Quattlebaum v. Hendrick

16 S.W.2d 591, 179 Ark. 494, 1929 Ark. LEXIS 97
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMay 6, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 16 S.W.2d 591 (Quattlebaum v. Hendrick) 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
Quattlebaum v. Hendrick, 16 S.W.2d 591, 179 Ark. 494, 1929 Ark. LEXIS 97 (Ark. 1929).

Opinion

Mehaffy, J.

This action was instituted in the Garland Chancery Court hy Mrs. M. H. Quattlebaum against Max Hendrick, Max Hendrick, trustee, and Mabel R. Hendrick, wife of Max Hendrick, in January, 1927, seeking- to impress certain real property and improvements thereon, in the city of Hot Spring's, with a trust in favor of the appellant, and to compel the relinquishment of this specific property to the appellant. Appellant also asks judgment against Max Hendrick for the sum of $23,000 with interest from July 10,1925, until paid, at the rate of 6 per cent, per annum, less the value of such trust properties as are ordered and decreed by the court to be conveyed to appellant by appellees.

Mrs. Quattlebaum, whose home was in Jefferson County, Arkansas, went to Hot Springs in the spring of 1924 to take the 'baths. She testified that her husband had just died.

Max Hendrick, whose wife and children were in Denver, Colorado, also went to Hot Springs in the spring of 1924. They met at the Townsend Hotel, being introduced by Mrs. Townsend. Hendrick was the owner of a closed ear, and, after Mrs. Quattlebaum and Mr. Hendrick became acquainted, they went riding together a number of times. Mrs. Quattlebaum returned to her home, and then went to California. Before she left Hot Springs, however, she stated that she was going to Denver in the summer of 1925, and Mr. Hendrick told her that he also would be in Denver at that time.

In July, 1924, while Mr. and Mrs. Hendrick were living together, she found letters in Hendrick’s pocket written to him by Mrs. Quattleibaum. She immediately wrote to Mrs. Quattlebaum, and Mrs. Quattlebaum wrote her that she would not correspond with her husband any more, and Mr. Hendrick also agreed not to communicate with Mrs. Quattlebaum. This was satisfactory to Mrs. Hendrick, but thereafter she found another letter from Mrs. Quattlebaum, and she instituted suit for divorce, and obtained a divorce from Mr. Hendrick in November, 1924, at Fredonia, Kansas. Mr. and Mrs. Hendrick had two small children, a girl and a boy.

While in Hot Springs, Mr. Hendrick learned that Mrs. Quattlebaum had some money which was deposited in a bank at 4 per cent, interest. When they were in Colorado in 1925, they had arrangements by which Hendrick was to invest certain moneys belonging to Mrs. Quattle-baum in purchasing mortgages. Mrs. Quattlebaum was to receive 6 per cent, on the mortgages and Hendrick’s pay was to be the difference between 6 per cent, and what was collected on the mortgages. There is no dispute or controversy about the money which was invested in mortgages, but, on July 6, she gave Hendrick a check for $23,-000, which she contends was given to him to buy Sinclair oil stock for her. Her contention is that he was to take it in his name and transfer it to her. Hendrick contends that the $23,000 was a loan, and that he bought the Sinclair stock for himself, and gave her his note for the $23,000.

When Hendrick began to purchase mortgages for Mrs. Quattlebaum they rented a deposit box at the United States National Bank of Denver, and the mortgages and papers connected with their transactions were deposited in this box, and each of them had a key. They also opened an account in the bank in the name of Hendrick-Hunt, Hunt being Mrs. Quattlebaurn’s maiden name.

It is the contention of the appellant that this $23,000 given to Hendrick was for the purpose of purchasing Sinclair oil stock for Mrs. Quattlebaum, and that it was a trust fund, and that this stock was sold and a part of the proceeds used to purchase the home of Mrs. Hendrick in Hot Springs, Arkansas, and that she was entitled to have this property conveyed to her or impressed with the trust because of the transaction with reference to the Sinclair oil stock.

When Hendrick was preparing to leave Denver, he and Mrs. Quattlebaum went to the bank, got their papers from the deposit bos, went over them, and, among other papers in the box, was Hendrick’s note for $23,000 to Mrs. Quattlebaum. At that time she said that she would not accept the note, and that she did not lend him any money, but that the oil stock was hers. Hendrick said the oil stock was his, and that he had borrowed the money from her and executed the note. The note was left with the bank, and the bank made several efforts to collect it after Hendrick had come to Hot Springs.

Hendrick not only claims that this was not a trust fund, but he also contends that the money which Mrs. Hendrick invested in a home in Hot Springs was received from other stocks which belonged to Mrs. Hendrick, and that all the money that went into the home was hers, and no part of it belonged to Mrs. Quattlebaum.

The chancery court found all the issues in favor of the defendant, Mabel R. Hendrick, and entered a decree accordingly. This appeal is prosecuted to reverse this decree.

The vital issue in this case is whether there was a trust created at the time Hendrick received the $23,000 from Mrs.. Quattlebaum. Whether a trust has been created is largely a question of fact in every case, and it is proper, in determining the fact as to whether or not there is a trust, to give effect to the situation and relation of the parties, the nature and situation of the property, and the purposes or objects which the settlor had in view. The burden of proving the existence of a trust rests on the person asserting it, and he must prove it by clear and satisfactory evidence, having in view all the surrounding facts and circumstances and the intention of the parties. 26 K-. C. L. 1203.

The appellant testifies positively that the $23,000 was received by Hendrick to buy Sinclair oil stock for her, and that, while she agreed that it should be bought in his name, the understanding' and agreement was that he was to transfer it to her. The testimony of Hendrick was just as positive that the $23,000 was a loan, and that there was no agreement that the stock should be transferred to her, but that the stock was to be his, and that he was to pay her, and he gave her a note for the $23,000. No one was present when Mrs. Quattle-baum and Mr. Hendrick made their agreement about the $23,000, and therefore no one knows what that agreement was except themselves, and their testimony on the question is in hopeless conflict.

While Mrs. Quattlebaum and Mr. Hendrick were having the numerous transactions with reference to property, Mrs. Hendrick was prosecuting a suit against Hendrick for divorce, and the undisputed proof is that Hendrick and Mrs. Quattlebaum were to be married. She evidently, at the time when she expected to marry Hen-drick, had the utmost confidence in him, and they had a good many transactions after the transaction with reference to the $23,000. Hendrick bought mortgages in his name and transferred them to her, and spent large sums of money of hers, and no dispute arose over any of these transactions.

Mrs. Quattlebaum- testifies that she suggested to Hendrick that he go back to his wife and children, and, shortly after he left Denver in October, he did go back to his wife, and they were remarried. Before leaving Denver, Mrs. Quattlebaum had become dissatisfied, and, as she says, suspicious. The evidence does not show the cause of her dissatisfaction or why she became suspicious.

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Bluebook (online)
16 S.W.2d 591, 179 Ark. 494, 1929 Ark. LEXIS 97, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/quattlebaum-v-hendrick-ark-1929.