Woodard v. Bruce

339 S.W.2d 143, 47 Tenn. App. 525, 1960 Tenn. App. LEXIS 88
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedFebruary 26, 1960
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 339 S.W.2d 143 (Woodard v. Bruce) 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
Woodard v. Bruce, 339 S.W.2d 143, 47 Tenn. App. 525, 1960 Tenn. App. LEXIS 88 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1960).

Opinion

CARNEY, J.

The Chancellor sustained the original bill filed by the complainant below, Edna "Woodard, in *528 which, she sought cancellation of a $3,500 note and deed of trust on her home and an injunction against foreclosure under said trust, on the grounds of fraud.

The defendant, Floyd Bruce, is a contractor who did certain repairs on the house and lot of Edna Woodard for which she executed and delivered to him her promissory note in the amount of $3,500 drawing interest at 6% per annum payable at $35 per month and secured by a deed of trust on her house and lot in Memphis, Tennessee. Defendant Godwin, a note broker, paid $2,149 to Bruce for the note and in turn sold the note to the defendant, Sarah Sauer, on the same day for $2,500.

The complainant, Edna Woodard, colored, is a widow occupying a small frame dwelling at 1098 Pearce Street in Memphis, Tennessee, where she has lived for over twenty-five years maintaining her feeble-minded son. The complainant is somewhere close to 55 years of age and is of very poor mentality herself. She testified that her husband had been dead ten years when as a matter of fact he had been dead over twenty-five years.

Her income consisted of $50 per month welfare payment from the State of Tennessee for the benefit of her and her feeble-minded son. She also was the owner of about $1,000 in stock in the Union Protective Insurance Company, a Negro insurance and burial company. The record does not indicate any income from this stock, however.

The little frame dwelling which she occupied had two rooms upstairs which she had been accustomed to renting from time to time to roomers for $5 per week each. Sometimes she collected the rent and sometimes she didn’t.

*529 The City of Memphis, under its urban renewal program, notified Edna Woodard that a considerable amount of repairs would have to be done to her home. Within just a few days the defendant, Floyd Bruce, appeared upon the scene and solicited the contract of making the repairs for her. In collaboration with the defendant, Godwin, he prepared a contract to do the repairs for the price of $3,500 to he secured by a note and trust on the house and lot drawing interest at 6% per annum and payable to the order of Bearer at the rate of $35 per month.

The work started sometime about the first of June and was completed on the thirteenth of June. On this same date the defendant, Godwin, note broker, through his attorney, sold the note and trust to the defendant, Mrs. Sarah Sauer, for $2,500 and paid the contractor, Bruce, the sum of $2,149 out of the proceeds of sale of the note.

Edna Woodard paid about four monthly payments of $35 each on the note and then ran out of money. Foreclosure proceedings had been instituted when her attorney filed suit in the present case seeking an injunction against foreclosure and a cancellation of the note and deed of trust alleging fraud and usury on the part of the defendants, Godwin and Bruce, and alleging that the defendant, Mrs. Sarah Sauer, was not a purchaser in good faith without notice of the defects in title.

The original bill averred that the complainant was mentally weak and that she was imposed upon by the joint conduct of the defendants, Godwin and Bruce. The bill also averred that the actual value of the work done by the defendant, Bruce, in making repairs to the complainant’s *530 home is far less than the $3,500 contract price and worth more nearly $700.

The defendant, Godwin, contended that he was not a party to the contract and simply purchased the note from Bruce without knowledge of any fraud or overreaching. Likewise the defendant, Sarah Sauer, contended that she was a bonafide purchaser of the note and trust for value without notice from the defendant, Godwin.

The Chancellor found that the defendants, Bruce and Godwin, were engaged in a joint venture; that the complainant, Edna Woodard, was mentally weak and was imposed upon and taken advantage of by the defendants, Bruce and Godwin, and that the contract price of $3,500 was greatly in excess of the actual value of the services rendered and therefore that such contract was so tainted with fraud that the note and deed of trust should be can-celled and set aside.

The Chancellor further found that the defendant, Sarah Sauer, had failed to carry the burden of proof of showing that she was a holder in due course without notice of defect in said promissory note and deed of trust as provided by T.C.A. sec. 47-159. Accordingly, the Chancellor made permanent the injunction against foreclosure, ordered the note and deed of trust cancelled and ordered a reference to determine the amount of money actually due and owing by Edna Woodard to Mrs. Sarah Sauer on the basis of quantum meruit, namely, the fair and reasonable value of the repairs and improvements actually made to her home by the defendant, Bruce, and declared a lien on the property to the extent of the amount to be determined upon said reference.

*531 The defendants, Bruce and Godwin, perfected their appeals to this court and the defendant, Sarah Sauer, filed the record for writ of error in lieu of an appeal.

The defendant, Floyd Bruce, has filed thirteen assignments of error and the defendant, E. H. G-odwin, has adopted the assignments of error of the defendant, Bruce, Godwin has also added the additional assignment that the court erred in finding that the defendants, Bruce and Godwin, perpetrated a fraud on the defendant, Edna Woodard.

We do not deem it necessary to discuss all thirteen assignments of error separately. Basically, it is the contention of Bruce and Godwin as follows: That Bruce, the contractor, made a valid contract with Edna Woodard, which she understood and signed, to do the repairs and improvements on her home in accordance with the requirements of the City of Memphis at the price of $3,500 which was at least $1,000 in excess of what the defendant, Bruce, says would be the cash price of such repairs; that the $3,500 or credit charge was necessary because the loan came in the category called “substandard loans”; that Mr. Bruce was unable to carry his own paper and that it was necessary that he make arrangements with Mr. Godwin, as he had done on other occasions, to dispose of this paper for him and therefore, he had an arrangement with Mr. Godwin to take this paper at approximately $2,400; that the defendant, Bruce, did make the repairs in accordance with the contract, sold the note to Godwin as agreed upon, receiving a total consideration of only $2,149 therefor, and that he, Bruce, was not guilty of any fraud and should be hence dismissed.

*532 It is the contention of Mr. Godwin that he is not a contractor bnt engaged in the business of buying and selling notes; that he was concerned only with getting a good title to the note and deed of trust; that he told Mr. Bruce that he would handle the note when the repairs were completed and the title to the property cleared and certified; that he, Godwin, does not hold the notes which he buys until maturity but that he sells them to his several customers and that he sold this particular note of Edna Woodard to Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
339 S.W.2d 143, 47 Tenn. App. 525, 1960 Tenn. App. LEXIS 88, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/woodard-v-bruce-tennctapp-1960.