Schlickling v. Georgia Conference Ass'n Seventh-Day Adventists

355 S.W.2d 469, 49 Tenn. App. 412, 1961 Tenn. App. LEXIS 120
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJuly 1, 1961
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 355 S.W.2d 469 (Schlickling v. Georgia Conference Ass'n Seventh-Day Adventists) 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
Schlickling v. Georgia Conference Ass'n Seventh-Day Adventists, 355 S.W.2d 469, 49 Tenn. App. 412, 1961 Tenn. App. LEXIS 120 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1961).

Opinion

AVERY, P. J. (W. S.)

This suit originated in the Chancery Court of Hamilton County and is a suit by Albert Schliekling as Conservator of the estate of Mag-delena Schliekling Fehn, his sister, having been appointed such Conservator on the 22nd day of June, 1959, against the Georgia Conference Association Seventh-Day Adventists, a corporate entity, chartered under the laws [415]*415of the State of Georgia, by which he seeks to set aside a deed executed by his said sister, dated September 1, 1953, in which she conveyed certain real estate in Tennessee to defendant, and two deeds executed on the 1st day of September 1953, in which she conveyed certain real estate located in Walker County, State of Georgia, to defendant, said deeds being Exhibits “A”, “B” and “C” to the original bill, and a Power of Attorney executed by his said sister on March 11, 1959, recorded March 28, 1959 in Walker County Georgia, to the defendant, all of said documents or certified copies are exhibited with the proof, which deeds show that she reserved a life estate in said properties.

The parties will be referred to in this Opinion in the following manner: Albert Schlickling, the original complainant as Conservator, will be referred to by the name “Schlickling”, his sister will be referred to by the designation, “Mrs. Fehn”, The Georgia Conference Association Seventh-Day Adventists will be referred to as “defendant”. In the course of the proceedings other parties were made defendants and if referred to as such separate defendants in this Opinion, it will be by their respective surname.

A supplemental bill was filed against defendant on August 17, 1959, by which Schlickling sought to require Charles A. Noone, one of the solicitors for defendant, to file with defendant’s answer, all statements taken by a court reporter of a conference between him, the said Noone and Mrs. Pehn, which was alleged to have been recorded by a court reporter and purported to be a conference and conversation interpreted by a German interpreter, and enjoining defendant, its agents, etc. from [416]*416“going about, harassing, or any way communicating with said Magdelena S. Fehn.”

The bill is predicated on the facts charged to be that when said deeds and Power of Attorney were executed, the said Mrs. Fehn was mentally incompetent and that they were the result of undue influence exerted on the part of agents and representatives of the defendant. The original bill also averred that during this interim between the time the deeds were executed and the original bill filed, that defendant had prevailed upon the said Mrs. Fehn to execute a will leaving any property she might have at her death, to it, and it also sought a surrender of all wills which Mrs. Fehn might have executed and in possession of defendant, together with any other documents and papers which might have been executed by her and held by defendant. The original bill had narrated a situation wherein the complainant had referred to certain litigation between Martha M. Schlickling, a former wife of the complainant and said Mrs. Fehn, which had caused a severe mental strain and much harassment of Mrs. Fehn and had caused her great expense.

Defendant filed a demurrer to that part of the bill which sought the surrender of the alleged will on the theory that the bill sought to have a hearing devastavit vel non contesting such will while the alleged testator lived.

Without waiving the demurrer so filed, on August 20, 1959, defendant filed an answer and cross-bill in which they admit the conservatorship, but averring that Schlickling is an unfit person to serve as conservator. This answer refers to the litigation involved in the lawsuit by the former wife of Schlickling and that Schlick-[417]*417ling was involved in two lengthy and continuous lawsuits with his said former wife. The answer admits the conveyances to it by Mrs. Fehn, and further alleges that Mrs. Fehn did execute a security deed to Schlickling conveying certain property in Walker County, Georgia, for an averred consideration of $5,500.00.

This answer and cross-bill further alleges that in March of 1955, for a consideration of $10,000 paid to Schlickling, he and his present wife, Nora Schlickling,-executed to the defendant an assignment of the promissory note and a security deed, and on the same day they executed to the defendant a warranty deed conveying certain property in Hamilton County, Tennessee, which complainant then claimed to own and the consideration that by the assignment of said debt and security deed and execution of the deed to the other property, there had been a full satisfaction and payment of any and all claims which Schlickling might have had or claimed against his sister, Mrs. Fehn.

This answer and cross-bill denies every material allegation such as incompetency, senility, feeblemindedness, hallucinations, undue influence etc., with which the original bill alleged Mrs. Fehn was seized at the time' she executed the deeds to it, and the cross-bill sets forth in somewhat detail what is alleged to be conferences between Mrs. Fehn and the officials of the defendant occurring at and leading up to the execution of said deeds.

In this answer and cross-bill it is alleged that the power of attorney executed May 18, 1959, named H. E. Bideout as the agent of defendant and authorized him to manage the property so conveyed to it by Mrs. Fehn, [418]*418located in the State of Georgia, and that one O. 0. Churchwell was authorized to collect the rents and manage the Chattanooga property. It admits that there is in its possession a will executed by Mrs. Fehn under which the defendant is the principal beneficiary, but alleges it has no validity since the testator still lived. It also alleges that on information Mrs. Fehn executed a will to her brother in 1951, by which he is the principal beneficiary of her property.

The cross-bill alleges certain monies were transmitted from Germany by Mrs. Fehn to her said brother amounting to some $8,500 which he received and invested in certain rental properties in Chattanooga, putting the title to the properties in himself and collecting the rents therefrom, and that after Mrs. Fehn came to the United States in 1936, she, by a suit in the Chancery Court of Hamilton County, recovered the property in which the money forwarded to her brother had purchased. It further alleges that Schlickling has made a constant effort to misappropriate and dissipate the property and funds of Mrs. Fehn and that this last act of having himself appointed her conservator is the culmination of such activities on his part. The cross-bill avers that Schlick-ling seeks to set aside the deed to the property involved and also seeks to keep the $10,000 which was paid him by the defendant.

The prayer of the cross-bill is that the cross-defendant be required to answer the cross-bill, not under oath, and prays that in event the conveyances attacked by the bill are declared void, that Schlickling be required to pay to defendant $10,000 with interest thereon from the 10th [419]*419day of March, 1955, and that' cross-complainant have a decree against him for such recovery.

While this case was pending in the lower Court many motions of different character were made by respective parties, among which is a motion to appoint a Guardian ad Litem for Mrs. Fehn, which the Court did and appointed James L. Banks such Guardian ad Litem. This attorney at the Chattanooga Bar then filed a petition with the Court, the third paragraph of which recites the following:

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Schlickling v. GEORGIA CONF. ASS'N SEVENTH-DAY ADV.
355 S.W.2d 469 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1961)

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Bluebook (online)
355 S.W.2d 469, 49 Tenn. App. 412, 1961 Tenn. App. LEXIS 120, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schlickling-v-georgia-conference-assn-seventh-day-adventists-tennctapp-1961.