Grigsby v. Bedwell

206 S.W. 739, 136 Ark. 427, 1918 Ark. LEXIS 349
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 4, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 206 S.W. 739 (Grigsby v. Bedwell) 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
Grigsby v. Bedwell, 206 S.W. 739, 136 Ark. 427, 1918 Ark. LEXIS 349 (Ark. 1918).

Opinion

Smith, J.

This suit was brought by appellee to cancel a deed executed by ber to ber brother, tbe appellant, on tbe ground that its execution bad been procured by fraud. Appellee admits that sbe voluntarily executed tbe deed for tbe sum of $320, tbe consideration recited in tbe deed, but sbe alleged that it was ber contract and intention to convey only an undivided one-fourth interest in tbe northeast quarter of tbe northeast quarter, of section 22, township 15 north, range 1 west, this being tbe land in which sbe inherited an interest from ber mother. But, in addition to that interest, tbe deed also described and conveyed an undivided one-third interest in four other tracts of land, containing 230 acres, and which interest sbe alleged was worth at the time tbe sum of $1,000. In support of the allegations of ber complaint, appellee testified that, on February 3,1914, the date of tbe deed, sbe was barely eighteen years old, and wholly unfamiliar with land descriptions and relied upon the representations of appellant, her brother, that the deed conveyed only the land which she had contracted to sell.

Appellant and appellee were the children of J. H. Grigsby, who had married five times, his first wife leaving one child, the appellant. The second wife left four children, of whom appellee was one. The third wife to whom J. H. Grigsby was twice married left three children, and his fourth wife, who survived him, had one child. Appellee’s mother owned the forty-acre tract described above in her own right, and also owned an undivided interest in certain other lands known as the Childers land, which consisted of an eighty-acre and a forty-acre tract.

Upon the death of his second wife, J. H. Grigsby “was appointed guardian of the minor children of this wife, and he sold the interest of these minors in this Childers land. In 1910, J. H. Grigsby purchased through J. N. Childers 240 acres of land in sections 11 and 14, and took a deed to himself for the 120 acres in section 11, and caused a deed to be made to his wards for the 120 acres in section 14.

Appellee arrived at the age of eighteen on November 24,1913, and married Leo Bedwell in December following, which marriage was so much against her father’s wish that he never spoke to her again until a short time before his death. In 1901, J. H. Grigsby, while living with his second wife, divided his lands among his children then in esse, these deeds containing a clause providing for a right of survivorship among the grantees, and reserving to the grantor the use of the lands for his natural life. The complaint contained a prayer for the cancellation of the deed from appellee to appellant for fraud, and, having made the other heirs parties to the cross bill, there was a prayer that a constructive trust be declared in appellee ’s favor in the lands bought by her father and guardian with her money, and for partition of the lands. The court made an order cancelling the deed upon the refund of the $320, with interest, but refused to make any order in regard to the lands purchased by J. H. Grigsby from Childers. The court also decreed that the lands deeded to the older children were an advancement, and decreed title to the children to certain lands owned by J. H. Grigsby at the time of his death, and an appeal has been prosecuted by appellant to reverse the action of the court in cancelling the deed to him, and a cross appeal has been prosecuted by appellee to review the action of the court below in refusing to declare a trust in accordance with her prayer in the cross complaint.

In support of the cross appeal, it is contended that J. H. Grigsby was the trustee of a resulting trust, because of his purchase of lands with the funds of his ward, the title to which he took in his own name. But, without any further statement of the facts in regard to this issue, it suffices to say that J. H. Grigsby made a final settlement of his guardianship, which was made under the provisions of section 3822, Kirby’s Digest, which was approved by the court, and after appellee had attained her majority and had married, she and her husband executed a receipt to the guardian acknowledging full settlement of all money and other property due her.

The real question in the ease is whether the deed should be cancelled because of the mistake of one party accompanied by the fraud of the other. The law of that subject was fully discussed in the recent case of Welch v. Welch, 132 Ark. 227, and need not be restated, but, applying the test of that case to the facts of this, we have concluded that the testimony is not sufficiently clear, unequivocal and undisputed, to warrant the cancellation of the deed.

Counsel for appellee in their brief invoke the doctrine of the cases of Million v. Taylor, 38 Ark. 428; Reeder v. Meredith, 78 Ark. 111, and Giers v. Hudson, 102 Ark. 232, to support the action of the court below in cancelling the deed. These cases do not announce the doctrine, however, that transactions between a brother and a sister, or other persons occupying relations of trust and confidence, will be invalid because of that relationship, but the doctrine is that, because of this relationship, the transactions will be more closely scrutinized. But the purpose of this scrutiny is to ascertain the facts and the real intention, and not to defeat the transactions of the parties, when the transactions are free from fraud and imposition induced by reason of the relation of the parties.

Counsel for appellee argue that J. H. Grigsby instigated his son, the appellant, to procure the deed from the sister, the appellee, and conspired with him to obtain from his sister a deed to an interest in lands worth from $1,000 to $1,800 for a consideration of $320, because of the objectionable marriage. But there is scarcely any substantial evidence to support this theory, and the case presents no question of confidence abused in the relation of a father to his daughter, for their estrangement was complete.

Any wrong done, or confidence betrayed, must be charged to the brother and not to the father, and we think the testimony fails to show that the execution of the deed was procured by fraud. The testimony is conflicting as to the value of the land conveyed, although it is certain that it is worth several times the sum named in the deed. But it must be remembered that the conveyance was made in the lifetime of J. H. Grigsby, and most of the land conveyed was subject either to his right of curtesy or to the life estate reserved in his deeds, and there was testimony that appellee stated prior to and at the time of the execution of the deed that she would rather have $320 in money than to wait until the death of her father and then get the land, and there was testimony that she had offered to sell the interest conveyed by the deed to another party for the sum of $320, as her husband needed that sum of money in connection with a business venture upon which he was about to engage. This testimony was denied by appellee, however.

Appellee testified that she did not know when she signed the deed just what her interest was, but she admits that she knew she had some interest in lands in addition to the forty-acre tract which she says she intended to convey, and it is not contended that appellant made any misrepresentations in regard to the interest which appellee in fact owned.

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Bluebook (online)
206 S.W. 739, 136 Ark. 427, 1918 Ark. LEXIS 349, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grigsby-v-bedwell-ark-1918.