Warner v. Maroney

66 S.W.2d 244, 16 Tenn. App. 78, 1932 Tenn. App. LEXIS 40
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMay 27, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 66 S.W.2d 244 (Warner v. Maroney) 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
Warner v. Maroney, 66 S.W.2d 244, 16 Tenn. App. 78, 1932 Tenn. App. LEXIS 40 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

PORTRITM, J.

In the year 1919 Mrs. Margaret W. Jones, a widow, seventy years of age, lived upon her valuable farm of twelve hundred acres, in Monroe County, which she had inherited many years before from her ancestors. She was the mother of a large *80 family which is marked by tragedy; she was widowed by the murder of her husband, and some years later a son was murdered, and since her death the accused, Ole Bull Jones, was killed in an automobile accident, and since the institution of this lawsuit another son, Dr. Barkley J. Jones, his wife and an adopted child, were all murdered on Christmas Eve by a befriended negro servant who paid for the crime with his life.

Prior to the year 1919 Mrs. Jones had given an option on this farm to the Globe Realty Company, a firm engaged in the sale of real estate by auction, at a stipulated price of $50,000. She became dissatisfied with this agreement and thinking she was not bound by it she repudiated it. The Globe Realty Company sued her for damages for the breach of the contract, averring that the farm was worth. $75,000 and should have been sold by it for this su-m, and seeking to recover the difference in the contract price and the value of the farm, or the sum of $25,000. This suit was never successfully prosecuted, and is important now only as influencing the future action and conduct of Mrs. Jones.

lOle Bull Jones, a son of some prominence, and a resident of the City of Knoxville, possessed the confidence of his mother; he advised with her in reference to her business affairs. She -was a woman in poor health and had been suffering with a cancer for a number of years, and died with this malady in April, 1925. She suffered much from mental anguish on account of the murder of her husband and son.

On December 17, 1919, Mrs. Margaret W. Jones conveyed her farm to her son, Ole Bull Jones, for a recited consideration of $1000’ paid and the execution of a note, secured by a vendor’s lien, in the sum of $39,000, due fifteen years from date, or in December, 1934, and without interest before maturity. At this time another son was living upon the farm and operating it, and Mrs. Jones was dissatisfied with the management and conduct of this son. Ole Bull Jones took control of the farm, but his mother remained upon the farm and collected and paid over proceeds from the farm. This deed was a warranty deed and covenanted against encumbrance; but at the time the land was encumbered by a mortgage of over $14,000 in favor of the Union Central Life Insurance Company; $1.0,000 of this money had been raised by Mrs. Jones for her son, Lara J. Jones, who lived in Louisiana, and was loaned to him by his mother upon his note in order to set him up in business. This farm was the principal, if not the sole valuable asset of Mrs. Jones, but perhaps she considered the note of her son Lara as a valuable asset and expected the proceeds from this note to discharge $10,000 of the mortgage against the farm. Later, Lara *81 claims to have paid a part of this note, and the balance of the debt was forgiven him, by his mother.

This deed was withheld from the record in the Register’s office nntil 1922 or 1923, when Mrs. Jones wrote to her son, Ole Bull Jones, and suggested that the deed be then registered. After the receipt of this letter the grantee registered the deed.

From the date of the execution of the deed up until the death of the mother in 1925, Ole Bull Jones made certain payments on the note, which are credited upon the back of the note and signed by Mrs. Jones, notwithstanding no payments were due, aggregating more than $18,000. Upon these credits Ole Bull Jones claims interest from the date of the payments.

On March 7, 1924, Mrs. Margaret W. Jones executed her will; she gave her son, Ole Bull Jones, the sum of $5, and under the third clause she gave to her three sons, Barkley J. Jones, Lara J. Jones, and Maultrie Jones, and her two daughters, Katherine J. Warner and Deva Jones Maroney, and a granddaughter, Barkley Kennedy, share and share alike all her property of every nature, description and kind, real, personal and mixed, wheresoever situated, located or to be found. In the fourth clause she recited that she had conveyed to Charles C. Jones, another son, a farm in Monroe County, containing approximately four hundred acres, and for this reason no provision was made for his widow and children in the will. Under the fifth clause she appointed Ole Bull Jones the executor and expressly excused him from giving bond.

Mrs. Margaret W. Jones died in 1925, and Ole Bull Jones qualified as here executor. He entered upon the administration of her estate in the County Court of Knox County, Mrs. Jones at the time of her death being a resident of Kinox County.

More than two years later, or on December 35, 3926, Maultrie Jones filed a bill in the Chancery Court of Knox County against Ole Bull Jones as executor of the will of Margaret W. Jones, and in his individual capacity, and making all the beneficiaries under the will of Margaret W. Jones defendants, charging that Margaret W. Jones died testate in Knox County, setting out the will in full; and that Ole Bull Jones, as the executor named in said will, had made an improper disposition of the personal property of the estate at a sale of the property. Further alleging the estate owned or should own a note executed by Ole Bull Jones to Margaret W. Jones on the 17th day of December, 1919, in the sum of $39,000. due and payable fifteen years from date. And the note was a lien against the large and valuable farm situated in Monroe County, describing it. The bill charged that no part of this note had ever been paid and that Ole Bull Jones was seeking to cover up, hide and conceal the assets of the estate for the purpose of *82 rendering the interest of the complainant worthless. The bill further alleges that the executor “is actually claiming to have paid on the note due from him to the estate the sum of $18,875.” This claim on the part of the executor is charged to be. false and fraudulent and made for the purpose of cheating and defrauding the beneficiaries under the will. And by reason of the illegal and fraudulent designs of Ole Bull Jones there is danger that the valuable estate of Margaret AY. Jones, which should in truth and in fact be worth no less than $40,000, will be rendered insolvent and that he should be required to give a sufficient bond or be removed from his trust. And it is charged that if the estate be allowed to pend in the County Court until 1934, and the executor holding both possession of the note and the farm securing the same, he will in time so manipulate and destroy same as to render the interest for the beneficiaries under the will entirely worthless. The bill alleges that it was filed for the purpose of having all the rights of interest of all the parties entitled to benefits under said bill adjudicated and settled. The bill sought to have the administration of the estate removed from the County Court to the Chancery Court, and the sale of the undue note for immediate distribution. The bill was signed and sworn to by the complainant, Maultrie Jones, and subpoenas were issued and served upon the defendants with the exception of one, who was a non-resident, and publication was made for this one.

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Bluebook (online)
66 S.W.2d 244, 16 Tenn. App. 78, 1932 Tenn. App. LEXIS 40, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/warner-v-maroney-tennctapp-1932.