Bennett v. Langham

383 S.W.2d 16, 214 Tenn. 674, 18 McCanless 674, 1964 Tenn. LEXIS 521
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 9, 1964
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 383 S.W.2d 16 (Bennett v. Langham) 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
Bennett v. Langham, 383 S.W.2d 16, 214 Tenn. 674, 18 McCanless 674, 1964 Tenn. LEXIS 521 (Tenn. 1964).

Opinion

*676 Mu. Chief Justice Buunett

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The complainants’ Della Langham Bennett and others, filed a hill quia seeking to obtain the court’s construction of a deed given by their father to the defendant, Minnie Langham, his fourth wife. The deed purported to convey some property owned by complainants’ father to the defendant. There is no conflict over the fact that a conveyance was made; the conflict arises as to how much of an estate was given to the defendant.

The deed was a regular printed form with the words “a life estate” inserted in the granting clause so that it read:

“* * * have bargained and sold, and by these presents do transfer and convey a life estate unto the said Minnie May Langham * * * ”

Following these words there is the usual description and then the following’ is typed into the face of the deed:

*677 “It is the purpose and intent of this conveyance to make this property as if we had jointly bought it during our marriage.”

It is contended on behalf of the complainant that the intention of the grantor was to convey only a life estate to his wife. The defendant, on the other hand, insists that the language following the description sufficiently modifies the express mention of a life estate in the granting clause to make the estate conveyed a fee simple held by husband and wife as tenants by the entirety. This construction, the defendant alleges, is supported by the fact that the habendum and covenant clauses are regular in form and also purport to convey a fee simple.

The deed is signed by the mark of the grantor indicating that he was not a man of letters, and there is no indication in the record that he had employed an attorney to draft the instrument.

We, therefore, are confronted with a deed presumably drawn by the grantor and one not learned in the law or experienced in the form and formalities of such an instrument. It is the duty of this Court in such cases to ascertain the intent of the grantor and to give effect to it once found.

It is an established rule of law in this, and most other jurisdictions, that the intention of the grantor is to be determined from the four corners of the instrument if possible. If, from an attempt to do this, an irreconcilable conflict arises because of contradictions within the deed other means must be employed to ascertain the correct interpretation to be placed upon.it.

Here we are confronted with such.a conflict. In the granting clause there is expressly granted a life estate *678 to the wife. Subsequent wording- as well as the habendum and covenant clauses would tend to support the granting of a fee simple title. The Chancellor in the court below was of the opinion that the instrument, in its fairest interpretation, conveyed a fee simple through the vehicle of a tenancy by the entirety. A survey of the Tennessee cases dealing with this subject will show the evolution of the present rule in this State.

In 1908 the case of Teague v. Sowder, 121 Tenn. 132, 114 S.W. 484, was decided. In that decision the court set down the cornerstone of our modern rule of deed interpretation. There it was said that in this State we have abandoned the technical rules of construction of the deeds and allowed the intention of the drafter to become the primary guide. Mere formal divisions of the instrument are not to be adhered to in order that the intention of the drafter may be more readily ascertainable. Finally, in cases of irreconcilable conflict this case held that the premises, or first part of the deed, would prevail over the latter parts thereof, such as the habendum or covenant clauses.

The necessity of giving the instrument in question an interpretation most consistent with the intention of the grantor was reasserted in Nashville, C. & St. L. Ry. v. Bell, 162 Tenn. 661, 39 S.W.2d 1026, where the court added that the words of the deed in question were to be given their appropriate meaning.

A deed was declared to be a contract and treated as such in which, the intention of the parties was to be gathered from the language used by them in connection with the surrounding circumstances. Trapp v. McCormick, 175 Tenn. 1, 130 S.W.2d 122. This was in line with *679 the modern progression of case law on this subject at that time, and this case set np a base for the later Tennessee progressions.

The rule of the Trapp case, snpra, was reaffirmed almost ten years later in the case of Thompson v. Turner, 186 Tenn. 241, 209 S.W.2d 25.

In Quarles v. Arthur, 33 Tenn.App. 291, 231 S.W.2d 589, the conveyance was to, “S. E. Quarles to her her lifetime then to her heirs of her body”. In the habendum clause there was this wording: [T]o have and to hold the same to the said S. E. Quarles her and her heirs and assigns”. It was conceded that the granting clause, after the statutory abolition of the Rule in Shelley’s case in Tennessee, created‘a life estate in the grantee and a remainder in the heirs of her body, living at the time of her death. It was claimed, however, that the conflict in wording between the granting and habendum clauses manifested an intent on the part of the grantor to convey a "fee simple title.

The court, in sustaining a construction favoring a life estate with a remainder to the heirs of her body, held against that the courts should adopt a construction consistent with all of the wording of the grantor in the deed. It should not be assumed that the grantor intended to contradict himself and the court should lean to a construction which avoids such a contradiction. Notwithstanding this, the overriding purpose of the court is to make paramount the intention of the grantor in all instances, and this was to be done without recourse to the formal rules of construction, if possible. This decision was in line with that of Lockett v. Thomas, 179 Tenn. 240, 165 S.W.2d 375, in which a life estate granted in *680 the habendnm was given precedence over a fee given in the premises on the basis of reading the whole document without regard to the common law rules of construction.

As noted in the opinion in the Quarles case, supra, there seemed to be two lines of cases in Tennessee dealing with deed interpretation. Both espoused a reading of the entire document without regard to technical wording in order to get at the intent of the grantor, but they differed on the construction devises to be used in case of a conflict on the face of the instrument. Those in line with Lockett v. Thomas, supra, and

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Bluebook (online)
383 S.W.2d 16, 214 Tenn. 674, 18 McCanless 674, 1964 Tenn. LEXIS 521, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bennett-v-langham-tenn-1964.