Victory v. Victory

399 S.W.2d 332, 55 Tenn. App. 264, 1965 Tenn. App. LEXIS 255
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJuly 30, 1965
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 399 S.W.2d 332 (Victory v. Victory) 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
Victory v. Victory, 399 S.W.2d 332, 55 Tenn. App. 264, 1965 Tenn. App. LEXIS 255 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1965).

Opinion

[266]*266I.

THE CASE

SHRIVER, J.

Complainants below, James F. Victory, et als., five children of Mrs. Lillie M. Victory deceased, filed the original bill in the Chancery Court of Rutherford County against the defendant J. W. Victory, another son of decedent, and Wilkes Coffey, Jr., as her executor, seeking a declaration that a certificate of 1,000 shares of preferred stock in Tennessee Farmers Cooperative belonged to the estate of decedent and not to the defendant, J. W. Victory, individually.

Under the will of Mrs. Victory her property was divided equally among her children with the exception of a small specific legacy to one of them. However, after her death it was discovered that she had caused her checking account at the bank and her savings account and the stock certificate in question be changed from her name individually, to the name of herself and the defendant J. W. Victory jointly.

The defendant disclaimed the bank account and the savings account and turned them over to the executor, but he asserted ownership of the stock certificate, taking the position in the Court below that the shares represented thereby were the subject of a valid gift inter vivos from his mother to himself.

The cause was heard before Honorable John D. Templeton, Chancellor, who held there was no valid gift inter vivos but that the stock, nevertheless, belonged to the defendant as a third party donee beneficiary of a contract between the issuing corporation and Mrs. Victory, the original owner.

[267]*267From this decree the complainants below appealed and have assigned errors.

Defendant below J. W. Victory has also assigned error on the part of the Chancellor in failing to hold that the shares in question constituted a valid gift inter vivos.

II

MOTION TO DISMISS

On the date of the oral argument in this case the ap-pellee, J. W. Victory, filed a motion to dismiss the appeal and affirm the judgment below on the ground that the executor of Mrs. Victory having assumed the duty of asserting ownership of the stock certificate in controversy, he alone had the right to maintain a suit for that purpose.

Thereupon, Wilkes Coffey, Jr., Executor, filed a motion to be substituted as appellant in this cause or, in the alternative, to he added as one of the appellants.

The attorneys for the respective parties have filed briefs and arguments on this question.

It is to he noted, in the first place, that this is not a possessory action hut is a bill for a declaratory judgment, and, under Section 23-1105 T.O.A., any person interested as devisee, legatee, heir or next of kin in the estate of a decedent may have a declaration of rights or legal relations in respect thereto for the purpose of directing the personal representative to do a particular act in his fiduciary capacity or to determine any question arising in the administration of the estate, and, distributees and legatees have a right to obtain a declaratory judgment as to distribution of an estate by making the personal representative a party. Sadler v. Mitchell, 162 Tenn. 363, [268]*26836 S.W.(2d) 891; Cummings v. Shipp, 156 Tenn. 595, 3 S.W.(2d) 1062.

The motion to dismiss the appeal and affirm the judgment below is denied. The motion of the executor to be allowed to become a party appellant is granted.

Ill

THE FACTS

The dispute herein arose after the death of Mrs. Victory when it'was discovered that she had caused her checking account in the bank and her savings account and a certificate of 1,000 shares of preferred stock in Tennessee Farmers Cooperative at Lavergne, Tennessee, worth about $10,000.00, to be changed from her name to that of herself and/or her son, J. W. Victory.

As hereinabove stated, the son disclaimed the bank accounts, although they were made out as joint and survivor accounts, but he insisted on ownership of the certificate.

The bill was filed against the son, J. W. Victory, and the Executor by six of Mrs. Victory’s eight children. The main tenor of the bill is that the son procured the re-issuance of this stock with his name on it by fraud and undue influence and at a time when a confidential relationship existed between him and his mother, so that the transaction was void, and that, in any event, there was no valid gift inter vivos.

The defendant denies any undue influence and relies on the gift as being good.

The Chancellor pointed out that if these issues were the only ones involved the defendant would be cast, because, although there was no fraud, there was no valid [269]*269gift inter vivos. The Chancellor’s opinion then goes on to state that, with great deference to the parties, it is believed that the canse turns on another and different principle, to wit, that the transaction was a contract for the benefit of the defendant under which he became the owner of the stock when his mother died.

The opinion then sets out a resume of the proof which we adopt as follows:

“For many years prior to 1958 the defendant, J. W. Victory, was in equal partnership with his father, J. J. Victory, in the construction business. In 1958 the partners made an agreement that in event of a partner’s death the survivor would buy the deceased partner’s share of the business from his estate for $10,000.00. To assure the performance of the agreement, life insurance was taken out in the amount of $10,000.00 on the life of each partner payable to the survivor. The written agreement is unique in that it appears to take no account of what a partner’s interest might be worth at his death. Mrs. Victory has the moving spirit in the making of the contract.
After the agreement was made Mr. and Mrs. Victory became estranged on account of the alleged scandalous conduct of Mr. Victory. The defendant confirmed to his mother the father’s misconduct while the other children discounted or denied the report. Partly because of this Mrs. Victory became much provoked and even bitter toward her other children and more attached to the defendant. Theretofore, she had been critical of the defendant about the conduct of the partnership business and especially disliked his wife.
In 1959 the father died suddenly. The defendant collected the $10,000.00 life insurance and used it to [270]*270purchase the interest of his father in the business. He lived up to the agreement and took no account of what the interest of the deceased partner was worth or how much the worth of it had been diminished by excess withdrawals. Mrs. Victory was the object of Mr. Victory’s bounty and came into possession of about $20,-000.00 in cash, the home place, and perhaps other property when the estate was wound up in 1960. Even after her husband’s death she remained hostile for some time toward all of her children except the defendant but she later became reconciled with at least some of them.
Mr. Coffey, the Executor of her will, was her lawyer and she consulted him regularly. He testified in this case for the complainants and for himself as Executor of Mrs. Victory’s will.
Mr. Coffey advised Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
399 S.W.2d 332, 55 Tenn. App. 264, 1965 Tenn. App. LEXIS 255, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/victory-v-victory-tennctapp-1965.