Young v. Wiggs

13 Tenn. App. 522, 1931 Tenn. App. LEXIS 91
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMay 8, 1931
StatusPublished

This text of 13 Tenn. App. 522 (Young v. Wiggs) 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
Young v. Wiggs, 13 Tenn. App. 522, 1931 Tenn. App. LEXIS 91 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

SENTER, J.

The original bill filed in this cause, which is very elaborate, alleges in substance that complainant placed with the defendant certain land notes for collection; that the defendant was then and is a practicing attorney at Linden, Perry County, Tennessee; that these several notes placed with the defendant, as her attorney, for collection, amounted in the aggregate to the sum of $6,922 with interest at the rate of 6% per annum from date, the interest payable annually, and provided for attorneys fees. These several notes represented the purchase price for certain lands con *523 veyed to P. A. Beasley, et al., that said land notes were first placed with another attorney, Mr. Jno. Greer, for collection, and were subsequently placed with the defendant. The bill alleges that certain amounts were paid on the notes, to the former attorney, amounting in all to about $700'; and that two payments, one for the sum of $1200, paid on January 11, 1918, and one for the sum of $800 paid on May 1, 1919, were paid to the defendant as her attorney, according to the information of complainant. The bill alleges that the complainant has never properly accounted to her for the amounts collected by him on said notes, and that he has abused her confidence, and has taken advantage of her, and that he has been guilty of gross fraud and deception in handling her affairs as her attorney. The bill alleges that the defendant has purchased the lands from Beasley, and now claims to be the owner of the lands under two separate deeds, the first conveying a one-half undivided interest to him, and subsequently a deed from Beasley to defendant conveying the other one-half undivided interest, and that the defendant, still has in his possession the notes which she turned over to him for collection and that he has not accounted to her for the notes, or for the collections made on the same. The original bill charges gross fraud upon the part of the defendant.

The bill further alleges that in addition to the lands notes which she turned over to the defendant for collection, that under the provisions of the will of her deceased husband she was given a life estate in a farm at Pope, Tennessee, and that her son, Sam P. Young, was given a life estate in said farm, subject to the life estate of complainant. The bill alleges that in 1919 she and her son sold the life estate in this last mentioned property to one "W. C. Nix for the sum of $2500, and that this money was paid by Nix to the defendant, as her attorney. The bill avers, however, that about the time of the sale of the life estate in this farm to Nix she purchased a small home in Jackson, Tennessee, for the sum of $2,000, and that the defendant assisted her in paying for same and that it is probable that the $2500 was used in part in paying for the home in Jackson, and that the defendant has not accounted for the balance of the money received by him from Nix. She charges that the land notes had been in possession of the defendant since they were originally turned over to him in 1917 or 1918. The bill alleges that the records in the Register’s office of Perry County, Tennessee, disclose a certain instrument which purports to be a quit-claim deed from complainant to defendant of all her interest in the farm sold to Beasley, said instrument dated January 4, 1922. Complainant states that she has no recollection of signing or acknowledging such an instrument, and if she did so the *524 contents of same were not made known to her, and she was misled, deceived and defrauded by defendant and induced to sign and acknowledge an instrument the contents of which were not explained to her, nor which she understood, and that she would not have signed same had she known what it contained. She alleges that she had confidence in the defendant and relied upon him to treat her properly and fairly. The bill alleges that she is an uneducated woman and that the defendant took advantage of her ignorance and weakness. The bill further alleges that she did not know of the existence of such an instrument until shortly before she filed the bill when she was informed that the same had been recorded in the Register’s Office of Perry County.

The bill further alleges that she had recently discovered that the records of Perry County showed that on January 4, 1922, the defendant and his wife executed a trust deed to "W. C. Nix, as trustee, to secure the complainant in the sum of $2282.18. She alleges in the bill that she did not understand at the time that said trust deed was upon the Beasley farm, and that she did not know until recently that the defendant even claimed to be the owner of said farm, and alleges that she did not know or understand that this purported to be a settlement for, or even a payment upon the said Beasley notes. She alleges that said sum of $2282.18 was only a small portion of the amount due her upon said Beasley notes and owing to her by defendant from other sources at the time the said trust deed was given, and that if said trust deed purports to correctly recite the amount actually due by defendant to complainant as of date January 4, 1922, said recitation is false and does not correctly set forth the true agreement between the parties. The bill alleges that since said date of January 4, 1922, the defendant has made several payments of $25 each to her, but she does not know how many payments nor when same were made, but that the defendant, has discontinued making any payments to her. She denies that the defendant had ever made any settlement with her and denies that he has rendered any legal service to her at her instance or request, or that he is entitled to any credit upon any of said notes or any other indebtedness, except his commission upon the amount turned over to her.

By the prayer of the bill she prays that the defendant be required to produce all notes, papers and receipts which he has in his possession and which in any way relates to the transactions between the parties; that the court decree that said Beasley notes amounting to $6922, together with all accrued interest thereon, be decreed to be in full force and effect and due and unpaid, and that the lien to secure same be decreed to be valid, outstanding and *525 unreleased and the complainant have a decree against defendant for the full amount thereof with interest; that the court decree that the purported quit claim deed of January 4, 1922, he decreed a fraud and a nullity; that it he further decreed that the conveyances from P. A. Beasley to the defendant vested the title in • defendant as trustee only for complainant, and that he now holds said lands as trustee for complainant; that the defendant be required to make a full accounting for all rents and profits and income received by him directly or indirectly and that she be given a decree against him for the same, with interest thereon; that it be' decreed that the trust deed of date January 4, 1922, is and was from its date void and of no effect, and that it be held that the same was a part of the fraudulent scheme of defendant to deprive complainant of her just rights and her property. She prayed for writs of attachment and injunction to restrain the defendant or his agents from collecting any further rents or from selling or encumbering said property, and for a receiver to take charge of said property to rent out and collect the rents and to care for the same.

The original bill was filed on November 23, 1928. The subpoena to answer was issued on November 27th, and was served on the defendant on December 13, 1928.

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Bluebook (online)
13 Tenn. App. 522, 1931 Tenn. App. LEXIS 91, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/young-v-wiggs-tennctapp-1931.