Smith v. Logan

429 So. 2d 598, 1982 Ala. Civ. App. LEXIS 1418
CourtCourt of Civil Appeals of Alabama
DecidedDecember 22, 1982
DocketCiv. 3556
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 429 So. 2d 598 (Smith v. Logan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Civil Appeals of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. Logan, 429 So. 2d 598, 1982 Ala. Civ. App. LEXIS 1418 (Ala. Ct. App. 1982).

Opinion

BRADLEY, Judge.

The instant appeal arises out of facts surrounding and events occurring subsequent to the supreme court’s decision of Williamson v. Matthews, 379 So.2d 1245 (Ala.1980). In that case Carolyn Ann Williamson, appellee herein, entered into a real estate sales contract and deed for the conveyance of her home to the Matthewses at a time when foreclosure was threatened on the property. Having learned of the threatened foreclosure through the newspaper, Etowah County attorney Virgil M. Smith appeared at Ms. Williamson’s home to discuss the matter with her. Ms. Williamson, in the presence of her son, informed Smith that she had expected to sell her home for $17,000 but that she had actually received $1,700 in the transaction. On the following day Ms. Williamson and her son went to Smith’s office where Smith prepared to file suit to have the abstract and deed to the Matthewses set aside on the ground of lack of capacity on Ms. Williamson’s part. While she was in his office, Smith advanced $500 to Ms. Williamson and took back a note and mortgage on her home. Following an adverse ruling in the circuit court, Smith pursued an appeal on Ms. Williamson’s behalf to the supreme court where she was successful in having the conveyance to the Matthewses set aside on the grounds of gross inadequacy of consideration and mental incapacity brought on by alcoholism.

Subsequently, when Smith began foreclosure proceedings on the property, Ms. Williamson and her mother, Dura P. Logan, to whom Ms. Williamson had conveyed the property on October 3, 1980, obtained a temporary restraining order to prevent the attorney’s actions. Smith thereafter filed an answer and cross-bill, claiming that Ms. Williamson owed him $6,633.09 for money advanced to her, attorney’s fees, various litigation expenses, and payments made on her first mortgage. In a judgment rendered on December 17, 1981, the trial court held that the mortgage proposed by Smith was void and that he was permanently enjoined from foreclosing on it. The trial court further awarded Smith $3,223.59 as attorney’s fees and litigation expenses and $3,642.03 for money advanced and first mortgage payments. The trial court specifically stated that the $3,642.03 judgment would not constitute a lien against Ms. Williamson’s home. From that judgment Smith has appealed to this court.

Appellees have filed a motion pursuant to rule 38, Alabama Rules of Appellate Procedure, requesting that they be awarded damages and costs on the ground that the ap[600]*600peal is without merit and is frivolous. We deny this motion.

Smith advances the position that the trial court erred in granting a permanent injunction to prevent him from foreclosing the mortgage on Ms. Williamson’s home. In so arguing he cites language from Williamson v. Matthews, supra, a case he argued and won before the Supreme Court of Alabama, where the court said:

“Our rule in such a case is that a party cannot avoid, free from fraud or undue influence, a contract on the ground of mental incapacity, unless it be shown that the incapacity was of such a character that, at the time of execution, the person had no reasonable perception or understanding of the nature and terms of the contract. Weaver v. Carothers, 228 Ala. 157, 160, 153 So. 201 (1934).”

Smith relies heavily on that line of cases which says that mental incapacity brought on by drinking or alcoholism, per se, is not sufficient, in and of itself, to render a contract voidable and that it must also be shown that the party lacked the ability to comprehend the nature of the instrument or the transaction or that fraud or undue influence was present. See Williamson v. Matthews, supra; Snead v. Scott, 182 Ala. 97, 62 So. 36 (1913). In essence, Smith takes the position that while Ms. Williamson had been drinking on the morning that she executed the mortgage to him, the transaction was still valid because she had sufficient capacity to understand the nature of the act, and it was free from fraud and undue influence.

To accept Smith’s position would require us to ignore certain subtle ironies arising from the facts of this appeal and the nature of the fiduciary relationship between attorney and client. The transaction between Ms. Williamson and the Matthewses which was eventually set aside by the supreme court on the ground of mental incapacity occurred on October 11, 1978. The record indicates that on that evening Smith appeared unsolicited at Ms. Williamson’s home and assured her that he could help her with her legal problem. All of this occurred at a time in which Ms. Williamson and her son were planning to contact Legal Aid for assistance because she lacked the money to hire a private attorney. In overturning the contract and deed to the Matthewses, the supreme court found that Ms. Williamson was incapable of understanding the nature of the transaction and also found that her intoxication, coupled with the gross inadequacy of consideration, supported this result. Williamson v. Matthews, supra. The record indicates that Ms. Williamson executed the note and mortgage on her home to Smith on October 12, 1978, the following morning. The record further shows that Ms. Williamson had consumed a pint of one-hundred proof vodka and that she remained in an agitated state over the sale of her home. To hold that Ms. Williamson was incapable of understanding the nature of the transaction with the Matthewses and then to hold that she was able to comprehend the nature of her dealings with Smith would be to reach illogical results, especially in light of the facts presented at trial.

Similarly, we find no merit in Smith’s contention that even if Ms. Williamson was suffering from diminished mental capacity, the second mortgage was still binding because no fraud or undue influence was involved. In Fortune v. Boutwell, 271 Ala. 592,126 So.2d 116 (1960), our supreme court said that “[u]ndue influence which is required to avoid a conveyance must proceed from some act of dominance or coercion over the will of the grantor.” Moreover, the supreme court in Verner v. Mosely, 221 Ala. 36, 127 So. 527 (1930), stated:

“The rules of administrative procedure in cases involving transactions inter vi-vos, where one party stands in relation of trust and confidence to the other, such as is here involved, attorney and client, trustee and cestue que trust, where the dominant party — and in this relation the attorney or trustee is regarded as the dominant party — receives or derives a benefit or advantage from a transaction during the existence of such relation, the party reposing the confidence, on seasonable application to a court of equity, may ob[601]*601tain relief from the burden of such transaction, by showing the transaction and the confidential relations, unless the person receiving the benefit overcomes the presumption of undue influence by evidence which reasonably satisfies the judicial mind that the transaction “ was in every respect just, fair, and equitable.” (Citations omitted.)

Ms. Williamson and her son testified that she had gone to Smith’s office to seek his legal advice in connection with the sale of her home to the Matthewses. She further testified that Smith prepared to seek in-junctive relief on her behalf. In so doing she established that a confidential relationship existed in terms of Verner v. Mosely, supra, and the burden was placed on Smith to show that “the transaction was in every respect just, fair, and equitable.” We find that Smith has failed to meet this burden.

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Bluebook (online)
429 So. 2d 598, 1982 Ala. Civ. App. LEXIS 1418, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-logan-alacivapp-1982.