Hendrix v. Thomas

362 S.W.2d 22, 235 Ark. 791, 1962 Ark. LEXIS 666
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 26, 1962
Docket5-2787
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 362 S.W.2d 22 (Hendrix v. Thomas) 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
Hendrix v. Thomas, 362 S.W.2d 22, 235 Ark. 791, 1962 Ark. LEXIS 666 (Ark. 1962).

Opinion

Neill Bohlinger, Associate Justice.

This case was brought in the Chancery Court of Hot Spring County by Charlie Y. Hendrix, an incompetent, by his brothers and sisters as his next friend against Robert Thomas and Dovie J. Thomas and sought the cancellation of two deeds which the appellant, Charlie Y. Hendrix, and his wife had executed conveying their home in Malvern, Arkansas to the appellees.

It was alleged that Charlie Y. Hendrix was mentally incompetent to transact his business affairs and that Eliza J. Hendrix, the wife of Charlie Y. Hendrix, was physically and mentally depressed and that while she was in the home of the appellees and in that state of health she was fraudulently induced to transfer the property in Malvern to the appellees; that the transfer of the title to their property was void by reason of the mental incompetency of the grantor; that the deeds were procured by duress and the exercise of undue influence by the appellees; that the deeds were given without consideration or upon a grossly inadequate consideration; and, that there was such a failure of the consideration that the transaction resulted in a fraud upon Charlie Y. Hendrix.

While the case was pending, the First National Bank in Little Rock, having been appointed guardian of the estate of the incompetent, was substituted as plaintiff.

The case was duly tried and on October 3, 1961, the chancellor entered a decree dismissing with prejudice the complaint in this cause and from that action comes this appeal.

The record reflects that on the 13th day of May, 1959, the title to the property here involved was transferred by the appellant, Charlie Y. Hendrix, to Eliza J. Hendrix, his wife, and she in turn,delivered a warranty deed to the same property to the appellees herein, the deed reciting $1.00 and other considerations and she retained in snch deed a life estate in herself.

Much testimony was taken before the chancellor and it appears that Charlie Y. Hendrix, if not incompetent, was suffering from a speech impairment and that his wife had cared for him for a long period of time in realization of his lack of capacity to care for himself and his physical needs. It further appears that Eliza J. Hendrix was, at the time of the execution of the deeds on May 13, 1959, suffering from a malignancy from which she died the following September. After the death of Eliza J. Hendrix, the appellees took the incompetent appellant to their home and three days after the burial of Eliza J. Hendrix, on September 21st, the appellees transported the appellant, Charlie Y. Hendrix, to the federal mental hospital at Ft. Boots where he remained until he was released to his sister, Mrs. Madie Pippin, in December of 1959. He has remained in her home near Jacksonville, Arkansas, ever since.

The evidence is, for the most part, convincing that Charlie Y. Hendrix was an incompetent and the Probate Court of Pulaski County so found but there is an absence of testimony as to whether or not Charlie Y. Hendrix, at the time of the execution of the deeds on May 13,1959, was aware of the extent and value of his one piece of property and to whom he was transferring it or for what consideration, but the following facts are clear: Eliza J. Hendrix was dying of a cancer; the appellee, Mrs. Dovie J. Thomas, was her sister and appellees seem to have made a number of trips to the home of Charlie V. Hendrix and Eliza J. Hendrix in Malvern; they carried Mrs. Hendrix to a hospital and to doctors and for a while moved Mr. and Mrs. Hendrix to the Thomas home in Little Bock. We are now confronted with the question as to whether or not if Charlie Y. Hendrix, as the chancellor found, was capable of transferring and disposing of his entire estate, were the circumstances such as to preponderate in favor of a finding of fraud in the procurement of the two deeds by which Hendrix divested himself of his home. One deed was made to his wife and at the same time the wife executed her deed to that home to the appellees.

The consideration recited in the deeds is $1.00 and other valuable considerations. In searching for the fraud that is alleged we look to the circumstances by which appellant’s home was transferred to the appellees. Viewing the testimony, as to the consideration, in the light of the circumstances that confronted Hendrix and his wife we find it difficult to believe that the deeds were given, as the appellee, Mrs. Thomas, stated, “they gave me that for helping them in their illness.” There was nothing rendered to the appellants by the appellees in the period that preceded the death of Mrs. Hendrix in September that would not have been prompted by a warm personal friendship in addition to services which would be engendered by the tie of blood and we conclude that the next statement of the appellee, “yes, she asked me if I would take care of him [Hendrix] and I said I would see that he was cared for,” was the basic reason for the conveyance.

There are two other witnesses as to the promises which prompted the giving of the deeds. The appellee, Dovie J. Thomas, testified: “I said I promised my sister that I would care for him,” and the witness, Mrs. Spears, who heard the conversation when the deeds were explained by the attorney who drew them, was definite in her statement: “The place was to be deeded to Mr. and Mrs. Thomas to see after Mr. Hendrix. ’ ’ Mrs. Pippin, the sister of the incompetent appellant and who is the duly appointed guardian of his person, testified in regard to a conversation with Dovie J. Thomas: “She said she promised Liza that she would take care of Charlie but she didn’t promise that she would take care of him at her house.” However, it is immaterial as to which line of testimony we take. Whether the out-and-out statements of Mrs. Thomas and Mrs. Spears that the appellees would care for the incompetent, or the more guarded statement of the appellee, Robert B. Thomas, that he would see he was taken care of is true, the result is the same for the appellees have failed to do either of these two things.

Eliza J. Hendrix was buried on September 21, 1959, and her husband, the incompetent appellant, was taken by the appellees to their home in Little Rock and on September 24th, or three days after they started caring for the appellant, they delivered him to the mental hospital. When the appellees placed the incompetent in the mental hospital they were doing nothing for him that he conld not have done for himself. He had earned the right to the care which the government hospital afforded by reason of his service in the army. He could have committed himself, for the appellees testified that the incompetent had his admission card on him when they delivered him there, or he might have been committed by any veteran’s agency or by a court and the only thing that the appellees furnished toward his care was the automobile ride from their home in Little Rock to the mental institution at Ft. Roots.

There seems to have been but one person, after the death of the appellant’s wife, who has displayed any degree of interest or care for his welfare and that is his sister, Mrs. Pippin. She made efforts to have him released from the mental institution and finally, in December, the hospital authorities deemed it prudent and released the incompetent to her.

The only logical conclusion that can be taken from the testimony in regard to the deeds is that the sole asset that the incompetent had to shield him from charity was his home which was given away.

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Related

Davis ex rel. Hutchinson v. Mullis
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414 S.W.2d 624 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1967)

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Bluebook (online)
362 S.W.2d 22, 235 Ark. 791, 1962 Ark. LEXIS 666, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hendrix-v-thomas-ark-1962.