Brier Hill Collieries v. Pile

4 Tenn. App. 468, 1926 Tenn. App. LEXIS 198
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedSeptember 28, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 4 Tenn. App. 468 (Brier Hill Collieries v. Pile) 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
Brier Hill Collieries v. Pile, 4 Tenn. App. 468, 1926 Tenn. App. LEXIS 198 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

DeWITT, J.

The bill in this cause was brought by Brier Hill Collieries, Stearns Coal & Lumber Company, and trustees under certain deeds of trust against the widow and heirs-at-law of S. H. Pile, deceased, the devisees of A. L. Crawford, and'others, to remove cloud from title and enjoin an action of ejectment in the circuit court of Fentress county. The land involved comprises about forty-five hundred acres bounded on the south by the parallel of latitude *470 of 36 degrees, 30 minutes, known as the Matthews line as it was surveyed by Thomas J. Matthews in the year 1826 for the State of Kentucky in order to mark the southern boundary of the strip of land about seven miles wide from north to south running from the Matthews line to the Walker line, which is the present boundary between Tennessee and Kentucky. This is the territory in which the proprietary right was granted to the State of Kentucky under the Convention of 1820 between the two States settling’ a dispute as to the true boundary line. See, Sharp v. Van Winkle, 12 Lea, 15; Russell v. American Association, 139 Tenn., 124, 201 S. W., 151.

The land herein involved is part of a large boundary of land in Fentress, Pickett and Scott counties known as “the Big Survey,” and granted by the State of Kentucky to F. P. Stone and others under Land Office Warrant No. 630., containing 123,989 acres. Upon their own application the bill was dismissed as to the complainants, Stearns Coal & Lumber Company and the First Trust & Savings Bank, trustee; leaving the controversy between the Brier Hill Collieries and the aforesaid defendants.

The land involved in this cause was involved in the action of ejectment brought by Ward R. Case et al, v. Brier Hill Collieries et al., in the chancery court of Fentress county, in which case tlje opinion of the Supreme Court is reported in 145 Tenn., 1 et seq. The complainants in that cause are defendants to the bill in this cause. A careful consideration of the opinion of the Supreme Court, delivered by its present Chief Justice, together with the decree of that court in all things affirming the decree of the Chancellor, is necessary to an understanding and determination of the issues here presented. The complainants in this cause insist that the decision of the Supreme Court in Case v. Brier Hill Collieries was conclusive of the issues now before us. A transcript of the record of that cause, including the opinion and decree of the Supreme Court, is. a part of the record in this cause. In that cause it was adjudged 'that a description in a deed of March 17, 1896, of the devisees of A. L. Crawford to S. H. Pile, “in Scott county known as the Jim Smith tract,” was invalid, as it did not refer to a definite parcel of land, there being seAferal other tracts knoAvn as Jim Smith tracts; and that parol evidence was not admissible to supply the description, which the statute of frauds requires to be in writing. On July 12, 1895, S. II. Pile, the ancestor of these appellants, entered into an agreement in writing with A. B. Bradford, as agent for the heirs of A. L. Crawford, deceased, which agreement and the said deed of the Crawford heirs to S. H. Pile and the deed of S. PI. Pile to the Crawford heirs pursuant thereto are set forth in 145 Tenn., pages 4 to 8. The agreement was made in settlement of all issues between the Crawford heirs and S. H. Pile in the case of A. L. Crawford v. *471 Anderson Smith, et al., in the United States Court at Knoxville as to their respective interests in the lands included within the bounds of the “Big Survey.” Pursuant to said agreement, S. H. Pile conveyed to the Crawford heirs all of his interest in “the Big Survey” excepting seven tracts, the fourth of which was designated, “known as the Jim Smith tract.” As aforesaid, the Crawford heirs conveyed to S. H. Pile all their interest in these tracts, the fifth tract being “in Scott county known as the Jim Smith tract.”

In Case, Trustee v. Brier Hill Collieries, supra, the land sued for was claimed by the complainants therein to be “the Jim Smith tract” referred to in said papers. The said parties, defendants and appellants here, insist, as they did in that case, that “the Jim Smith tract” is a tract of land in Fentress county said to contain fifteen thousand acres. These defendants insist that they are the owners, by descent from S. H. Pile, of said tract, including the lands herein involved. They do not question the finality of the adjudication of the Supreme Court that the said description in said deed of March 7, 1896, was void, but they deny that complainants have established a good and perfect title to the land or have a right to maintain their bill in this cause. They rely upon a deed of the adult Crawford heirs and a commissioner, appointed by the United States District Court at Indianapolis, Indiana, purporting to convey to them the said tract of fifteen thousand acres, which deed was executed pursuant to a decree of said court under a bill filed by said heirs of Pile against the devisees of A. L. Crawford, on August 26, 1922, after the termination of said cause of Ward R. Case et al., v. Brier Hill Collieries, and the cause of Ermine G. Pile et al., v. Travis Smith et al., a companion case which was consolidated with it. In said decree, in a cause to which these complainants were not parties and of which they had no knowledge until shortly before the filing o'f their bill in this cause, it was in short undertaken to reform said deed of March 17, 1896, by describing “the Jim Smith tract” as this tract of fifteen thousand acres, which includes the lands herein involved. After the execution and delivery of said deed, these defendants instituted an action of ejectment in the circuit court of Fentress county against these complainants, which action was enjoined by the Chancellor in this case upon confession of judgment by the defendants therein — said confession of judgment being set aside by the Chancellor in his final decree sustaining the bill in this cause. The defendants herein further rely upon adverse possession of S. H. Pile under a deed purporting to bear date of August 10, 1882, executed by James Smith, acknowledged by him on August 27, 1891, and registered on November 8, 1913, in which deed this said tract of fifteen thousand acres is described as conveyed. These defendants also *472 rely upon other acts of adverse possession which will be later discussed in this opinion.

The bill in this cause was filed to remove said deed of the Crawford devisees and the commissioner as a cloud upon the title of Brier Hill Collieries and trustees under deeds of trust executed by it; and to establish their said title to said tract of about forty-five hundred acres. Said parties deraign their title to said Land Office "Warrant No. 630 to F. P. Stone and others issued in the year 1848 by the State of Kentucky; and they also insist that their title has been perfected by open, notorious, peaceable and adverse possession under registered assurance of title for more than seven years prior to the institution of this suit. They insist that whatever title S. IT. Pile had to the tract herein involved was conveyed by him to their predecessors in titlé, the devisees of A. L. Crawford by deed of January 24, 1896, in which, as aforesaid, he conveyed all his interest in “the Big Survey” excluding seven tracts, of which the Jim Smith tract was described so vaguely that the attempted exclusion of it was void.

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Bluebook (online)
4 Tenn. App. 468, 1926 Tenn. App. LEXIS 198, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brier-hill-collieries-v-pile-tennctapp-1926.