Jones v. Thomas

296 S.W.2d 646, 41 Tenn. App. 503, 1955 Tenn. App. LEXIS 66
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedAugust 29, 1955
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 296 S.W.2d 646 (Jones v. Thomas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jones v. Thomas, 296 S.W.2d 646, 41 Tenn. App. 503, 1955 Tenn. App. LEXIS 66 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1955).

Opinion

GARNET, J.

The defendants, Ben Block Jones and 0. A. Tindall, appeal from a judgment rendered against them jointly in favor of the cross-complainant, Gladys Thomas, by the Chancery Court of Shelby County. The suit arose out of the foreclosure of a deed of trust at which foreclosure sale the defendant C. A. Tindall, mortgagee, became the purchaser of the house and lot belonging to the cross-complainant, Gladys Thomas.

Gladys Thomas, cross-complainant, had purchased the house and lot from one Emma Alexander Jones who had executed a deed of trust on said house and lot of date May 1, 1949, securing an indebtedness of approximately $4,500 which was purchased by the defendant C. A. Tin-dall. The indebtedness was payable in monthly payments of $35 each with a balloon note of $2,600 due and payable May 1,1954.

Gladys Thomas had paid the monthly notes to defendant Tindall as they became due but was unable to pay the balloon note of $2,600 due May 1, 1954.

[506]*506Gladys Thomas unsuccessfully sought to refinance this indebtedness first at the Future Savings and Loan Association of Memphis and later through the defendant Ben Block Jones who deals in real estate notes.

The principal cause of her failure to refinance the indebtedness was two suits in the Chancery Court of Shelby County by one John Thompson who was a judgment creditor and former husband of Emma Alexander Jones, the predecessor in title to Gladys Thomas. In suits in Chancery Court, Thompson sought to impress a lien on the property owned by Gladys Thomas. Neither of the suits were prosecuted to conclusion and the last one was dismissed prior to the date of foreclosure under the Tin-dall deed of trust.

. After two unsuccessful efforts to refinance the loan, Gladys Thomas obtained promise of relief from one E. P. Nabors who agreed to make a loan sufficient to pay off Tindall.

Attorney Homer Stone acting on behalf of Nabors ascertained that $2,773.19 vras necessary to pay defendant Tindall in full.

After the Title Companies refused to insure the title of the Gladys Thomas lot on account of the Thompson claim, Attorney Stone recommended a foreclosure under the Tindall trust; the house and lot to be bought in by Nabors for the use and benefit of Gladys Thomas.

After due advertisement and on June 10, 1954, the property was offered for sale by the Trustee under Tin-dall’s deed of trust. Attorney Stone was authorized to bid up to $3,000, on behalf of Nabors for the use and benefit of Gladys Thomas. The following bids were offered:

[507]*507C. A. Tindall _1_$2,997.79
Homer Stone, Attorney_$3,000.00
C. A. Tindall_$3,100.00
Ben Block Jones_$3,200.00
C. A. Tindall_$3,300.00
Ben Block Jones_$3,474.00
C. A. Tindall_$3,475.00

The property was knocked oil by the,Trustee to Tin-dall for $3,475 and Trustee’s deed accordingly executed and delivered to him.

Tindall went into immediate possession of the property and began making repairs thereon. The Chancellor found the property to be worth $5,000 as of the date of the foreclosure and we cannot say that the evidence preponderates against this value and accordingly the Chancellor’s finding of fact on this value is affirmed. Code sec. 10622.

After payment of the indebtedness to Tindall, costs of foreclosure, etc. approximately $500 was left in the hands of the Trustee to be paid to Gladys Thomas. The defendant, Ben Block Jones, filed the original suit in this cause in the Chancery Court seeking to recover $449.50 for alleged services rendered and expenses incurred in the unsuccessful effort to help Gladys Thomas refinance her loan.

Gladys Thomas then filed her answer and cross-bill against Ben Block Jones and C. A. Tindall seeking to set the foreclosure aside on the grounds that she had been over-reached and deprived of the opportunity to refinance her indebtedness to Tindall by the joint acts of Ben Block Jones and Tindall in bidding more at the [508]*508Trustee’s sale than the new money-lender, Nabors, was willing to bid on the property for her benefit.

After prompt notice of the cross-complainant’s intention to file suit to set the foreclosure sale aside, defendant Tindall continued to repair the property and before the trial sold the same to a third person for approximately $7000 on a long-term sales contract.

The Chancellor found that the defendant Ben Block Jones and C. A.. Tindall did conspire to deprive the cross-complainant, Gladys Thomas, of a substantial equity in her home and to prevent her from refinancing her indebtedness to Tindall through the aid of Nabors and rendered a judgment against both defendants for the amount of complainant’s equity in the home as of the date of the foreclosure sale.

Both the defendant Ben Block J ones and the defendant C. A. Tindall assailed the action of the Court in finding a conspiracy between Tindall and Jones. The only evidence in the record of a conspiracy is the testimony that at the Trustee’s sale, Ben Block Jones and Tindall were conferring with each other apart and out of hearing of the other persons at the sale. Also they bid against each other until Ben Block Jones bid an amount sufficient to leave in the Trustee’s hands after paying Tindall and costs approximately $500 which he claimed Gladys Thomas owed him for services rendered.

There is no evidence of any participation of Ben Block Jones in the repairs of the house or the sale of the house. Therefore, we feel inclined to modify so much of the Chancellor’s decree as finds a conspiracy between the parties. However, from our view of the evidence, we do not think the case should be reversed or that either of [509]*509tlie two defendants should he held not liable to the cross-complainant.

For the reasons hereinafter set ont we find that each of said defendants breached his trust relationship toward the complainant by bidding at said sale and that they are severally liable to the complainant for all damages proximately resulting from such acts.

The defendant Tindall had collected $35 per month for several years from the cross-complainant Gladys Thomas. He knew that she, a middle-aged colored woman of limited educational advantages and very limited financial resources, could not possibly pay the balloon note owing to him, Tindall, on May 1, 1954, without borrowing the money from someone else. Tindall also knew that the cross-complainant, Gladys Thomas, was exercising every effort at her command to try to borrow this money.

The defendant Tindall knew that Attorney Stone was representing some money-lender, whether he knew his name was Nabors or not does not make any difference. The defendant Tindall knew that the foreclosure was recommended by Stone as a means for Gladys Thomas to save her home instead of losing it.

The defendant Tindall, up until the hour of the sale, never gave the cross-complainant, Gladys Thomas, nor the Attorney representing her and the new money-lender, Nabors, any indication that he expected to bid on the property. On the contrary, his action was such as to lead them to believe that he was interested only in collecting his money that was due and owing on the note.

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Related

Duke v. Daniels
660 S.W.2d 793 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1983)
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660 S.W.2d 784 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1983)
Williams v. Burmeister
338 S.W.2d 645 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1959)

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Bluebook (online)
296 S.W.2d 646, 41 Tenn. App. 503, 1955 Tenn. App. LEXIS 66, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-thomas-tennctapp-1955.