Vick v. Vick

449 S.W.2d 717, 60 Tenn. App. 600, 1968 Tenn. App. LEXIS 289
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedAugust 19, 1968
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 449 S.W.2d 717 (Vick v. Vick) 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
Vick v. Vick, 449 S.W.2d 717, 60 Tenn. App. 600, 1968 Tenn. App. LEXIS 289 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1968).

Opinion

CARNEY, J.

The complainant below, Mrs. Vaughn Vick, is the widow of Edwin Vick who died intestate in Benton County on August 15, 1956. She brought suit in the Chancery Court of Benton County against her father-in-law, Gr. T. Vick, to gain title to a house and lot or in the alternative for a decree establishing her equity in said house and lot. The Chancellor found that the value of [602]*602the lot had been enhanced to the amount of $12,000 by the construction of a home. He gave judgment to the complainant for $12,000 less $3,700 balance due on a loan from the defendant to complainant’s husband leaving a net judgment of $8,300 with interest from the date of filing the bill. He also declared a lien on the house and lot and ordered a sale thereof. The defendant G. T. Vick, has appealed and assigned error.

The facts surrounding the erection of the home are not in controversy. The defendant, G. T. Vick, who is now 77 years of age, is a very substantial farmer of Benton County, Tennessee. He had two sons, Edwin G. Vick, husband of the complainant, and T. L. Vick who lives at Bruceton, Carroll County, Tennessee. The father and the two sons were engaged in farming and related enterprises such as the operation of a saw mill, bulldozer, hay baler, cotton, com and livestock. They operated in both Benton and Carroll County, Tennessee.

Shortly after the complainant, Vaughn Vick, and Edwin G. Vick were married on May 4,1946, it was decided that since the brother, T. L. Vick, was living in Bruceton, Carroll County, it might be better that Edwin G. Vick and the complainant, Vaughn Vick, move from Bruceton to the farm of G. T. Vick in Benton County for a more efficient business operation. Accordingly, they moved into a small farm house owned by the defendant, G. T. Vick. They lived in this small house for several years.

Edwin G. Vick and wife, Vaughn Vick, had two boys, the eldest bom in 1948 and the youngest born in December, 1951.

In the fall of 1952 Edwin G. Vick and wife, Vaughn Vick, desired a more comfortable dwelling than the mod[603]*603est cottage which they had been occupying. They had a fund saved up to build a house. The complainant testified that this fund, the exact amount is not shown, was in her name and that the father-in-law told her husband that if he would build close to Mr. and Mrs. G. T. Vick he would give them a deed to a building spot. There was complete harmony among the entire family unit. It was understood that in the division of Mr. Gr. T. Vick’s property Edwin 0-. Vick would receive the farm on which the new dwelling for Edwin Gr. Vick and complainant was to be built. A spot was selected across the road and near the dwelling of Mr. and Mrs. Gr. T. Vick. Fo request was made by Edwin G. Vick of his father for a deed to the lot on which the house was to be built.

The erection of the home was. somewhat a family enterprise. The brother, T. L. Vick, operated the bulldozer to dig out the basement; timber was cut from the lands of Mr. G. T. Vick and sawed to rough framing for the home; the costs of the finishing material and labor such as roof, sheetrock, doors, windows, heating, plumbing, etc. were paid by Edwin G. Vick and wife, Vaughn Vick. Edwin G. Vick and wife Vaughn, ran out of money and Edwin borrowed $5,500 from his father to complete the home.

The parties lived in the home from the spring of 1953 until August, 1956, when Edwin Vick died. Mrs. Vaughn Vick had worked at H. I. Siegel in Bruceton up until shortly before her oldest son was born in 1948 and she did not work any more until January, 1955, when she went back to work for Siegel. After the completion of the house and before his death in August, 1956, Edwin Vick repaid his father a total of $1,100 on the $5,500 loan.

[604]*604Mis. Vaughn Vick testified that during her husband’s last illness he instructed her to use the $5,000 insurance money which was hers to finish paying off the indebtedness to his father so that she would have a home. Mrs. Vaughn Vick testified that after her husband’s death she went to her father-in-law and asked the balance due on the loan to which he replied $4,400. She offered to pay him the balance of the $4,400 out of the insurance money and asked him for a deed to the property. She testified that Mr. Vick stated that he would not want to give her a deed to the property but would be willing to give her a deed to the property for her lifetime with remainder to her two children. He gave as his reason that she might sell the property to someone whom he would not like living there so close to him and Mrs. Vick or that she might marry someone else within a year or two and lose the property. After Mr. Vick refused to give her a deed to the property she asked him to pay her what she and her husband had invested in the property and likewise he refused to make any payment. Complainant suggested that she did not want to live in the house and that she wanted to move back to Bruceton near her work and to buy her a house that she could use as she pleased.

In August, 1957, Mrs. Vaughn Vick and her two children vacated the house and moved back to Bruceton, Tennessee, to live. Mr. Vick took immediate possession of the property and rented the house to a share cropper. He has had complete possession of the property continuously to the date of the trial. Negotiations between Mrs. Vaughn Vick and the defendant, Gf. T. Vick, remained at an impasse until shortly before the original bill was filed in this cause on August 14, 1963. Before filing the bill Mrs. Vaughn Vick and her eldest son, Dale Vick, had a [605]*605conference with Mr. Gr. T. Vick and asked him to pay them a total of $6,000 for their equity in the home, the complainant to receive $2,000 and each son to receive $2,000 to be held in a trust or guardian’s account. Mr. Gr. T. Vick replied to his grandson that he and his brother would get the property anyway. Mr. Vick steadfastly refused to make a deed to the property unless Mrs. Vaughn Vick would agree to accept a deed to her for life with remainder to her two children and agree to live in the house and rear her children there.

Upon the trial Mrs. Vick introduced proof by a building contractor that the lot was enhanced to the amount of $12,000 by the brick home which she and her husband had built. A great deal of the work such as painting, etc. was done by Mr. and Mrs. Vick personally. The defendant, G. T. Vick, testified that in his opinion the house was worth only about $10,000 instead of $12,000 but did not offer any other testimony to contradict the testimony of the builder that it would have cost $12,000 to build the home. The lot was never staked off on the ground but Mrs. Vick described a lot in her original bill as running northerly with the west side of the Bruceton-Big Sandy Road 300 feet; thence west 250 feet; thence south 300 feet; thence east 250 feet to the point of beginning being the northeast corner of a barn lot.

Mr. Vick stated that he never promised his son a deed but he did tell him, “I told him there was a location and if he wanted to build on it, it’s yours, go ahead and do it.” (Bill of Exceptions, page 99) Also he testified that if his son had, in his lifetime, asked him for a deed he probably would have executed one.

Upon the trial Mr. Vick reiterated that he was perfectly willing for Mrs. Vick to have a deed to the property for [606]*606her lifetime so long as it went to the two boys at her death and that he was also willing to cancel the remainder of Edwin’s debt which he made to finish building the house.

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Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 2001
Linder v. Little
490 S.W.2d 717 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1972)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
449 S.W.2d 717, 60 Tenn. App. 600, 1968 Tenn. App. LEXIS 289, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vick-v-vick-tennctapp-1968.