Harris v. Whitworth, Administrator

194 S.W.2d 1017, 210 Ark. 198, 1946 Ark. LEXIS 332
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJune 3, 1946
Docket4-7913
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 194 S.W.2d 1017 (Harris v. Whitworth, Administrator) 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
Harris v. Whitworth, Administrator, 194 S.W.2d 1017, 210 Ark. 198, 1946 Ark. LEXIS 332 (Ark. 1946).

Opinion

McHaNey, Justice.

C. H. Harris, the father of appellant and appellees, other than the administrator, died intestate in the Chickasawba District of Mississippi county, Arkansas, on March.19,1945, at the age of 88 years.. Said intestate left -a substantial estate, both real and personal. His real estate consisted of two farms, one of 120 acres about a mile south of the city of Blytheville, known-as the Home Place, on which he was residing, at the time of * his death, with appellant; the other of about 202 acres some 6 or 8 miles northeast of Blytheville, known as the Crooked Lake Farm near Number Nine;1 and a number of pieces of rental property in said city. His personal property consisted of two bank: accounts totaling more than $32,000, TJ. S. Government bonds of the maturity value of $5,000, a lot of livestock — horses, mules, cattle, etc. — and farming machinery, equipment, feed, seed, etc.

On May 4, 1945, appellant filed a suit against appel-lee, Frank Whitworth, as administrator of his father’s estate, alleging that in the year 1921 he and his father entered into a partnership agreement to operate as partners the farm property then owned by his father, which is the same as mentioned above, and the city property as above mentioned, and were to share equally in the gains and losses, which continued to the death of his.father; that the personal property above described — bank deposits, bonds, livestock, etc., belonged to the partnership; that the administrator, appointed at the instance of his brother, Gordon Harris, and his sisters, Sue Burks and Mattie Bell Nation, wrongfully took possession of said bank deposits which was partnership property, and has made demand upon him to surrender and deliver up the possession of the other personal property; and that until said partnership affairs are wound up, the interest of the estate therein is contingent. He prayed that the administrator be enjoined from listing said property as assets of said estate, or from payiua enlato or inheritance taxes thereon, and that the administrator be required to turn over to appellant the money in his possession so that the affairs of said partnership might be wound up.

The administrator answered with a general denial and cross-complained for the possession of the other personal property held by appellant and the rental value of the use thereof.

Theréafter, on May 11, 1945, appellant filed suit against his brother and sisters in which he sought specific performance of an alleged oral contract with his father made in 1921 to convey to him the 120 tract of land called the Home Place. He alleged that at that time his father was heavily indebted on account of the long illness and death of his wife (appellant’s mother) and had been compelled to mortgage a portion of the Crooked Lake Farm to secure same and further alleged: “That by reason and on account of his advanced age and his inability to farm and manage his property he' induced this plaintiff to assume the management and control of said property and made a contract and agreement with the plaintiff in consideration that the plaintiff would take charge of and manage said property and take care of the said C. H. Harris as long as he should live and pay off the mortgage indebtedness against said property and that the C. H. Harris and this plaintiff would be equal partners in the management and operation of said property-and the said C. H. Harris, before his death, would deed the 120 acres above described to this plaintiff. ’ ’ Ap-pellees in this case answered with a general denial and a plea of the statute of frauds, and filed a counter-claim against appellant for their share of the rental value of the 120-acre tract for the year 1945, and prayed partition of all the real estate.

Both cases were submitted to the trial court on depositions and stipulations, and resulted in decrees which found the issues of both law and fact in each case against appellant, and held that he was not entitled to recover either on his alleged partnership agreement with his father, or on the alleged oral contract to convey the land. On the counterclaim of the administrator the court held that he was entitled to recover from appellant the war bonds above mentioned, the mules, teams, livestock, farming implements, seed and feed, and awarded the possession thereof to the administrator, with process to recover same. On the suit regarding the Home Place, the court found that appellant and appellees are the owners as tenants in common of all the real estate of their deceased father, each being entitled to one-fourth interest therein, describing it, and that appellees were entitled to have partition made of said lands. D.ecree was entered therefor and viewers were appointed for said purpose. No recovery was allowed against appellant for rents. This appeal followed.

Appellant was 51 years old at the time he testified in this case. His mother died in 1920 and his father never remarried. He testified in support of his complaints that he entered into the oral agreements set out therein with his father in 1921, that is, the partnership agreement and the agreement to deed him the home place when the mortgage and other indebtedness was paid off. Appellant, lived on the home place and farmed it at that time and for some years prior thereto. His father, brother and sisters lived on property owned by the father in Blythe-ville. The father owned all the real estate in 1921 that he owned when he died. From 1932 on the father lived with appellant and his wife- on the home place. In 1937, appellant divorced his wife on account of her misconduct, but appellant and his father continued to live together on the home place, until the father was taken to the hospital on February 28,1945, suffering from a heart attack from which he died on March 19. During his last illness the father was conscious at all times. For a period of at least 24 years, therefore, this alleged agreement between father and son was said by the son to be in existence, yet no memoranda thereof in writing ever existed, or, if so, not produced, and no other member of the family ever heard of them until these suits were filed. Between the 19th day of March, the date of the death of the father, and May 4th, the date of the suit against the administrator, appellant not only did not tell his brother and sisters that he had this contract with his father, but on the other hand had conferences with them about the division of the whole estate, in which he wanted, as a part of his share, not the whole of the home place, but only. 80 acres out of the 120 acres. The home place is on highway No. 61. The residence is on 80 acres east of the highway and 40 acres is west of the highway. Appellant wanted the division of property so made as to give him the 80-acre tract on the east and he wanted his brother Geo'rge to have the 40-acre tract west of said highway; He made no claim that he had any contract with his father regarding a partnership operation of all the properties, or that he owned by virtue of an agreement any part of the real estate of his father.

Another significant fact is that, for 24 years aftei said contract was said to have been made, all business, was conducted in the name of C. H. Harris, the father. All bank deposits were in his name. All checks on the bank accounts were signed by the father. Appellant had no authority to sign any checks for any partnership or any other purpose.

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Related

Harris v. Whitworth, Administrator
211 S.W.2d 101 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1948)

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Bluebook (online)
194 S.W.2d 1017, 210 Ark. 198, 1946 Ark. LEXIS 332, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harris-v-whitworth-administrator-ark-1946.