decree may therefore be entered in favor of the complainant, cancelling the notes, trust deed and trustee’s deed as clouds upon her title to the property described in the bill.
“Defendant Haynie will be taxed with the costs.”

The defendants have appealed and have assigned eight errors. These errors raise four propositions:

(1) The Chancellor erred in sustaining complainant’s bill and in cancelling the trust deed and notes, because the Chancellor has granted the relief prayed for against the weight and preponderance of the evidence.

(2) Because complainant came into Court with unclean hands and was permitted to recover compensation for her admittedly immoral conduct.

(3) The Chancellor having found that W. Percy Biggs was not guilty of any fraud, complainant’s bill should have been dismissed because relief sought was predicated solely and entirely upon the alleged fraudulent conduct of said W. P. Biggs.

(4) The fourth proposition is raised by the eighth assignment, which is as follows:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
13 Tenn. App. 310, 1931 Tenn. App. LEXIS 75, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fly-v-woods-tennctapp-1931.