Williams v. Buntin

4 Tenn. App. 340, 1927 Tenn. App. LEXIS 193
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedFebruary 19, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 4 Tenn. App. 340 (Williams v. Buntin) 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
Williams v. Buntin, 4 Tenn. App. 340, 1927 Tenn. App. LEXIS 193 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

PAW, P. J.

This suit was brought in the chancery court of Davidson county, Part II, on January 5, 1925, by Mrs. Ida Flynn Williams and her husband J. T. Williams against W. A. Buntin, administrator of the estate of Mrs. Rachel Craighead, deceased, Mrs. Elsie C. Buntin, Thomas C. Biintin, May Winston Buntin and Fourth and First Bank and Trust Company, trustee. The defendant May Winston Buntin is a minor represented by guardian ad litem.

On final hearing- in the chancery court a decree was entered (on September 18, 1925) in favor of the complainants, granting to them the relief prayed for in the bill, and the defendants thereupon prayed, *342 obtained and perfected an appeal to this court and have assigned errors here.

The “finding of facts and opinion,” filed as a part of the record, contains a clear statement of the material issues made by the pleadings, and also the Chancellor’s conclusions of fact and law, and is in full as follows:

“This is a proceeding to recover twenty-six thousand three hundred dollars ($26,300) damages for breach of a contract by Mrs. Rachael A. Craighead, deceased, evidenced by a letter, to bequeath and devise in her will, certain property to Mrs. Williams, and to set aside certain conveyances as voluntary and void as against said indebtedness.

Defendants insist that the contract was mutually abandoned and annulled by the parties; that it is ineffectual, inoperative and voidable under the statute of frauds, which they plead and rely upon. They admit the conveyances attacked were voluntary and void as against bona fide creditors who cannot otherwise be satisfied from the assets of M|rs. Craighead’s estate, and aver their willingness and ability to pay any judgment complainant may recover against said estate, without the necessity of setting aside any of said conveyances or selling any of the real estate.

The controlling and determinative facts and the legal principles conceived to be applicable thereto, follow:

Mrs. Rachel A. Craighead,.deceased, was a daughter of Mrs. Daniel Carter, born December 11, 1838, and died February 24, 1924. She was a lady of fine social standing and abundant means. In 1859 she married Thos. D. Craig'head and became a childless widow in 1898. From about 1873 to 1907 — the date of her mother’s death— she and her mother lived together in a fine old mansion in the 'City of Nashville, and at their summer home “Rock Rest,” in Robertson county, Tennessee. Mrs. Carter, her mother, was possessed of a large estate which she at one 'time disposed of by will, but in 1901, she conveyed by deed all of her property to her only child, Mrs. Craighead.

Mrs. Craighead’s Nashville residence -was. converted into business property in 1913, and from that period to her death, she made her home part *of the time with her adopted son, Daniel C. Buntin, in the winter, and from .May to late in the fall at Rock Rest. She had a large estate, worth about five hundred thousand dollars, which she conveyed in trust, and in part to her.adopted son and his wife. The annual income therefrom was about twenty thousand dollars. Her .adopted.son’s health failed two or three years before his death in 1923, and thereafter Mjrs. Craighead relied upon her cousin and adopted son’s brother, Allison Buntin, and his lifelong friend Mr. James E. Caldwell, for guidance and advice in her business affairs.

*343 Állison Bnntin, Mr. Caldwell and Mrs. Elsie C. Buntin, testified that Mrs. Craighead was mentally unsound from July or the late fall of 1923 to her death, in 1924, while Mrs. Williams testified that she was mentally unsound and incapable of attending to her business from the summer or fall of 1922 to her death.

In 1873, Mrs. Craighead took into her home Ida Flynn, an orphan, who was then twelve years old, and she continued a member of the family until she was twenty-one years old in 1882, when she went to West Tennessee to teach in the public schools at Kenton. Mjrs. Craighead sent Miss Flynn to the public schools in Nashville and she graduated from the Hume High School and took an A. B. degree at Peabody College in 1882. Miss Flynn was married to J. T. Williams of Texas in 1903, at Bock Best, and Mrs. Craighead gave a grand reception and a chest of silver as a marriage present. Thereafter Mrs. Williams, with the exception of the summers of 1910 and 1916, was a guest at Mrs. Craighead’s home up to the year 1923.

In the spring of 1898, Mrs. Craighead’s husband was taken ill, and in MJhy of that year died. Mrs. Williams, who was then connected with a private school at Kenton, came to Nashville and remained with Mrs. Craighead until after the death of her husband. After Mrs. Williams returned to Kenton from this visit she received a letter from Mrs. Craighead, which is the basis of this lawsuit, and .is in the words and figures following:

“Nashville, Tenn.
“June 7, 1898.
“My dear Ida—
“I know you are making money on your school, but I want to make you a business proposition too.
“We are lonely in this big house, and afraid especially at night. We couldn’t bear to bring a stranger ifi, and you are the only unattached female in the family — so if you will consider this and give up your school, and come to make your home with Ma & I for three or four years, I will compensate you, handsomely.
I will leave you in my will my little store on the south side ■ of the Public Square, near College st. — and I will give you $250 or $300 every year for spending money, as long as I am able to do so. I will also leave you my rosewood bed-room set and give you my handsome opal and diamond ring — and the emerald and diamond ring (three stones) that I always wear.
“By being our companion I do not mean that you have to spend every day and hour with us. You will be free to go and come as you wish — 'just so you take care of us — as you would your own — you see we are always afraid in this big house and ’dreary — you always cheer us up.
*344 “Now before you decide I want you to consult Mr. Clark. Ask Daisey or any close friend — entre nous, but do not make my business public.
“Can’t you close up down there and come to us by July 1st for good? You know Mary Harris is going to be with us in the country — that will make you happy — ■
‘ ‘ God bless and guide you my dear Ida. I am anxious to have you with us, and you will never regret it.
“With love—
“Your true friend,
“Miss Puss — ”

In response to this letter, Mfcs. Williams returned to Nashville and lived with Mrs. Craighead until 1902 — the term prescribed in the letter. During these four years she was away from Mrs. Craighead’s home for some time in Columbia, Tennessee, and in Colorado, but her absence was with the full knowledge and consent of Mrs. Ci'aighead.

Daniel C. Buntin was a first cousin of Mrs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
4 Tenn. App. 340, 1927 Tenn. App. LEXIS 193, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-buntin-tennctapp-1927.