Anderson v. Akard

83 Tenn. 182
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1885
StatusPublished

This text of 83 Tenn. 182 (Anderson v. Akard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Anderson v. Akard, 83 Tenn. 182 (Tenn. 1885).

Opinion

Cooper, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Bill to 'set up a deed to land alleged to have been made by William Peoples to Absalom McNabb, and to have been unintentionally lost, and to perpetually enjoin the heirs of William Peoples from prosecuting a suit for the recovery of the land. The chancellor [184]*184grants the relief sought, and the Referees report that his decree should be affirmed. The heirs except.

The land consists of about forty acres of a seventy-five acre grant held by Peoples, the part of ''the granted land claimed lying immediately adjoining the land on which McNabb lived, and which belonged to his mother. The proof is entirely conclusive that about the year 1850, William Peoples sold to Absalom McNabb about forty acres of the granted land nearest to him, for a full consideration paid, and executed to him a deed, or as the learned counsel of the heirs concedes, “a writing of some character,” intended.. as a conveyance, and attested by two witnesses. The instrument was never registered. The proof shows that shortly after the sale the forty acres were assessed to McNabb, and continued to be assessed to him, he paying the taxes, and William Peoples only gave in for taxation the residue of the land included in the grant. The evidence is that McNabb claimed the ■land thereafter, and so far as appears William Peoples never did claim it. Peoples died June 30, 1875. . McNabb died in the fall of 1867, leaving a widow and several children. After McNabb’s death, the forty acres were assessed to his widow, who paid the taxes. The taxes for the year 1877 not having been promptly paid, the land was sold therefor in 1878, and bought by W. J. Peoples, a son of William Peoples, and one of the defendants, who afterwards permitted the widow to redeem the land. The land was also sold in the lifetime of Absalom McNabb, under an execution. against him, and bought by the creditor, who after-[185]*185wards received from McNabb the greater part of the debt, and made a gift of the small • residue to the widow. The written instrument from Peoples to McNabb was by the widow placed in the hands of the complainant, who was her brother-in-law, to be registered. He placed it in his clock, where it remained for some time, and was lost when the clock was repaired, and, after diligent search, has never been found. Feeling that he was to blame for the loss, the complainant bought the land from the widow, and took from her a deed of conveyance, dated May 3, 1880, which deed was also signed by one of her daughters, whose name was not mentioned in the body of. the deed. Previously, and with a view to this conveyance, the complainant had the land run out by the county surveyor in the presence of the defendants, W. J. and M. T. Peoples, sons of William Peoples, who owned, under a conveyance from their father, ■over nine hundred acres of 'land adjoining a part of the land covered by the seventy-five acre grant. The complainant and the surveyor say that this survey was made in the year 1877, and that the Peoples made no objection to the survey. The two Peoples ■say that the survey was made after they were notified of the loss of the deed, which they admit was not earlier than 1880, and that they did object to the survey. No part of the land in controversy has ever been enclosed. The McNabbs have cut wood from it, and sold wood thereon to be cut by others. The two Peoples above named say . they have also cut wood on both sides of the line claimed by the McNabbs [186]*186as the dividing line. There is no other proof of such cutting, and it does not appear that^they crossed the line intentionally. Several witnesses' depose to having read the deed sought to be set up, and state positively that it was a conveyance by William Peoples’ to Absalom McNabb of about forty acres of the grant nearest to the place on which McNabb then resided.

Under these circumstances, the heirs of William Peoples do not except to so much of the report of the Referees as finds that there was a deed executed by their ancestor to Absalom McNabb for some of the land included in the seventy-five acre grant, and that the deed has been lost. What they do insist upon, in their first and ■ second exceptions, is that the Referees, by their finding of the fact that the deed had been executed, were brought directly to the position which they, the heirs, had contended for, and have not decided it, namely, that the contents of the deed were not sufficiently described to be set up, and that the proof fails to show that such a deed as the chancellor set up was in fact executed, being too-vague and indefinite for that purpose. The evidence does clearly establish the proximate date of the deed, the names of the grantor and grantee, the consideration, the signature of the grantor, the delivery of the deed by the grantor to the grantee, and that the conveyance was of forty acres, more or less, of the seventy-five acre grant adjoining the McNabb land. The only uncertainty can be as to the exact boundaries given in the deed set up.

The proof shows that the land covered by the . [187]*187seventy-five-acre grant lies in snch a shape that forty acres adjoining the McNabb land can be very easily laid off by running a line across the land from the boundary on one side of the grant to the boundary on the other. In this way the proper quantity of land could be readily obtained from the general description, about which there can be no dispute. Even if the contention made by the exceptions should be sustained, the complainants would still be entitled to have the deed set up according to the general description, and the result would be substantially the same attained by the chancellor’s decree: Hord v. Baughf 7 Hum., 576.

But we think the testimony sufficiently establishes the boundaries as claimed in the bill and fixed by the decree. Jonathan McNabb, who is clearly proved to have been an attesting witness to the deed, although he himself is not absolutely certain of the fact, and only believes that he was, testifies that he was present when ¥m. Peoples traded the land to Absalom McNabb; that Peoples, McNabb and himself went around the land, and Peoples laid off the boundaries; that Peoples then wrote a deed for the land at MclN abb’s house, signed it, and it was witnessed by Andrew McNabb, and to the best of his belief by himself also; and that Peoples delivered the deed to McNabb. Peoples, he adds, had with him a deed for the whole land, meaning, no doubt, the grant. He went around the boundary of the land, meaning plainly the boundaries of the grant, by the calls of the deed, pointing out the lines and corners. The new line, dividing the [188]*188land of the grant, was only a short one: it ran from the beginning corner to an oak on Price’s line. The witness was one of the chain-bearers when the land was run out in the presence of complainant, Anderson, and the two Peoples, as above mentioned. In running the land, he says, we began at a marked poplar, then we followed the line of marked trees to a white oak, a marked tree, a straight line from the white oak to the poplar, the beginning corner, includes the land in controversy. The boundaries set forth in the deed from Hannah McNabb (the widow of Absalom McNabb) to the complainant, Anderson, include the land in controversy.”

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
83 Tenn. 182, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anderson-v-akard-tenn-1885.