Banner Baptist Church v. Watson

246 S.W.2d 17, 193 Tenn. 290, 29 Beeler 290, 1951 Tenn. LEXIS 357
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 14, 1951
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 246 S.W.2d 17 (Banner Baptist Church v. Watson) 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
Banner Baptist Church v. Watson, 246 S.W.2d 17, 193 Tenn. 290, 29 Beeler 290, 1951 Tenn. LEXIS 357 (Tenn. 1951).

Opinion

Me. Justice Gtailoe

delivered, the opinion of the Court.

The controversy presented by this litigation has finally resolved itself into a contest for $2,000! paid into Court by the State for the agreed value of a quarter-acre of land split by Highway No. 71, in Sevier County, and possessed and used by the Church since November 15', 1926. The land in controversy is referred to in the record as the "School Lot,” to distinguish it from an adjoining tract which is referred to as the "Church Lot,” upon which the Church is actually located. It is not disputed that both lots have been used for Church purposes.

The original bill was filed by the Church to enjoin trespass on the “School Lot” by the defendants, and after protracted and complex pleading and controversy between the parties, the question of trespass to the land became moot by reason of the condemnation of the "School Lot” for highway purposes by the 'State, which paid $2,000, the agreed value of the lot, into Court, leaving the disposition of the money to the adjudication of the Chancellor.

Thereafter, by formal stipulation, it was agreed: "At the trial of this cause set for June 4, 1951, the issues to be determined shall be limited to the question of whether complainants or defendants were the lawful owners of the land referred to in the record as the ‘school lot’ and thus entitled to the sum of $2000, this sum representing the proceeds realized from the condemnation of said land by the State and said sum having been paid into the registry of the Court in this cause on October 11, 1950, both complainants and defendants having agreed that said sum represents the fair cash market value of said land and having executed a deed to the State of Tennessee therefor. ’ ’

[293]*293In a careful, well-reasoned opinion, the Chancellor determined this issue in favor of the Chnrch, and defendants have appealed, assigning errors which we consider hereinafter.

To understand the determination of the cause by the Chancellor it is necessary to give some account of the title and the conveyances by which the School Lot finally came into possession of the Church. In 1870, one Isaac Ogle conveyed a 110-acre-tract, which included the School Lot, to his granddaughter, “Susan King Maples during her life and the heirs of her body of the said Susan Maples after her death.” By this deed the grantor undertook to convey to Susan King Maples a life estate, with remainder to the heirs of her body. She was the wife of Samuel M. Maples.

With her husband, Susan King Maples lived on this tract of land until her death on May 22, 1921, and except for the Church Lot and School Lot, which were parts of the tract, the husband, Samuel M. Maples, remained in possession until his death in July, 1941.

The heirs of the body of Susan King Maples were two daughters, Lizzie Maples, who married John Henson, and Nannie Maples, who married J. K. Maples. By partition deed, the daughter, Nannie Maples and her husband, J. B. Maples, obtained the half of the tract which included the Church Lot and the School Lot.

In March 1909, Samuel M. Maples conveyed to the School Directors for Sevier County, the “School Lot,” the land involved in this litigation, but said deed was never recorded, and it is not known whether Susan King Maples joined in the deed; said deed contained a reverter clause in the event the property was not used for school purposes, and thereafter, the property was improved with a school house, and used as school property until [294]*294about 1926, when it was abandoned, and the school moved to another location.

On November 15, 1926, by warranty deed recorded in Book 52, page 288, Register’s Office of Sevier County, Samuel M. Maples, then a widower, conveyed to the Trustees of complainant, and their successors in office, the School Lot which had been abandoned shortly before the date of the deed by the School Directors of Sevier County; said deed contained a recitation that the tract contained one-quarter of an acre, more or less, and, “* * * being the parcel of land conveyed by vendor herein some years ago to the School Directors of Sevier County, Tennessee, with a reverting clause in said deed, and said land having reverted to the vendor under said clause, the vendor here conveys the same to the Trustees of the above named church, to be used for church purposes; that is said church ceases to be used for church purposes, then in that event, the land herein conveyed goes and descends to my daughter, Nannie Maples, if living, and if deceased, the reverting clause is void.”

After November 15, 1926, the date of this last deed, the Church had undisputed possession, use and control of the School Lot, using it in connection with the Church establishment, for outside toilets and the parking of vehicles, until some time in 1947, when the defendant, Russell Watson, objected to the use of this lot for outside toilets, and thereafter, in May 1948, undertook to cut certain timber from the lot and to grade the same, which action by Watson led to the filing of the original bill and the injunction in the present case.

Nannie Maples, the daughter of Susan King Maples and Samuel M. Maples, died in 1943, intestate, leaving two children as her sole heirs at law. These were the defendant Alice Maples Watson, and her brother, Samuel [295]*295W. Maples, and the daughter has since, by recorded deed, acquired the undivided half interest of her brother.

On these facts which were stipulated, the Chancellor held that Susan King Maples took a life estate in the School Lot under the deed of 1869, with remainder to the heirs of her body living at the time of her death, and that upon her death in 1921, title to the School Lot vested in her daughter, Nannie Maples, by reason of a partition deed, and that Samuel M. Maples, husband of Susan, and father of Nannie Maples, had no estate by the courtesy in the School Lot, since his wife held only a life estate therein; that by the deed of November 15, 1926, Samuel M. Maples undertook to convey to the Trustees of the Baptist Church, an estate in fee, to said School Lot, which deed was recorded on November 15, 1926, in warranty deed book No. 52, page 288, of the Register’s Office of Sevier County, and that immediately thereafter, complainants went into complete possession and control of said School Lot, and continued in said possession and control, holding said lot openly, notoriously and adversely from November 15, 1926, for a period of approximately 21 years and 6 months, until the commencement of the present controversy. The Court accordingly decreed that title to the School Lot at the time of the institution of the present suit, had become vested in complainants, and that complainants were vested with good and indefeasible fee simple title to the land described in said deed, and referred to .as the “School Lot,” both under Section 8582 of the Code, and by reason of having held same adversely for a period in excess of 20 years.

The Chancellor further adjudged that the $2,000, which was the agreed value of said lot, which had been paid as a result of the condemnation proceeding by the State [296]*296into the registry of the Court, was the property of the Church, and that the defendant should pay the costs.

To this decree of the Chancellor, the defendants perfected an appeal, and have made five assignments of error. The first assignment, — that the Chancellor erred in holding that the deed of November 15, 1926, from Samuel M.

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Bluebook (online)
246 S.W.2d 17, 193 Tenn. 290, 29 Beeler 290, 1951 Tenn. LEXIS 357, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/banner-baptist-church-v-watson-tenn-1951.