Anderson v. Anderson

372 S.W.2d 452, 52 Tenn. App. 241, 1962 Tenn. App. LEXIS 134
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedSeptember 28, 1962
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 372 S.W.2d 452 (Anderson v. Anderson) 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
Anderson v. Anderson, 372 S.W.2d 452, 52 Tenn. App. 241, 1962 Tenn. App. LEXIS 134 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1962).

Opinion

CARNEY, J.

This suit involves the title to 100 acres of farm land located in the 5th District of Madison County, Tennessee, just north of the city limits of Jackson, Tennessee. The land was owned by one Sam Anderson, colored, at his death in 1924 intestate. Sam Anderson was born about 1841 in slavery on or near the very farm which is in litigation. The two determinative questions to be decided by this Court on this appeal are: (1) Whether Sam Anderson was legitimate or illegitimate, and (2) whether his three children, Robert, Sarah and Harriet Anderson, were legitimate or illegitimate.

Sam Anderson entered into a civil marriage ceremony with Eliza Hunt on November 18,1893, and this marriage continued to the date of his death on May 19, 1924. Sam Anderson purchased the land in litigation on November 1, 1904. Sam and his wife, Eliza, had no children.

Eliza Hunt Anderson lived on the land, collected the rents and paid the taxes continuously from 1924 until her death on May 4, 1950. Apparently administration was never had upon the estate of Sam Anderson and no [244]*244homestead and dower was ever laid off or set apart to Eliza.

The present litigation is between the collateral heirs of Eliza Hnnt Anderson represented by Alma Smith Isbell and others, appellees in the present canse, and the defendants-appellants, Cooper Anderson and W. E. Leech. Mr. Leech is an attorney practicing at the Madison County Bar. Cooper Anderson and W. E. Leech claim title to the real estate as grantees of the grandchildren of Sam Anderson, namely Eva Floyd and Nora Porter Mathis.

Eva Floyd is a daughter of Sarah Anderson Grill, a daughter of Sam Anderson, who died in 1921. Nora Porter Mathis is a daughter of Robert Anderson, a son of Sam Anderson, who died about 1889. Sam Anderson had another daughter, Harriet Anderson, who died about 1924 leaving no children or grandchildren surviving her. Robert Anderson, Sarah Anderson and Harriet Anderson are all three children of Sam Anderson by one Sa-ludie Lee. The Chancellor found that Sam Anderson and Saludie Lee were never married, by slave marriage or otherwise, and that Robert, Sarah and Harriet were illegitimate.

The deeds from Eva Floyd and Nora Porter Mathis, as the alleged sole heirs of Sam Anderson, conveying the 100 acres of land to Cooper Anderson were executed in 1939. In 1942 the defendant, Cooper Anderson, conveyed an undivided one-half interest in 95 acres to W. E. Leech. The defendant, Cooper Anderson, shortly after he received the deeds to the land, notified Eliza Hunt Anderson, the widow of Sam Anderson, of his purchase and explained to her that she would be entitled to keep [245]*245the land as long as she lived. On this occasion Eliza Hunt Anderson told Cooper Anderson that Sam Anderson had never been married to Salndie Lee and that Robert, Sarah and Harriet Anderson were outside children of Sam Anderson.

Eliza Hunt Anderson never made any claim to title to the land except the right to live there throughout her lifetime. She left a will in which she bequeathed personal property but made no mention of owning any real estate. The defendants, Cooper Anderson and W. E. Leech, have been in possession'of the land continuously since May 4, 1950, the date of death of Eliza Anderson. They have collected all the rentals therefrom.

After the death of Eliza Hunt Anderson on May 4, 1950, and on May 29, 1950, David Anderson, et al. as collateral heirs of Sam Anderson filed the original bill in ■ this cause seeking to establish title to the 100 acres owned by Sam Anderson at his death. The original bill averred that the three children born to Sam Anderson and Sa-ludie Lee through whom the defendants, Cooper Anderson and W. E. Leech, claim title were illegitimate and therefore Cooper Anderson and W. E. Leech held invalid titles to the real estate. Some proof was taken shortly after filing the original bill.

The original complainants, David Anderson, et al., are children and grandchildren of brothers and sisters of Sam Anderson.

On March 18, 1957, Alma Smith Isbell, appellee herein, filed an intervening petition averring that she was a great-niece of Eliza Hunt Anderson and that Eliza Hunt Anderson owned the fee simple title to the land in ques[246]*246tion at lier death, as the surviving widow of Sam Anderson because Sam Anderson was illegitimate and left no legitimate children or grandchildren surviving him legally entitled to inherit the prdperty. T.C.A. Section 31-105. She averred that Sam Anderson was illegitimate because he was born as a slave and that his three children, Robert, Sarah and Harriet Anderson, were illegitimate because Sam was never married to their mother, Saludie Lee. The intervening petition further set out names and relations of all the other collateral heirs of Eliza Hunt Anderson and the petitioner, Alma Smith Isbell, stated that she filed the petition on behalf of herself and all the other collateral heirs.

On June 1,1957, the defendant, Cooper Anderson, filed his general answer to the intervening petition of Alma Smith Isbell and denied her right to file petition on behalf of the other collateral heirs of Eliza Anderson and denied the right of any of them to recover.

On June 3, 1957, the defendant, W. E. Leech, filed a motion to dismiss the petition of Alma Smith Isbell for misjoinder of parties averring that Alma Smith Isbell was one of a group or class of persons and each member should be petitioner, complainant or defendant.

On November 6, 1959, the then Chancellor Dewitt Henderson, on motion of solicitor for the original complainants, collateral heirs of Sam Anderson, ruled that the original bill filed by the collateral heirs of Sam Anderson should be treated as a suit in ejectment. He held that the petition of Alma Smith Isbell was a good petition to intervene insofar as the interest of Alma Smith Isbell individually was concerned but that she was not entitled to file the petition in behalf of the other heirs of Eliza [247]*247Hunt Anderson insofar as the defendant, W. E. Leech, was concerned. He sustained her right to petition on behalf of the other heirs insofar as the defendant, Cooper Anderson, was concerned because Cooper Anderson waived his objection by filing a general answer.

On November 20, 1959, the defendant, W. E. Leech, filed his general answer to the intervening petition of Alma Smith' Isbell. The solicitor for the original complainants, the Honorable Watt Moore, announced in open court that in his opinion the deceased Sam Anderson was illegitimate and that therefore his original complainants, the alleged collateral heirs of Sam Anderson, had no right to maintain their suit and that they were abandoning the same and that he was associating himself as counsel with the solicitor for the collateral heirs of Eliza Hunt Anderson.

After all the proof was in the cause was argued on November 15, 1960, before the Honorable Brooks McLe-more, Chancellor, successor to Chancellor Dewitt Henderson, retired. Counsel for all parties stated and agreed in open court that it was their desire and request that all questions in the cause be ruled on by the Chancellor and that all motions previously ruled on by Chancellor Henderson be examined by the present Chancellor and affirmed, modified or reversed so that the entire matter could be passed on at one time.

Chancellor McLemore sustained a motion by Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
372 S.W.2d 452, 52 Tenn. App. 241, 1962 Tenn. App. LEXIS 134, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anderson-v-anderson-tennctapp-1962.