Hogue v. Hogue

448 S.W.2d 627, 247 Ark. 914, 1969 Ark. LEXIS 1201
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedDecember 22, 1969
Docket5-5019
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 448 S.W.2d 627 (Hogue v. Hogue) 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
Hogue v. Hogue, 448 S.W.2d 627, 247 Ark. 914, 1969 Ark. LEXIS 1201 (Ark. 1969).

Opinion

Frank Holt, Justice.

This litigation results primarily from a disagreement as to the amount of the purchase price and the payments made upon certain lands. The appellee, mother of appellant Wm. F. Hogue, brought an action against him and his wife alleging a constructive trust and seeking reconveyance of 144 acres or, in the alternative, to recover $14,400 as the fair value of the lands which she had previously conveyed to the appellants; $500 annual rent for a period of ten years less $2,000 credit [appellee later abandoned her claim for rent;] $922.21 for her investment in a tractor; and an accounting from the appellants with respect to her cattle which she later testified to be of the value of approximately $1,800. The issues were joined by the appellants’ answer denying appellee’s allegations and specifically pleading the defenses of the statutes of frauds and limitations and asserting that the appellants had owned the lands in question since 1957. At the conclusion of the trial the chancellor approved the motions of both parties that the pleadings be amended to conform to the proof as is permitted by Ark. Stat. Ann. § 27-1160 (Eepl. 1962).

The chancellor decreed that the property was subject to a constructive trust in favor of the appellee in the sum of $8,626.92; that the appellee had the right to use and occupy the dwelling on the property for her lifetime jointly with the appellants and that if the joint use and occupancy of the dwelling should become unbearable to the appellee and appellants, then the right of the appellants must yield to the right of the appellee; that the appellee should have the right to keep her livestock on the property; that because of offsetting equities between the parties the appellee should not recover anything for the .alleged sale of her cattle or her equity in a tractor; that the parties had numerous transactions between themselves by deeds, mortgages and other business ventures, mostly for the benefit of the appellants; that all the deeds .and other transactions between the parties were inferior, ineffective, and if effective, merged into the deed dated June 6, 1966, wherein appellee conveyed the lands therein described [144 acres] to the appellants; that the consideration for said conveyance was for the amount the appellee had in her property which is the sum of $8,626.92 and this consideration is unpaid. From that decree comes this appeal.

For reversal appellants contend that the finding of the court that a constructive trust existed is not supported by the required “extraordinary burden of proof” and that no constructive trust existed without fraud at the inception. Upon a review de novo we are of the opinion that the better view is that a vendor’s lien for the unpaid purchase price, instead of a constructive trust, existed in favor of the appellee.

The appellee is 69 years of age and without any formal education. Her son, the appellant, is 44 years of age with a college education. She has four other adult children. The appellee and her husband acquired 160 acres of land in 1939. When she and her husband divorced in 1944, she acquired title to this property. At about this same time she purchased an adjoining 40 acres in the name of her son, the appellant, from an allotment made to her by him while he was in the military service. In 1957, at a time when appellants were elsewhere teaching school or in the poultry business, appellee deeded 120 acres of her property to appellants in fee simple. She retained 40 acres, which was in the soil bank, “as security.” In 1958 the 120 acres were reconveyed to appellee for the purpose of securing a $5,000 FHA loan in appellee’s name. This money was used to construct a new house on the property. In 1963 the appellee deeded to appellants her entire 160 acres. In the meantime appellants had conveyed to appellee, without her knowledge and for their own purposes, their original 40 acres. Appellee also conveyed this acreage along with the 160 acres. The appellants, who had possession of their 1963 deed, did not record it. In 1966 the appellee made another warranty deed (a correction deed she claims) to the appellants to the same property excluding, however, a 12-acre tract which appellee, unknown to the appellants, had deeded to one of her other children. Upon receipt of the 1966 deed the appellants recorded it. Shortly thereafter they recorded the 1963 deed which included the 12-acre tract. All of the deeds were warranty deeds reciting a nominal cash consideration and no encumbrances. In March 1968 the appellee filed her complaint alleging, among other things previously indicated, an unpaid purchase price of $14,400.

It appears undisputed that the appellee agreed to convey certain lands to the appellants. According to her evidence she agreed that the consideration would be for what “I’ve got in it” providing she would have a home there for as long as she lived. She testified that the appellants agreed to pay her $6,333 which, according to her computations, represented what she had in the property before the new house was built. In 1958, when the property was reconveyed to her, she borrowed $5,000 in her name for the construction of a new home according to her own plans and specifications. When the house was constructed the appellants were “supposed to pay” to her “what she paid into the house.” Further, it was the understanding that appellants were to pay her in full before they recorded their deed and that they breached their agreement by recording the deeds in 1966 before paying her the agreed purchase price. She testified and offered some receipts from the FHA that she had made payments in her name on the FHA loan to the extent of $2,293.92. She claims her 1966 deed to appellants was a correction deed for the purpose of excluding 12 acres that were included by mistake in the 1963 deed. It was understood by appellants, according to appellee’s evidence, that this 12 acres plus 4 acres, or a total of 16 acres, were to be deeded by appellee to another one of her children.

Appellee testified that appellants never “paid another penny” after they made a $500 down payment by check in April 1957. She contends they are due no credit for this $500 down payment because it was used by her, with appellants’ consent, to apply on an FHA mortgage on a tractor which appellants later acquired. She also admits that later she received $1,500 cash from the appellants. However, she testified this was used for expenses in the operation of the farm for appellants’ benefit. She testified that she first learned in 1966 that appellants were not going to perform their agreement when “he told me that I had to move several times * * * he would just say you know you cannot stay here and you know you can’t.” They further breached their agreement by refusing to “settle” with her and by filing her deeds before full payment of the agreed purchase price.

The appellants’ version is that the sale price agreed upon was $2,500 for the 160 acres. It is undisputed that they made a $500 down payment preceding appellee’s deeding to them the 120 acres in 1957. Forty acres were not conveyed to them with the understanding that it would stay in appellee’s name “as security” and that the soil bank payments derived therefrom would be applied to the purchase price “until she was satisfied she had received full payment.” Appellants testified that in 1963 the appellee deeded the entire farm to them because she was satisfied they had paid all they owed her and that she never mentioned the figure of $6,333. Further, that they never agreed appellee could have a home with them for the rest of her life.

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Related

Back v. Union Life Insurance
634 S.W.2d 150 (Court of Appeals of Arkansas, 1982)
Hogue v. Hogue
464 S.W.2d 67 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1971)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
448 S.W.2d 627, 247 Ark. 914, 1969 Ark. LEXIS 1201, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hogue-v-hogue-ark-1969.