Campbell v. Foster

2 Tenn. Ch. R. 402
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedApril 15, 1875
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Tenn. Ch. R. 402 (Campbell v. Foster) 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
Campbell v. Foster, 2 Tenn. Ch. R. 402 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1875).

Opinion

The Chancellor :

— Bill filed on the 4th of March, 1872, against Joseph Foster and Mary, his wife, John Broderick, E. B. McClanahan, trustee of Andrew J. Harding, and Andrew J. Harding. The object of the bill is to recover an undivided half interest in lot No. 155, in McGavock’s addition to Nashville, claimed by the complainant as co-heir of his father with Mary Foster, his half-sister. The facts, as shown by the record, are that James Campbell, sr., departed [403]*403this life on the 25th of January, 1855, leaving a widow, Lavinia Campbell, and three children — the complainant, a child by his first wife, and Thomas and Mary, children by his wife Lavinia. Of these children Thomas died in 1863, intestate, and without ever having married, and Mary intermarried with the defendant Joseph Foster, in 1865. The complainant was born in 1837, and, at the time of his father’s death, was married, and living apart from the family. The lot in controversy was bought and- built upon, .though not fully paid for, during the life of James Campbell, sr. Lavinia, his widow, continued to reside upon it with her children, without, so far as appears, any claim on the part of complainant, until her death, on the 17th of November, 1865. The lot had been bought from Dr. D. T. McGavock, and, on the 16th of September, 1856, he, by deed of that date, reciting a consideration of $900 to him paid, conveyed the said lot to the said Lavinia Campbell, her heirs and assigns forever, with covenants of seizin, general warranty, and against encumbrances. This deed was acknowledged by the bargainor on the 22d of September, 1856, and registered on the same day. On the 14th of September, 1869, Foster and wife, by deed duly proved and registered, sold and conveyed the said lot to the defendant Andrew J. Harding, and, on the same day, in consideration of this conveyance and the further consideration of $500, the said Andrew J. Harding sold and conveyed to Foster and wife sixty-five acres of land in the river bottom north of Nashville. On the 24th of May, 1870, Andrew J. Harding sold and conveyed said lot to the defendant John Broderick, for the recited consideration of $1,000. Sometime in 1870, when does not appear, but doubtless after the sale to Broderick, Harding seems to have conveyed all his property to the defendant McClanahan, “ to be held and managed. by him to shelter said Andrew J. against the machinations of the designing.” At any rate, this is the description of the trust as given by McClanahan in his answer, the instrument [404]*404itself, although promised, not having been produced and filed.

The ground upon which the complainant rests his claim for relief is that the lot in controversy was bought by his father, who paid the greater part of the consideration in his life-time, and that his widow had fraudulently taken the title in her own name, instead of having the deed made to the children of her husband. The bill alleges that Foster and wife, and Harding and Broderick, their vendees, were aware of complainant’s claim. Of this charge there is not a particle of proof, so far as Harding and Broderick are concerned. But this difficulty is obviated by the defendants MeClanahan and Harding, in their answer, consenting to the relief sought, and by the defendant Broderick filing a written agreement, signed by him, to the effect that, in consideration of $550 secured to be paid, he is willing to the rescission asked. The issue, therefore, is upon the complainant’s right to relief as against Foster and wife.

This right depends upon the point whether the lot was in fact, as alleged, bought and in part paid for by complainant’s father in his life-time, and the title fraudulently, or at least wrongfully, taken to Lavinia Campbell, the widow. The deed of David T. McGavock to Mrs. Campbell was executed on the 16th of September, 1856, and duly registered on the 22d of the same month. At that time, as the record shows, the complainant was residing with his wife, in Nashville, in the vicinity of his step-mother, and, of course, with full knowledge that she was residing on the place with her two children. It is stated in the answer of Foster and wife, and the fact is not shown to be otherwise by the complainant, who is himself examined as a witness, that complainant continued to reside at Nashville until the war, when he went off, probably, with the Confederate army. He came of age in 1858, and did not leave Nashville for three years thereafter. He offers no excuse for his silence in relation to his rights, as now set up, during these years. [405]*405He seems not to have been very active even in the present effort, for there are indications on the face of the bill, and still stronger indications in the answer of McClanahan, that he, as Harding’s trustee, had hunted up the complainant, with a view, through the instrumentality of his claim, to set aside the exchange, made between Foster and wife and Harding, of the lot in controversy for the sixty-five acres. Be this as it may, after such long delay and acquiescence in the title of the widow, without any satisfactory explanation, the burden of proof to make out his case beyond a reasonable doubt is clearly upon the complainant. This burden is made the more imperative as the two persons who certainly knew the facts, namely, Lavinia Campbell and Dr. McGavock, have both died — the former in 1865, the latter in 1866.

The complainant’s evidence, on which he relies to make out his claim, consists of his own testimony and the testimony of W. D. Scott. His own testimony is meagre in the extreme. He says the lot was bought by his father, who said he wanted it as a homestead for his three children, and adds, on cross-examination: “ I can’t tell how I knew it was bought by father, but, as well as I recollect, I have heard him speaking with McGavock about it.” After his father’s death, he says, he went to see his step-mother before the deed was taken. “ She wished me to go and pay the fifty dollars. I told her I could not do it, as I had not the money. She told me I could have my part of the property; I was entitled to my share of it, as I was as faithful to her as one of her own children.” This is literally all the witness has to say. Conceding its admissibility as evidence, it shows that he did not know that his father had bought the property, and only inferred it from hearing him speak with McGavock about the lot. The conversation with the stepmother, if it amounts to anything, shows that she was inclined to concede to him, on account of his faithfulness to her, and in consideration of the payment of the residue of [406]*406purchase money, an interest in the property to which he was not entitled, rather than a share to which he had a right.

W. D. Scott’s evidence is far more intelligible, but even less favorable to the complainant than his own. He was a, school-master at the date of the purchase of the lot, to whom the complainant was sent as a pupil, and took his pay out in groceries at the little store kept by Campbell, sr., and his wife, the wife being, as all the proof shows, the active and efficient member. He was called in to witness two payments on the notes given to McGavock for the lot, the money being paid by the wife, and the receipts drawn up by the witness. The notes, he says, were signed, he thinks, by both Mr. and Mrs. Campbell. He saw the title bond from McGavock, but does not remember whether it was made to Mr. or Mrs. Campbell, or to both. He proves that Campbell, sr.,was a man of feeble constitution, given to dissipation, and of idle habits, and that Mrs. Campbell was active, energetic, and managing.

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Related

Burem v. Foster
53 Tenn. 333 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1871)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2 Tenn. Ch. R. 402, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/campbell-v-foster-tennctapp-1875.