Hopkins v. Hopkins

983 So. 2d 382, 2007 WL 1874298
CourtCourt of Civil Appeals of Alabama
DecidedJune 29, 2007
Docket2050385
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 983 So. 2d 382 (Hopkins v. Hopkins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Civil Appeals of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hopkins v. Hopkins, 983 So. 2d 382, 2007 WL 1874298 (Ala. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

On Application for Rehearing

The opinion of March 9, 2007, is withdrawn, and the following is substituted therefor.

Gregory Allen Hopkins, Sr. ("the son"), filed a complaint in the Baldwin Circuit Court seeking to set aside a deed and to impose a constructive trust upon property he had conveyed to his father, Troy Edsel Hopkins, Sr., and his mother, Augusta P. Hopkins (sometimes collectively referred to as "the parents"), in January 1986. Thereafter, the parents filed in the Baldwin District Court an unlawful-detainer action seeking to evict the son from the premises. The district court action was eventually consolidated with the circuit court action.

Following lengthy hearings held on August 18, 2004, November 29, 2004, and March 21, 2005, the circuit court denied the relief requested by the son and entered a judgment on August 4, 2005, in favor of the parents on the son's complaint. On October 27, 2005, the parents moved to dismiss their unlawful-detainer action; the circuit court granted that motion on November 21, 2005.

The son timely appealed to the Alabama Supreme Court on December 30, 2005. The supreme court transferred the appeal to this court pursuant to § 12-2-7(6), Ala. Code 1975. On appeal, the son lists four issues; all four issues, however, are variations of his argument that the circuit court erred by finding that he had "failed to prove a confidential relationship between the parties."

The parents have been in the business of operating gasoline and automotive-service stations in Mobile County, Baldwin County, and Escambia County for more than 35 years. The son is the third of the parents' five children, all of whom have worked in the family businesses at one time or another. In the mid-1970s, when the son wanted to buy a house in Mobile, the parents loaned him $8,000 to pay the seller's equity, *Page 384 placed title in the name of the father, a veteran, and assumed the seller's Veteran's Administration mortgage. The son testified that the parents also "set [him] up in his own business," explaining that they had allowed him and his wife to operate a service station in Mobile that his parents were leasing from Gulf Oil Company. The father testified that, during the 18 to 20 months that the son operated the station, he paid the son's gasoline supplier for 10 or 12 of those months. The mother testified:

"[The son and his wife] did manage the station. It was in [the father's] name, all the records were in [the father's] name. [The father] paid the sales tax. [The son and his wife] had a bank account, and they couldn't make ends meet, so we supplied inventory, helped them with gas, sent our employees to help them, and did the books for them when they didn't finish them. And this went on for a while. And [the son] had an opportunity to sell the inventory and equipment, was not making a profit, and approached his father with a buyer and [the father] said okay because it was a loss situation for us. So [the son] did sell that business. And I think he netted $6,500."

When he received the $6,500, the son did not repay his parents any of the money he owed them; instead, he bought a truck and went to Canada on vacation.

In 1980, the son and his wife decided to move to Orange Beach. The son sold the Mobile residence and realized $15,000 on the sale, but he did not repay his parents any of the $8,000 that they had loaned him for the down payment. In 1980, the son and his wife purchased a parcel of real estate on Canal Road in Orange Beach for $52,000. They made a down payment of $5,200 and executed a note to a local savings and loan institution secured by a mortgage for the balance. The son and his wife moved into an existing two-bedroom residence on the property, and the son began operating a boat-motor repair business, a sole proprietorship known as Hopkins Marine Services, on the property. The evidence tended to show that the son's business flourished during the warm months (and that the son spent lavishly during those times) but that the business languished during the colder months (and that the son invariably failed to plan ahead or save for the lean times). The son became delinquent on his mortgage payments, and he failed to remit payroll and sales taxes to the federal and state taxing authorities. The parents testified that between 1980 and 1985 they loaned the son $40,000 to help him in his boat-motor repair business and "to keep him out of jail for tax evasion." The son disputed that amount, stating that the parents had loaned him less than $20,000.

By 1985, the son and his wife had paid only $5,474.13 on their mortgage indebtedness in five years. The mortgagee was preparing to foreclose, and there was a warrant for the son's arrest for tax evasion.1 The son first offered to sell the Canal Road property to a local merchant for $70,000, but the attempt to sell was hampered by the tax hens on the property. The son testified that he "thought he had borrowed enough from his parents," so he approached them with a request that they cosign a loan with him so that he could refinance his mortgage on the Canal Road property, pay off his tax liens, and have some operating capital to put into his business. *Page 385

The parents testified that they refused to cosign a loan for the son because they understood that they would be putting their assets at risk if the son defaulted. Instead, they proposed to the son that they buy the Canal Road property from him, that he continue to live on the property and operate his boat-motor repair business there, that they build him a larger building to conduct his business, and that he pay them rent in the amount of $600 per month.

The son testified that he thought that he and his wife would be the grantors on the deed and that all four parties — his parents, he, and his wife — would be the grantees. The son said he was surprised when, at the closing on January 3, 1986, he saw that the deed did not name his wife and him as grantees. However, he said that when he called the omission to his parents' attention, they replied, "Don't worry; we don't want your property and don't want your business," and that he then reluctantly signed the deed to his parents upon their oral promise to reconvey the property to him "when he got back on his feet," or words to that effect.

The parents testified that they purchased the Canal Road property for $125,000. Of that amount, they said, they were credited with a $40,000 down payment that represented the amounts they had loaned to the son from 1980 to 1985. After payment of the son's existing mortgage balance of $46,525, the net proceeds from the sale were slightly more than $38,000, a sum that the son and the father divided, with each receiving approximately $19,000. The father testified that, after the sale, he loaned the son "all but $6,000" of the $19,000 he had received at the closing. The son denied having received any portion of the father's $19,000. Both parents denied making any oral agreement to reconvey the property to the son.

A sales agreement, a HUD closing statement, a lease, a letter memorializing the terms of the lease and acknowledging the parents' $40,000 down payment, and a warranty deed were admitted into evidence. The sales agreement, executed on November 9, 1985 — 55 days before the closing — and signed by the son and his wife, reflected that the parents were the only grantees. The HUD closing statement reflected that the son and his wife were the sellers and that the net proceeds from the sale were $38,273.40. The son testified that he signed whatever he was asked to sign without reading the documents.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
983 So. 2d 382, 2007 WL 1874298, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hopkins-v-hopkins-alacivapp-2007.