Howard v. Rayner

94 S.W.2d 110, 192 Ark. 721, 1936 Ark. LEXIS 149
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMay 11, 1936
Docket4-4272
StatusPublished

This text of 94 S.W.2d 110 (Howard v. Rayner) 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
Howard v. Rayner, 94 S.W.2d 110, 192 Ark. 721, 1936 Ark. LEXIS 149 (Ark. 1936).

Opinion

Butler, J.

On April 10, 1935, the appellant, as half-brother and heir of Ella Wofford, brought this action against the appellee alleging in effect that appellee had procured a deed to certain lands in Crittenden county by reason of undue influence exerted upon the grantor, an aged negro woman, who at the time did not understand the legal effect of her act, but intended only to authorize appellee, her attorney, to more effectively handle her affairs. There was the further allegation that notwithstanding such fact and in repudiation of the trust reposed in appellee, he claimed to be the absolute owner of the property. The prayer was that appellee be declared trustee for. appellant. An answer was filed and upon the issue joined and evidence adduced, the court found in favor of the appellee entering a decree dismissing appellant’s complaint for want of equity. From that decree is this appeal.

Tlie land involved consists of a half section in section 9, township 5 north , range 7 east, and a ten-acre tract and eighty acres in section 36 of the same township and range. There were some lots in the town of Edmondson contained in the deed, ¡but these appear to have passed out of the case and no further mention of them will be made.

The 410 acides of land were acquired by William Wofford, a negro man, and upon the land in section 9, he and his wife, Ella Wofford, made their home. He was industrious and frugal, improved the property and was in good circumstances until the latter years of his life.- When he became old and no longer able to look after his affairs as in former times, some years before his death, his property became heavily involved. He had given several mortgages which he was unable to pay. Foreclosure suits threatened and he was unable to refinance his obligations or raise the funds for the proper operation of his farm. In this state of his affairs, he employed Mr. Kenneth Rayner, the appellee, who was endeavoring to obtain indulgence from the mortgagees when William Wofford died in the spring of 1933. No one seems to have known the exact age of William Wofford or of his wife, but William was apparently between 75 and 80 years of age at his death. He left a will by which he devised his real property to his wife and bequeathed to her the major portion of his personal property. Rayner became Ella Wofford’s attorney, represented her in the matter of probating the will and successfully resisted an attack upon it. He experienced great difficulty in the financing of the farm for the purpose of making a crop in 1933, but finally accomplished this through the means of an administrator who was able to raise the funds necessary for that purpose. Efforts were renewed to refinance the property, but without success, and it was apparent in the latter part of 1933 that foreclosure proceedings would soon be instituted. Ella Wofford and her husband had been married many years and she seems to have been devoted to him and mourned his death to a great degree. He always managed and 'looked after all their affairs and when he died she was helpless. It was her desire to be freed of the load of debt and to secure for herself a home for the remainder of her life. This became generally known and there were several who contemplated making some trade with her by which they would take over the farms and assume the debts, giving to her a home and support for the remainder of her life. Nothing came of these, however, largely because of the state of the title and the opinion entertained that it was necessary that Ella proceed through the courts in order to convey title. It seems that William Wofford realized he could never pay off his indebtedness, and a trade was talked of between him and a neighboring white planter by which the latter was to take the farms and give Wofford a certain tract of land or some other consideration. But this trade fell through .because of the interference of some of the old negro’s advisers. The fact further appears that William Wofford was unable to finance his farming operations for 1933 and no arrangement for that purpose had been effected prior to his death. In the course of events relating to Ella Wofford’s affairs, however, nothing had been done to relieve her financial situation or her distress of mind until the latter part of October, 1933, when Rayner proposed that if she would deed him the property he would give her a home, manage the farms, and try to pay off the obligations. Ella agreed to this and the deed which is the subject-matter of this litigation was the result.

The law governing the relation and dealings between attorneys and clients is well settled, about which learned counsel for the litigants in this ease are agreed. The principles applicable have been well stated in cases cited by appellant and appellee. We quote first from 3 A. & E. Enc. of Law, p. 33, and Thomas v. Turner’s Admr., 87 Va. 1, 12 S. E. 149, cited with approval in Thweatt v. Freeman, 73 Ark. 575, 84 S. W. 720. “Equity regards the relation of attorney and client much in the same light as that of guardian and ward, and will relieve a client from hard bargains, or from an undue advantage secured over him by his attorney. And' the client, in order to secure such relief, is not bound to show that there has been any imposition or fraud, nor is the transaction necessarily void; but if it is a transaction in which the relation between the parties exerted or might reasonably have exerted any influence in the attorney’s favor, then the burden of establishing its perfect fairness is thrown upon the attorney.”

“It is the duty of an attorney to give his client the benefit of his best judgment, advice and exertion and it would be a just reproach to the law if he were permitted to bring his own personal interest into conflict with that duty by securing a benefit to himself through the influence which the relation implies. All transactions between the parties, to be upheld in a court of equity, must be uberrima fides, and the onus is on the attorney to show not only that no undue influence was used, or advantage taken, but that he gave his client all the information and advice as against himself that was necessary to enable him to act understandingly. He must show, in other words, (1) that the transaction was perfectly fair, (2) that it was entered into by the client freely, and (3) that it was entered into with such a full understanding of the nature and extent of his rights, as to enable the client to thoroughly comprehend the scope and effect of it.”

Quoting from 6 C. J., § 211, p. 687, cited with approval in Goode v. King, 189 Ark. 1093, 76 S. W. (2d) 300, “There is no necessary incapacity for dealing between clients and attorney, and, although transactions between them will be closely scrutinized, yet those which are obviously fair and just will be upheld. To entitle the client to relief from a contract or agreement entered into with his attorney, it must be shown that the client has suffered some injury through an abuse of confidence on the part of his attorney.”

The evidence, with respect to the execution of the deed and the circumstances immediately preceding, to which these principles are applicable, is not in dispute. It is in effect as follows: Ella Wofford was in Memphis on a visit when the agreement between her and Mr. Rayner was made. In company with Mr. Rayner and two of her colored friends, a man and a woman, she went to the office of one of the leading attorneys of the city of Memphis with whom Mr.

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Related

Goode v. King
76 S.W.2d 300 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1934)
Thweatt v. Freeman
84 S.W. 720 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1905)
Thomas v. Turner's Adm'r
12 S.E. 149 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1890)

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Bluebook (online)
94 S.W.2d 110, 192 Ark. 721, 1936 Ark. LEXIS 149, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/howard-v-rayner-ark-1936.