Opinion
Opinion delivered May 20, 1929.
1. APPEAL AND ERROR — CONCLUSIVENESS OF CHANCELLOR'S FINDING. — A finding of a chancellor, not against the preponderance of the evidence, will be sustained on appeal. 2. PARTNERSHIP — REAL ESTATE. — Real estate, purchased for partnership purposes, paid for with partnership funds, and held and used as partnership property, will be treated as personalty and as partnership property, regardless of the manner of acquisition and in whose name the title is held; the holder of the legal title being considered a trustee for the partnership. 3. DEEDS — MENTAL WEAKNESS. — Mental weakness, though not to the extent of incapacity to execute a deed, may render a person more susceptible to fraud, duress or undue influence, and, when coupled with any of these, or even with unfairness, such as great inadequacy of consideration, may make an instrument voidable, when neither such weakness nor any other of these things alone would do so. 4. DEEDS — UNDUE INFLUENCE. — Evidence held to sustain the chancellor's finding that a deed from his mother to defendant was invalid on account of undue influence and mental incompetency.
Appeal from Woodruff Chancery Court, Central District; A. L. Hutchins, Chancellor; affirmed.
E. M. CarlLee and W. J. Dungan, for appellant.
Jonas F. Dyson, for appellee.
STATEMENT OF FACTS.
Tori Cain Mitchell brought a suit in equity against A. D. Cain and others to cancel and set aside a deed executed to A. D. Cain, and that she be assigned a certain share of the lands as one of the heirs of her deceased father, to whom the lands originally belonged. A. D. Cain defended the suit on the ground that he had title to the land in controversy. Subsequently Mrs. Susan Cain brought suit in equity against A. D. Cain to set aside certain conveyances that she had made to him, on the ground that they had been procured by undue influence, and that she was mentally incompetent to execute said deeds. The cases were consolidated and tried together.
The lands originally belonged to N. N. Cain, who died intestate in Woodruff County, Arkansas, on the 10th day of April, 1920, leaving surviving him his widow, Mrs. Susan Cain, and W. R. Cain, Tori Cain Mitchell, A. D. Cain and J. I. Cain, as his children and heirs at law. J. I. Cain died intestate, leaving surviving him two children, who are made parties to the action.
N. N. Cain engaged in the general mercantile business in Woodruff County, Arkansas, and took his son, W. R. Cain, into partnership with him while he was yet a minor. The partnership accumulated certain lands in Woodruff County, which are the subject-matter of this lawsuit. When W. R. Cain became of age the partnership was dissolved, and he was paid a certain amount of money for his interest therein. According to his testimony, his father took in A. D. Cain, a younger son, as a partner after the dissolution of the firm. According to the testimony of A. D. Cain, while he was yet a minor he was taken into the firm as a member thereof at the time his father bought out the interest of his son, W. R. Cain, in the partnership.
Some time after the death of his father, A. D. Cain went into the home of his mother, and lived there. In December, 1921, while he was living with her on the home place, she executed to him a deed to two tracts of land which are embraced in this lawsuit, and which his mother is endeavoring to set aside. Some time after the deed was executed to A. D. Cain, he moved out of his mother's home, but continued to reside in a home near by until she died in December, 1926. According to his testimony, he furnished his mother supplies out of his store and took care of her until she died, and his mother was mentally competent to execute a deed in December, 1921, at the time she executed the deeds in question to him. According to the testimony of W. R. Cain, his mother was not mentally competent to execute a deed in December, 1921. When his mother died, he paid her doctor's bill and funeral expenses. According to the testimony of the physicians who attended Mrs. Susan Cain in December, 1921, she was not right mentally, and had senile dementia. He did not consider her mentally capable of transacting her own business. Other evidence will be stated or referred to in the opinion.
The chancellor found that the lands embraced in the suit brought by Tori Cain Mitchell against A. D. Cain were partnership lands, and belonged to the partnership composed of N. N. Cain and A. D. Cain. The court found that A. D. Cain was the owner of an undivided five-eighths interest in said lands, one-half as the surviving partner of the firm which owned the lands and the other one-eighth as one of the four heirs of N. N. Cain, deceased, who owned an undivided one-half interest in said lands by virtue of the partnership. The court also found that W. R. Cain was the owner of an undivided one-eighth interest, and that Tori Cain Mitchell was the owner of an undivided one-eighth interest, and that the heirs of J. I. Cain, deceased, had an undivided one-eighth interest. A decree was entered in accordance with the findings of the chancellor in this respect.
