Smart v. Waterhose

18 Tenn. 94
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1836
StatusPublished

This text of 18 Tenn. 94 (Smart v. Waterhose) 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
Smart v. Waterhose, 18 Tenn. 94 (Tenn. 1836).

Opinion

Creen, J.

delivered the opinion of the court.

The bill charges that Richard G. Waterhouse, late of Rhea county, made his will on 1st. February, 1827, and shortly afterwards departed this life, leaving Richard and Blaekstone his executors, to whom, and to the other defendants his children, and the complainant Elizabeth, he devised his estate. That the complainant, Elizabeth, who was the widow of the said Richard G., but has since intermarried with the complainant, William C. Smart, was not satisfied with the provis-on made for her in the said will, and determined to dissent therefrom within the time prescribed by law. The executors ascertaining her purpose, represented to her that her dissent would throw the whole estate into confusion and produce confusion among the other legatees, and therefore they wished that she would not dissent from the will. Richard Water-house, the oldest of the executors, represented to hor that the estate was not worth more than $40,000, and proposed to give her $5000, or her partin money, if she would change her determination. Being perplexed and not wishing to do any thing that would injure others, she accepted the proposition, and the executors promised to nay her the value of the property to which she would be entitled were she to dissent, and which they said would be about $5000, or that she might elect to take the $5000, or the value of the property when it could be ascertained. The agreement thus made was to be written out by Spencer Jarnagin Esq. as he was expected soon to pass by on his way to court. She was afterwards told that Mr. [99]*99Jarnagin bad no time to do the writing and that he had passed by, but as new assurances were made to her, she confided in the fulfilment of the contract, and suffered the six months to elapse without dissenting. The bill charges that Richard made the agreement with the fraudulent design of preventing complainant, Elizabeth, from dissenting as the law requires, and that he has fraudulently put her off from time to time with new promises that every thing should be done according to the agreement, until within one year last past, and that she has been thus prevented by fraud from filing her bill. Nor did she .know the value of the estate until the executor filed his expose of the estate, the 2nd of May 1831, in the Rhea county court, whereby the estate appears to be worth $75,000.

Prayer,' that the agreement beenforced andthatshe be reinstated in her right of election. and be now permitted to enter her dissent therefrom, with all the rights to which she would have been entitled had her dissent been entered within the six months prescribed by the statute, and for general relief, &c>

The answer of Richard Waterhouse admits, that the complainant expressed dissatisfaction with the provision which was made for her in the will, and he suggested that she might wish probably to live elsewhere than at the home place, where, by the wi]l she was to reside and be provided for, and that he promised her, that if she became dissatisfied and wished to remove, he would give her $500 out of his part of the estate, and would advise the other children to do the same, but that this sum was not to be given if she married. With this promise complainant appeared perfectly satisfied, and said she wished the agreement reduced to writing by Mr. Jarnagin, to which respondent consented, denies that he prevented by fraud, the agreement from being reduced to writing or that he has made promises since by which said Elizabeth has been deluded. He insists the agreement has been made more than three years, and relies on the statute of limitations of thre’e years, and the statute of two years, and -the statute of frauds, and that the complainant Elizabeth not having dissented^ from the will of her said husband within six months after its probate, she is precluded from doing so now by the positive provisions of the statute.

[100]*100Samuel R. Hacket, a witness states, that Richard Water-house told him that he had compromised with the widow and agreed to give her $5000, if she would not dissent, which was supposed to be a child’s part. Mira Thompson states, she was present at the time of the contract, that Richard Waler-house was very unwilling that the widow should dissent from the will, and told her he would give her $5000 if she would not. He called $5000 a child’s part of the estate, and said-she should have a child’s part. It was agreed Mr. Jarnagin-should do the writing. William N. Gillesjaie states, that Blackstone Watherhouse told him, that himself and Richard had promised the widow $5000 if she would not dissent from the will,, and that Mr. Jarnagin was to do the writing, he further stated that the time had elapsed and the writings were not drawn, so they did not intend to give her any thing. Several witnesses introduced by the defendants say they heard Richard say he was to give $500 if the widow did not marryr and some of them say they heard Mira Thompson say that the children were each to give the widow $500.

1. The first question for the consideration of the court is, whether the complainant, Elizabeth, was prevented by the fraud of the executors to this will from entering her dissent thereto,according to law. There is no question in the mind of the court, but that a contract was made, by which this widow was promised what she deemed an equivalent to the part of the estate she would be entitled to by law, if she were to dissent from the will. Whether this agreement was that she was to have $5000, or whether she was to have the value of a. child’s-part, and such part was estimated at $5000, does not precisely appear. It is most probable from the proof that $5000 was to be given in lieu of that she would get by law.

That the dissent which the widow intended- to enter to the will was prevented by the solicitation of the executors, and their promise to pay the $5000 cannot be doubted; and the question is, whether this agreement was fraudulently entered into with a view to delude her with the expectation of its ful-filment, until the six months should elapse, within which the statute permitted her to dissent from the will. Both of the executors admit that Jarnagin was to reduce the agreement to [101]*101writing, and no satisfactory explanation.is given why it wa^ not done. Blackstone, one of the executors, told Gellespie that the time for the widow to dissent had elapsed and that himself and Richard did not intend to give her any thing. This dec-.ration, together with the subsequent refusal to pay any thing, and their concealment for a long time of the true condition of the estate, constitute evidence strongly tending to establish, that when the agreement was made there was no honest purpose to fulfil it; but be this as it may, this agreement was grossly fraudulent on another ground. The bill charges that the estate was represented by Richard, the oldest executor, as being worth only $40,000, but shortly before this suit was brought it was discovered tobe worth $75,000. These charges are amply sustained by the proof. Both Hacket and Mrs. Thompson state that Richard estimated $5000 as equal to a child’s-part. There are five legitimate children and four that are illegitimate. If we suppose that by a child’s part he meant to-include the nine children, that would make the estate worth only $45,000. By the inventory filed by the executor the 2nd May, 1831, the estate is reported to be worth upwards-of $75,000. This misrepresentation of the value of the estate must have been wilful.

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Bluebook (online)
18 Tenn. 94, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smart-v-waterhose-tenn-1836.