Forbus v. Gibbs

224 S.W.2d 790, 216 Ark. 138, 1949 Ark. LEXIS 887
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 21, 1949
Docket4-9000
StatusPublished

This text of 224 S.W.2d 790 (Forbus v. Gibbs) 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
Forbus v. Gibbs, 224 S.W.2d 790, 216 Ark. 138, 1949 Ark. LEXIS 887 (Ark. 1949).

Opinion

Minor W. Millwee, Justice.

Appellant, Charles H. Forbus, is a veteran of the First World War and resided with his wife, Clara Belle, in the City of Little Rock, Arkansas, in .1926. On December 17, 1926, appellant was adjudged incompetent by the Pulaski Probate Court and Mrs. Forbus was appointed guardian of his person and estate, which consisted of compensation paid by the Veterans Administration in amounts varying from $50.63 to $73.12 monthly.

In 1932, appellant and his wife moved to Pine Bluff, Arkansas, and the guardianship was transferred to the Jefferson Probate Court. On February 1,1932, the property involved in this suit was purchased from R. C. Cutrell, brother of Clara Belle Forbus. The property is described as, “Lots 5 and 6, Block 16 of Cockrill’s Addition, South of the Railroad, to the City of Pine Bluff, Arkansas.” The deed was executed to Clara Belle Forbus as guardian of appellant and recites a consideration of $2,000 payable in 100 promissory notes in the sum of $20 eacli. The notes were signed by the guardian and the sale was approved by the Jefferson Probate Court on June 28, 1932.

Abe Barre held a lien on the property in the sum of $1,000 and the first 50 notes were payable to the order of R. C. Cutrell at the Simmons National Bank in Pine Bluff, Arkansas, to discharge this lien. The second series of 50 notes was dated January 1, 1937, and payable to the order of R. C. Cutrell at the National Bank of Commerce in Pine Bluff. A vendor’s lien was retained in the deed to secure the purchase money notes, taxes and insurance. Clara Belle Forbus filed annual accountings showing receipts and disbursements of guardianship funds prior to her death intestate on May 18, 1945.

Appellee, Thelma Gibbs, is the daughter and sole heir of Clara Belle Forbus and stepdaughter of appellant. On August 22, 1945, the Pulaski Probate Court ordered the sanity of appellant restored pursuant to a petition filed by him in his own right and by appellee as his next friend. Appellee, as personal representative of her mother, also filed a final report and accounting in the guardianship proceedings in the Jefferson Probate Court on September 7, 1945. The report was duly confirmed and the guardian’s bondsmen discharged.

The last of the notes given in payment of the purchase price of the property was paid in July, 1941. However, the lots forfeited for nonpayment of assessments due Paving District No. 77 of Pine Bluff and two separate deeds were executed by the district to Clara Belle Forbus, individually. The first deed was executed on October 10, 1940, and recites payment by the grantee of $76.50 in delinquent taxes on lot 6. The second deed was executed September 18, 1944, in payment of delinquent taxes on lot 5 in the sum of $257.95.

Appellant instituted this suit against appellee on December 9, 1947, alleging that funds of his estate were used in payment of the consideration recited in the deeds .from the paving district; that said deeds should be construed as redemption deeds and reformed so as to show that the redemptions were in fact made by Clara Belle Forbus, as guardian, rather than individually.

In her answer appellee alleged that Clara Belle Forbus, during her lifetime, paid the greater portion of the purchase price from her own funds derived from the operation of said property as a boarding and rooming house ; that Clara Belle Forbus also used her own funds in redeeming the property from the paving district; that the property should be impressed with a lien for repayment of the amounts paid for said deeds from the paving-district and that appellee’s proper interest in the property by reason of her mother’s payments on the purchase price should be confirmed.

Appellant filed a pleading- containing- a general denial of the allegations of the answer and further alleged that appellee’s action was barred by the three-year statute of limitations. A demurrer and a motion to require appellee to make her answer more definite and certain were apparently never acted upon by the chancellor.

After a trial the court, among other things, found: “That Clara Belle Forbus operated a rooming- and boarding house and operated a laundry, and that funds belonging to her in the sum of $859.45 were used to pay taxes, installments on the purchase price, and for improvements made to said property, and that the plaintiff should pay to the defendant, as administratrix, the sum of $859.45, and upon said payment being- made to the defendant, all right, title, claim, interest and equity of the said Thelma Gibbs, individually and as administratrix, in and to the above described property, should be divested out of her and vested absolutely in the plaintiff, Charles H. Forbus, and title quieted and confirmed in him.” Judgment was accordingly rendered in favor of appellee as administratrix in said sum of $859.45 and the property ordered sold in satisfaction thereof. Both parties have appealed.

On the direct appeal appellant earnestly contends that the court erred in finding- that appellee was -entitled to judgment in any sum, while appellee contends that she is entitled to a definite undivided interest in the property-on account of the payment of purchase money. Appellee concedes that the testimony as to contributions in the form of improvements and purchase money is too uncertain and fragmentary to establish the payment of a definite amount by mother, but insists that the case should be remanded to the chancery court to determine such amount and appellee’s interest in the property fixed accordingly.

The evidence discloses that appellant was employed at various jobs from time to time during the pendency of the guardianship and that Clara Belle Fprbus also contributed to the running of the household at times by keeping boarders and roomers on the property which was purchased as a home for both. The only receipts reported by Clara Belle Forbus, as guardian, were the monthly payments to appellant by the Government, but the guardian’s accountings reflect that at least three-fourths of the purchase price of the property and a large portion of the taxes and insurance were paid out of the guardianship funds. The considerations for the tax deeds from the paving district to Clara Belle Forbus, individually, were not paid out of guardianship funds. While the evidence is conflicting as to whether appellant or his wife and appellee made these payments, we think the preponderance of the evidence supports the conclusion that they were made by Mrs. Forbus and appellee out of their separate funds.

It is observed that the trial court rendered judgment for appellee in the sum of $859.45 for taxes, purchase money and improvements without designating the amount allowed for each. The evidence is insufficient to show payments by Clara Belle Forbus individually of any definite amounts on the-purchase price or for improvements to the property. In fact, appellee made no claim for improvements in her answer and the trial- court sustained objections to some of the proof on this issue. It is true that appellee testified that her mother paid $600 on the purchase price of the property before arrangements were made to use appellant’s compensation from the Veterans Administration.

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Bluebook (online)
224 S.W.2d 790, 216 Ark. 138, 1949 Ark. LEXIS 887, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/forbus-v-gibbs-ark-1949.