Loftis v. Loftis

28 S.W. 1091, 94 Tenn. 232
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 10, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 28 S.W. 1091 (Loftis v. Loftis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Loftis v. Loftis, 28 S.W. 1091, 94 Tenn. 232 (Tenn. 1895).

Opinion

Wilkes, J.

There is a multiplicity of pleadings in these consolidated causes, which it is not necessary to notice critically. The cause as finally presented is a proceeding to wind up the estate of H. P. Loftis as an insolvent estate, to sell his lands for the payment of his debts, to declare the rights of . his widow and children and the creditors of the estate, and fix their priorities inter sene in the assets of the estate, consisting now entirely of the proceeds of real estate, a small amount of personal property, less than $100, having already been consumed in the payment of burial expenses.

It is made to appear in the record that, prior to the filing of the bills in this cause, by a proceeding in the County Court of Jackson County, dower and homestead were assigned to the widow of the intestate, and the amount ' in money of her year’s support fixed; but only a few dollars had been paid by the administrator upon the latter, leaving $264.44 unpaid on this account.

It further appears that the administrator had paid out all the personal assets in his hands — a small amount — on the year’s support, to wit, $17, and [235]*235the remainder on the burial expenses, and had used of his own individual funds, for the latter purpose, §29.28, which had not been repaid to him.

It further appears that intestate in his lifetime bought a tract of land — the ■ same now sought to be sold — from one Kirkpatrick for about §3,000; that, in order to finish paying for the same, he borrowed §300 from his wife out of her separate property, and from R. V. Brooks about §1,000, which he used in paying off the purchase money. He ' executed his notes to Brooks for the amount borrowed from him, and, to secure the same, gave a trust deed upon the land he had bought — the same now in controversy — and the deed of trust recites upon its face that the notes are executed for money with which the purchaser paid part of the purchase money for the land thus conveyed in trust. It contains the usual power of sale in case of default. This trust deed was not signed by the wife, but was regularly acknowledged by the husband and registered. For the §300 loaned by the intestate’s wife no note was given; but the fact of the loan, and that it was her separate estate, derived from a sale of her father’s land for division among his heirs, is abundantly shown. The agreement under which this §300 was furnished and used is somewhat indefinite and uncertain under the pleadings and proof. The widow died pending the litigation, and the question of her dower rights is thus eliminated from the controversy. She left minor children, who are [236]*236presumably in possession of the homestead, though this does not definitely appear; and these minor children insist upon their right to homestead, under the statute, in the land sought to be sold.

J. M. Loftis, the administrator of the husband, was also made administrator of the wife, and he is before the Court in both capacities.

The Chancellor, upon the hearing, held that the widow had established a right to a resulting trust in the tract of land to the extent of the $300, contributed by her to be used in paying for it, and that, by virtue of this resulting trust and interest thus acquired in the land by her, she became tenant in common with her husband in the land, and she and her children were not, therefore, entitled to homestead in the same, but she was entitled to have the $300, and interest, paid back to her out of the proceeds of the land when sold. Pie also held that, the personal property of the estate having been exhausted, the land should be sold, and, after paying the widow’s demands, as above shown, the mortgage debt should be paid, and the remainder distributed pro rata among the general creditors of the estate. A reference was had to report the debts against the estate, and the report, as made, did not embrace the balance of the year’s allowance to the widow, nor the. amount advanced by the administrator out of his own funds, as valid debts against the estate, and refused the administrator any allowance for his services.

The cause is here by appeal on the part of the [237]*237administrator. An appeal was prayed for the minors, by their guardian ad litem, acting also as their next friend, but this appeal ■ was, by the Court below, refused, on the ground that a guardian ad litem had no right of appeal. In this the Court erred. A guardian ad litem and next friend of minors has a right to appeal whenever, in his ' discretion, it is necessary to protect the interest of his wards, to the same extent as any other person may upon tendering proper bond, which was done in this case. The guardian ad Utem excepted to the action of the Court, and, while his bond for appeal is copied into the record, there is no bill of exceptions making it part of the record, and the transcript is not filed for writ of error. It appears, also, that the minors attempted to appeal in proper person, and a bond is executed for them with security. While the appeal prayed by and for them is not regularly and properly perfected, and the case is not properly in this Court because of such attempt to appeal, still there is a broad appeal by the administrator and creditors of the estate, raising the question of the rights of all parties in the estate, including the minors, and their rights can properly be adjudicated under this record.

We think the Chancellor was in error in holding that the wife of the intestate acquired an interest in the lands of her husband, under the idea and doctrine of a resulting trust, to the extent of the $300 contributed by her to the payment of the purchase [238]*238money of the land. Neither the pleadings on the part of the wife nor the proof in the canse make oxxt a case of resulting trust in the wife.

In her cross bill, attempting to set up this trust, she says the agreement, when she furnished the §300, was that the land, to that extent, should be hers; but, again, she adds that it was the agreement that she was to have a lien upon the land to the extent of the money furnished by her, superior to the rights of all others, as it was for borrowed money. She prays that the land be sold, and §300 and interest be repaid to her, and, if this cannot be done, then that a resulting trust be declared to that extent in the land, and her right to recover to that extent be declared superior to the rights of all others.

The proof on this branch of the case is' full and satisfactory as to the fact that she furnished the money, and that it was hers, and was used in paying off the purchase money, but it is indefinite as to the agreement under which it was furnished and to be used.

Her- brother, H. H. Johnson, from whom she received the §300, states that the agreement between the husband and wife was that he would pay her back out of the land, and that the land should stand good for the money she put into it, and that, in any event, she should not lose the money furnished by her and put into the land.

John M. Loftis, one of the intestate’s brothers, [239]*239states that the agreement was that the land should stand good for the money, and that she should have her interest in the land.

J. M. Loftis, another brother, and the administrator, states that it was agreed that she was to have her money out of the land, and hold her interest in the land until it was paid back to her.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
28 S.W. 1091, 94 Tenn. 232, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/loftis-v-loftis-tenn-1895.