Jack Bennett and Cindy Bennett v. Wiley B. Ballow

2022 Ark. App. 311, 653 S.W.3d 357
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedSeptember 7, 2022
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2022 Ark. App. 311 (Jack Bennett and Cindy Bennett v. Wiley B. Ballow) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jack Bennett and Cindy Bennett v. Wiley B. Ballow, 2022 Ark. App. 311, 653 S.W.3d 357 (Ark. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

Cite as 2022 Ark. App. 311 ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS DIVISION I No. CV-20-9

JACK BENNETT AND CINDY Opinion Delivered September 7, 2022 BENNETT APPELLANTS APPEAL FROM THE DREW COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT [NO. 22CV-18-87] V.

HONORABLE QUINCEY ROSS, WILEY B. BALLOW JUDGE APPELLEE AFFIRMED

ROBERT J. GLADWIN, Judge

On September 13, 2019, the Drew County Circuit Court entered a decree setting

aside two special warranty deeds in which the appellee, Wiley Ballow, transferred forty-nine

acres of land in Drew County to the appellants, Cindy and Jack Bennett. The court

determined that Mr. Ballow lacked the requisite mental capacity to execute the deeds or,

alternatively, that the transfer of the property was the product of undue influence and

constructive fraud. The Bennetts now appeal the circuit court’s decree. We affirm.

I. Factual Background

On December 14, 2017, when he was ninety-one years old, Mr. Ballow was involved

in a single-car accident in which he suffered multiple fractured ribs and a laceration to his

forehead. He was hospitalized at Jefferson Regional Medical Center (JRMC) from December 14, 2017, through January 15, 2018. Mr. Ballow was discharged to a nursing home for

additional care from January 15, 2018, through February 2, 2018.

At the time of his accident, Mr. Ballow was living in a trailer on a forty-nine-acre tract

of land in Drew County. He purchased the land while he was serving overseas as a Marine

in World War II, and he lived on the property for approximately twenty-five years following

his retirement from the aircraft-manufacturing industry. Mr. Ballow owned the land until he

was hospitalized in December 2017. At that time, he executed two special warranty deeds

transferring the property to his neighbor, Jack Bennett.

Mr. Bennett’s lawyer drafted both of the warranty deeds. Mr. Ballow executed the

first on December 26, 2017. In that document, Mr. Ballow purported to transfer all forty-

nine acres of his property to Mr. Bennett “for and in consideration of the sum of one dollar

and the assistance provided to [him] by Jack Bennett over the years.” The first deed was never

recorded, however, because it contained an error in the legal description of the property.

Consequently, Mr. Ballow executed a second special warranty deed on December 31, 2017.

As in the first deed, the transfer was in exchange for “the sum of one dollar and the assistance

provided to [Mr. Ballow] over the years.” The second deed was recorded in Drew County on

January 5, 2018.

At trial, Sherry Knight, a middle-school teacher in Monticello, testified that she met

Mr. Ballow the following spring when he answered a newspaper advertisement seeking

military veterans who would agree to be interviewed for a school project. The two became

friends after Mr. Ballow’s interview, and Ms. Knight began to visit him on a regular basis.

2 The poor condition of Mr. Ballow’s trailer, which Ms. Knight observed on those visits, led

to another school project “to get Mr. Ballow a house to live in.” It was in connection to that

second project that Ms. Knight found the recorded warranty deed that transferred Mr.

Ballow’s property to Mr. Bennett.

Ms. Knight and LeAnn Burch, a lawyer and veteran who also participated in the

veterans project, went to Mr. Ballow’s property to show him the deed transferring his land

to Mr. Bennett. According to Ms. Knight, Mr. Ballow “couldn’t understand why Jack

Bennett owned his land” and “said he remembered that [Mr. Bennett] came to his [hospital]

room, but Mr. Ballow thought that he was signing so that [Mr. Bennett] could take care of

his property while Mr. Ballow was in the hospital.” Ms. Burch testified that Mr. Ballow

initially did not remember “signing anything about his property.” She further testified that

he “did not understand the [deed] when he read it,” but its significance “dawned on him”

once she and Ms. Knight explained that “he might not own the land if that was his signature”

on the deed. Mr. Ballow confirmed that his signature was on the deed, but he could not

“relate [the deed] to a particular event.” Mr. Ballow eventually recalled “signing something

in the hospital.” He “was adamant,” however, “[that] he [would not] give away his property.”

He told Ms. Burch, in fact, that “if he was going to bequeath the property, he [would] leave

it to some family member in Texas when he died.”

Thereafter, with Ms. Knight’s assistance, Mr. Ballow hired a lawyer and filed a petition

to set aside the warranty deed on April 12, 2018. The petition alleged that the deed was the

3 product of constructive fraud, undue influence, and unilateral mistake. 1 In an affidavit

attached to the petition, Mr. Ballow asserted that “[o]n or about December 31, 2017,” he

“executed a special warranty deed at the request of . . . Jack Bennett,” while suffering from

“a laceration to the head, multiple fractures of the ribs, and generalized muscle weakness.”

Mr. Ballow further asserted that he understood the purpose of the deed “was to temporarily

allow Defendant, Jack Bennett, to look after my property while I was hospitalized.”

In their answer, the Bennetts “admit that [Mr. Ballow] signed a deed on his

homeplace in Drew County to Defendant Jack Bennett while in the hospital in Pine Bluff.”

They affirmatively alleged, however, that “it was Mr. Ballow who requested [Jack] to have a

deed prepared so Plaintiff could give his homeplace to [Jack] in consideration of the

assistance provided to [Mr. Ballow] by [Jack] over many years,” including “doing work on his

homeplace to make same habitable, providing him with water to drink and bathe, washing

his clothes, paying his personal bills from time to time with [Jack’s funds][and] buying him

and taking him groceries.” The Bennetts also affirmatively alleged that “others have

unjustifiably interfered with their long-standing good and supportive relationship,” and in

fact, the Bennetts “do not desire to keep ownership of [Mr. Ballow’s homeplace if he himself

truly wants [it] back.” The Bennetts, therefore, offered to “deed [the land] back to [Mr.

1 The petition also sought a declaratory judgment denying the validity of “any last will and testament” that Mr. Ballow executed while he was hospitalized. The circuit court dismissed the declaratory-judgment request for lack of any proof that Mr. Ballow executed a will during that time. Mr. Ballow has not cross-appealed that ruling; therefore, there will be no further discussion of it here.

4 Ballow] upon receipt of the voluntary written and signed demand of [Mr. Ballow] that [the

Bennetts] deed the subject property back to him.” The writing must “recite that in making

same Mr. Ballow is not being influenced by Sherry Knight or others associated with her,”

and “upon receipt of the opinion of a qualified independent professional that [Mr. Ballow’s]

actions in demanding a deed-back is not the result of manipulation or undue influence of

others.”

The “deed-back” apparently did not occur, and the case went to trial on September

3, 2019. At trial, Mr. Ballow testified that he had known Jack “all his life, since he was a little

boy,” and he met Cindy Bennett when she married Jack. He said that they were neighbors

who lived “almost directly across the street.” As for how much the Bennetts assisted him over

the years, Mr. Ballow testified that Cindy made meals for him “two or three times a week”

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2022 Ark. App. 311, 653 S.W.3d 357, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jack-bennett-and-cindy-bennett-v-wiley-b-ballow-arkctapp-2022.