Million v. Taylor

38 Ark. 428
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMay 15, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 38 Ark. 428 (Million v. Taylor) 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
Million v. Taylor, 38 Ark. 428 (Ark. 1882).

Opinion

Eakin, J.

This is a bill by an heir to recover of another heir, who is her brother, an interest in the lands of their deceased grandfather, and to cancel a deed for her interest which she had executed to the defendant, alleging that it had been obtained by fraud and misrepresentation. This is-denied, and is the only issue. The court below refused the relief.

The parties lived in Bradley county, Tennessee, and the lands are in Hempstead county, Arkansas. It is shown by-the pleadings, together with the preponderance of evidence, notwithstanding some conflict, that the complainant, being" yet a girl under age, agreed, verbally, for ten dollars, to-sell her interest, being one eighteenth, in these lands, to a cousin, Alfred Taylor, who, as well as the defendant, was engaged in the speculation of buying up the interest of the other heir’s. This to begin with, was dealing with a child in a very reprehensible manner. The defendant says as he is-informed, that this payment was not made to her as a pur-chase of her interest by Alfred, but as “hush money,” to induce her to conceal her interest in the lands until he could, effect a sale of them. This is worse, as it would be an effort to make her a party in craft and duplicity. The defendant disclaims, also, any interest in the purchase so-made, if it were a purchase, but we find that, after his sister, the complainant, became of ago, he approached her on the subject, and without any additional consideration paid at the time, obtained from her a deed of conveyance, in which her husband joined. This was in 1876.

The account given by herself and her husband of this transaction, which is in many points strongly corroborated by other witnesses, is, that her brother claimed the deed on account of the ten dollars paid by Alfred, representing that Re was entitled to it, because he had furnished Alfred the money, and the purchase had been made by Alfred for him. He says there was an additional payment also, to-wit, a saddle'worth twelve dollars, and her part of the cost for making a certain grave yard fence, worth thirteen dollars, and that he was to pay her the balance of the consideration ■expressed in the deed, which was in all forty dollars, when he got possession of her interest in Arkansas. She says, on the other hand, that the saddle and cost of the fence were otherwise paid for out of monies of her own in her brother’s hands. The proof tends to show that at the time the conveyance was made, she believed the lands to be worthless and ■ of no value. The defendant seems to have been an ■older brother, and from indications in the transcript was an intelligent man of business. He knew at the time that the •St. Louis, Iron Mountain and Southern Railroad had run through or near the lands, and although he denies that he represented them as worthless, he does not show that he took any care to advise his sister as to their real value, or as to her best interests in any manner. She seems to be a woman of no knowledge of business affairs beyond that of •other women in the common walks of life.

He came to Ai’kansas with this deed to obtain possession, and afterwards the complainants heard, first through others, -and then from himself, that the interests they had conveyed were worth thousands of dollars. His own lowest estimate of the value is $1200. They demanded a reconveyance, ■which he refused. Finally, as they testify, he agreed to give it up if they would give him a power of attorney to act for them with regard to the lands. They consented and executed the power in 1878. Pie, then armed with both papers, refused to reconvey the lands, but recorded the .power. They afterwards revoked the power in 1879, making the revocation matter of record. He then caused the •original conveyance to be recorded, and claims under that. The object of the bill is to cancel it.

The defendant, in his deposition, as well as his answer, ■denies that he agreed to reconvey when he obtained the power of attorney, but says he gave complainant, his sister, ■an additional compensation for the power of attorney, which he wished to have to avoid the champerty laws, as he had been advised they were here in force. He says he gave her ■some old pieces of furniture, which cost over a hundred dollars, at first, but had been worn. If this testimony could -avail the defendant, at best, we incline to think the preponderance of testimony, and reason itself is against it. The sister had then learned the value of her interest, and had ■perhaps an exaggerated estimate of it. If she were willing lo renounce it for the douceur of the present enjoyment of a few pieces of second-hand furniture, she was not competent to contract, at least with her brother, concerning parts of a common inheritance. What should we think of a brother who would advise a sister to make such a contract with third parties ? There is no definite showing that the lands were in litigation, or that the title was in danger. The whole of the lands had been once sold by order of court for partition, but they had been bought in by the agent and .guardian of all the parties, who is not shown to have set up any adverse title. The defendant does not show how much he expended to clear the title, or whether anything, or what he did besides coming to Arkansas and “working at it” -about a year. The sort of work is left wholly to conjecture. There is some vague showing of a compromise with parties ■claiming, but it is not definite. The values of the interests are fixed upon the net outcome.

It is true that all persons are bound by their contracts, intelligently made, however improvident they may be, if they deal at arms length as strangers, under no obligations-of protection or confidence. And it is generally true that the mere relation of brother and sister does not impose that confidence of itself. Ordinarily, about ordinary matters, if there be nothing in the circumstances showing dependence- and trust on one hand, and the assumed duty of protection and counsel on the other, equity will not compel a brother to treat a sister with more tenderness than other women. These things belong to the imperfect duties, which even equity cannot undertake to enforce. Yet, conceding that this relation differs, generally, in its confidential nature from that between parent and child, guardian and ward, attorney and client, principal and agent: it has been held to assume a confidential character, not only as to brother and sister, but between any near relatives, dealing with regard to inheritances, or distributive shares of estates, coming to them jointly. There are many authorities exacting under-such circumstances uberrima fides; with the duty of full disclosure of everything affecting value, and each other’s interest in the subject matter.

In Mr. Hare’s notes to the case of Hugnemire v. Boseley, in the second part of vol. II, of the 4th Edition of Leading Cases in Equity, p. 1213, he lays’ down this principle as the result of the authorities, and speaking of blood relations so dealing, he says, “They are consequently under a mutual obligation, not merety to say or do nothing that is calculated to mislead, but to give such counsel as would presumably proceed from a third person, who was equally-concerned for all.”

The numerous cases to which he refers, although, many of them resting upon the peculiar circumstances, involving imbecility, or weakness of intellect, or special confidence, which would equally apply to strangers in blood, nevertheless support the declaration in its full extent,.

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Bluebook (online)
38 Ark. 428, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/million-v-taylor-ark-1882.