Harkins v. Wells

13 Tenn. App. 299, 1931 Tenn. App. LEXIS 73
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMarch 13, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 13 Tenn. App. 299 (Harkins v. Wells) 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
Harkins v. Wells, 13 Tenn. App. 299, 1931 Tenn. App. LEXIS 73 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

OWEN, J.

L. B. Wells has appealed from a decree rendered in the Chancery Court of McNairy County on the 10th of September, 1930, in which the complainant was given a judgment for $2008.80. A lien was declared on a certain lot of land, it being decreed that the $2008.80 was owing for purchase money on this house and lot described in the pleadings and in the decree, and that the land be sold to pay. said purchase money.

The judgment for $2008.80 was made up of $1800 principal and $208.80 interest. The complainant also sought in her bill to recover a certain list of notes and accounts that she alleged she had turned over to the defendant as agent for collection.

A reference was ordered, and the Clerk and Master was directed to report from any proof now on file, as well as any proof offered by the parties to ascertain and report:

(1) Which ones of said notes and accounts have been collécted by the defendant in full, and the amount of same with any interest thereon;

(2) Which ones of said notes and accounts have been collected in part, and how much on each such item;

(3) Which ones of said notes have not been collected, nor anything collected on them, and the amounts of all such items.

After the decree was rendered, the Chancellor appointed the Clerk and Master receiver to take charge of the house and lot the complainant had sold to the defendant for a consideration of $1800, and which amount with interest she recovered in the Court below, it appearing to the Court that the defendant was insolvent and shortly *301 after the Court pronounced its decision, the defendant cancelled the insurance on said house.

The defendant prayed and was granted an appeal by taking the oath for poor persons and has assigned numerous errors in this Court.

The complainant is a widow; she lived in the village of Stanton-ville, in McNairy County. The defendant was a near neighbor. Shortly before the dealings between the complainant and the defendant, out of which this law suit arose, complainant’s husband was killed. He had conducted a store at Stantonville, known as the J. P. Harkins & Company. It appears that this Company was incorporated, but complainant’s husband owned all of the stock. He had become somewhat involved in debt. He owed a bank at Corinth, Mississippi, more than $4000. The complainant had signed her husband’s note and he had given certain seeuritjr, a trust on the house and lot involved in this law suit and had placed with said Bank a number of notes as collateral to secure a note signed by himself and his wife, the complainant. At the maturity to the Bank at Corinth, Mississippi, the trust deed on the house and lot in controversy was foreclosed and the complainant purchased the same. It appears that her husband had left his wife some life insurance and from the proceedings of this life insurance she was able to purchase the house and lot and pay the balance due the Bank, and the Bank turned over to her the collateral in the form of various notes.

The complainant, a few months after the death of her husband, decided to move to Nashville, Tennessee. She alleges that the defendant agreed to buy her house and lot, stating that he thought he could sell it for $2000 in a few months and that he would pay her $1800; and that the complainant was a woman not skilled in business affairs. It appears that shortly before the death of complainant’s husband, his store had burned and the business was lost; that the defendant had stated to complainant that if she would execute a deed for the house and lot for $1800 he would pay her in the fall $1000, and that the deed should not be recorded until the $1000 was paid, and thereupon he would execute a note for $800 and a mortgage on the house and lot to secure the $800 note. The deed was executed in compliance with this agreement the latter part of June. Complainant states during the fall she spoke to the defendant about his signing the mortgage and the $800 note, that she was then ready to remove to Nashville, and that he refused to sign the note or execute the mortgage. These transactions took place during the year 1928. The house and lot had been foreclosed on April 2, 1928, and complainant filed her deed from the bank June 28, 1928. The bill in the instant case was filed January 1, 1929. It appears that the defendant filed the deed from complainant to him June 2, 1928. Complainant alleges that she turned over to the defendant for collection a number of notes and accounts set out in the bill of various *302 parties to whom her husband had furnished merchandise, or these parties! were indebted to complainant’s husband, and they were the notes and accounts she had received from the Bank of Corinth, Mississippi, when she paid the $4000 note executed by her husband and on which note she was surety; that the defendant had solicited-these notes from complainant, agreeing to collect the same for a certain per centage — 10% on some of them and on one or two doubtful ones she had agreed to give larger per centages; that the defendant had insisted that as complainant was moving to Nashville she would not be able to see the various makers of these notes in controversy and that he would collect them and account for the collections less his commissions. She sought a judgment for the $1800 purchase money, which she alleged had not been paid. She also sought an accounting for the notes, or to have the same returned to her if they had not been paid to the defendant. She insisted that the defendant had procured the deed by fraud; that she had confided in him and trusted him and she sought to have a lien declared or the property sold for $1800; she also alleges that the defendant was insolvent. She prayed in the alternative that if a lien could not be declared on the house and lot for $1800 and the same be subjected to her lien then that the deed be declared void for fraud and cancelled and title be decreed to complainant and that defendant be enjoined from collecting any further on said notes.

The defendant filed a demurrer to this bill, which demurrer was overruled; thereupon he filed an answer denying the material allegations of the bill and in his answer he alleged that he held two notes against the complainant and her husband at the time of the execution of said deed and the delivery' of said notes to him; that the notes were for $2000 and $1200; that no sum had been pad on either one of these notes and that he and the complainant had a settlement whereby she deeded him the house and lot in controversy, which deed recites on its face, “for and in consideration of $1800 in hand paid,” and that the defendant accepted the notes in controversy and $500 worth of coffins that complainant’s husband had owned and that the coffins, the house and lot and the notes amounting to a little more than $1000 settled the defendant’s two notes and that he turned the two notes for $2000 and $1200 over to the complainant, marking them “paid.”

On the issues a large volume of proof was taken, there, being seventeen depositions in the record and a number of exhibits. At the hearing, the defendant moved to amend his answer so as to plead estoppel; that is, that the complainant was estopped from denying her solemn deed wherein she had acknowledged that she had received $1800 in hand paid. This was allowed.

*303 The defendant has assigned eighteen errors.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
13 Tenn. App. 299, 1931 Tenn. App. LEXIS 73, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harkins-v-wells-tennctapp-1931.