The court also found that the deeds from Susan Cain to A. D. Cain should be set aside because Susan Cain was incompetent to execute deeds thereto. The case is here on appeal.
(after stating the facts). The decree dismissing the complaint of Tori Cain Mitchell was correct. The lands sought to be recovered in that suit were partnership lands belonging to a firm composed of N. N. Cain and A. D. Cain. It is true that, according to the evidence adduced by the plaintiff, these lands belonged to N. N. Cain, and A. D. Cain did not become a member of the firm while the lands in question belonged to the partnership. In other words, according to the evidence of the plaintiff, Tori Cain Mitchell, the firm of N. N. Cain and his son, W. R. Cain, was dissolved, and the lands in question became the individual lands of N. N. Cain. According to the testimony of A. D. Cain, he became a member of the firm at the time his father purchased the interest of W. R. Cain, and the lands continued to belong to the partnership. The chancellor found this issue of fact in favor of A. D. Cain, and it cannot be said that his finding is against the preponderance of the evidence.
Real estate purchased for partnership purposes, paid for with partnership funds, and held and used as partnership property, will be treated as personalty for the purposes of the partnership, and as partnership property, regardless of the manner or by what agency it is bought and in whose name the title is held. The holder of the legal title will be considered a trustee for the partnership. Cain v. Hubble, 184 Ky. 38, 211 S.W. 413, 6 A.L.R. 146. This is the legal effect of our own decisions bearing on the question. Perciful v. Platt, 36 Ark. 456; Lenow v. Fones, 48 Ark. 557, 4 S.W. 56; and Lewis v. Buford, 93 Ark. 57, 124 S.W. 244.
The evidence warranted the chancellor in finding that the lands in question were purchased by the firm composed of N. N. Cain and W. R. Cain, and that A. D. Cain became a member of that firm at the time N. N. Cain bought the interest of W. R. Cain, and that the lands continued to be partnership lands. Hence A. D. Cain became the owner of an undivided one-half interest in these lands by virtue of the partnership and of an undivided one-eighth interest in them as one of the four heirs of his deceased father. The court correctly held that he was entitled to an undivided five-eighths interest in said lands.
A. D. Cain seeks to reverse the decree setting aside the deeds to certain lands from his mother to himself which were executed in December, 1921. The law relating to transactions of this sort is well settled in this State. Mental weakness, although not to the extent of incapacity to execute a deed, may "render a person more susceptible of fraud, duress, or undue influence, and, when coupled with any of them, or even with unfairness, such as great inadequacy of consideration, may make a contract voidable, when neither such weakness nor any of these other things alone would do so." Pledger v. Birkhead, 156 Ark. 443, 246 S.W. 510, and cases cited; and West v. Whittle, 84 Ark. 491, 106 S.W. 955. See also Phillips v. Phillips, 173 Ark. 1, 291 S.W. 802; Campbell v. Lux, 146 Ark. 397, 225 S.W. 653. In the case last cited the court said that gross inadequacy of price, although not controlling, is a circumstance to be given much weight in deciding an issue of this kind.
In the present case the record shows that A. D. Cain had moved into the house of his mother at the time she executed the deed to him in December, 1921. It is true that he testified that she was mentally competent, and that there was no consideration for the deed except the one dollar which was recited in the deed. He testified, however, that he furnished his mother with supplies from that time until the time of her death in 1926, and generally looked after her after he moved out of her home. The fact remains, however, that he moved out of the house soon after she executed the deeds to him, and that he never paid her doctor's bill nor any part of her funeral expenses. While he paid the taxes on the lands, he received the rents and profits from them, and some of the witnesses testified that it was understood that he was to support his mother and care for her until she died. She was old and helpless at the time she executed the deeds, and doubtless did so with the expectation that her son would continue to live with her and cadre for her until she died. The chancellor found that he did not do so, however; and the evidence shows that she suffered much from neglect during the last two years before she died. Under these circumstances it cannot be said that the chancellor erred in finding this issue against A. D. Cain and in decreeing that the deeds executed to him by his mother, Mrs. Susan Cain, in December, 1921, to the lands in controversy, should be canceled and set aside.
We find no reversible error in the decree of the chancery court, and it will therefore in all things be affirmed.