Campbell v. Lewisberg & Northern R. R.

26 S.W.2d 141, 160 Tenn. 477, 7 Smith & H. 477
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedApril 5, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 26 S.W.2d 141 (Campbell v. Lewisberg & Northern R. R.) 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
Campbell v. Lewisberg & Northern R. R., 26 S.W.2d 141, 160 Tenn. 477, 7 Smith & H. 477 (Tenn. 1930).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice GreeN

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This suit was brought by three complainants, two of them minors, to set up a one-sixth interest in a tract of land near Nashville comprising 160' acres claimed in fee by the Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company and on which are located certain terminal yards of that Com *482 pany, known as the Radnor Yards, which have been laid out and equipped at a cost of upwards of $1,500,000. The complainants sought to have their rights established and to have a partition of the land or a sale of the land for partition and division of the proceeds. In the alternative, and in the event the court thought they were not entitled to partition or sale for division of proceeds, the complainants asked for a decree for such damages as they might be entitled to under the facts of the case. The effect of the stipulation of counsel is to give complainants ’ bill the scope indicated.

The Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company denied that complainants had any interest in the land, but in the event the court held otherwise, the Railroad Company denied the right of the complainants to a sale for partition and division of the proceeds, and, by proper pleadings the Railroad Company sought to have any interest of complainants in the land set apart to them in kind out of that portion of the property involved upon which no improvements had been made and out of certain adjacent property. Bringing in new parties by cross-bill, the Railroad Company further sought redress on the covenants-of the deed under which it claimed for any failure of its title. The answer of the Railroad Company specifically pleaded that the land in. question was acquired and held by it for a public use and that if the complainants were entitled to any recovery, such recovery was limited to just compensation for any property of theirs taken.

An appropriate answer was filed to the cross-bill and the cause proceeded to issue and was tried on a stipulation. Other facts appearing will be brought out in the course of the discussion.

*483 The chancellor decreed that the complainants had become the owners of a one-sixth interest in said 160' acres of land on the falling in of a preceding- life estate hnt that they had no interest in the improvements that had been made'; that they were entitled to have their interest .set apart to them in kind in that portion of said tract on which no improvements had been made, or a sale of such portion for partition and division of the proceeds, if said portion of the tract was not necessary for the reasonable future requirements of the Railroad Company for terminal purposes; that they were entitled to a decree for the value of their one-sixth interest, if it could not be set apart to them in kind out of the unimproved portion or if said unimproved portion could not be sold for partition and division of the proceeds.

It was further decreed that the Railroad Company was entitled to recover on the covenants of warranty in the deed to its predecessor in title, the Lewisburg & Northern Railroad Company — the grantors in said deed having been made defendants to the Railroad Company’s cross-bill. The Lewisburg & Northern Railroad Company conveyed all its assets of every description to the Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company some years since and the former corporation need not be noticed hereinafter.

The chancellor referred the cause to the master to ascertain and report.

(1) Whether that portion of the 160-acre tract on which no improvements had been made was necessary to the reasonable future requirements of the Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company.

(2) If not so necessary, whether there should be a partition in kind of such unimproved property or a sale thereof for partition and division of proceeds.

*484 (3) If no partition or sale for partition and division of proceeds, what sum would be just compensation for complainants’ interest taken?

(4) The amount of damages .the Railroad Company would be entitled to for breach of the covenants of warranty in the deed to its predecessor.

Both parties'appealed from the chancellor’s decree and the first proposition of the Railroad Company is that the chancellor erred in decreeing that the complainants had any interest in the land.

The complainants claim title under the will of their ancestor, Enoch Ensley, who died testate in 1866. Melville Williams, the grandson of testator and grandfather of complainants, acquired the property here involved under a clause of the Ensley will, as follows:

. “I will and devise to my grandson Melville Williams during his life, and then to the heirs of his body by a legal marriage, and in the event of his death without such heirs, then to my residuary legatee and his heirs, $50,000 worth of property, etc., etc.”

The property here in suit was vested in the said Melville Williams for life and then to the heirs of his body by legal marriage under proceedings in the Chancery Court of Davidson County based on the will of Enoch Ensley. The residuary legatee referred, to in the language quoted from the will conveyed his interest to said Melville Williams.

Melville Williams had six children, Melville Williams, Jr., Robert N. Williams, G. Pillow Williams, Fount W. Williams, Mrs. Annie Williams Shannon, and Enoch Ensley Williams. Melville Williams, joined by his wife and all these children on September 11, 1911, conveyed this tract of land to the Lewisburg & Northern Railroad *485 Company and on October 1, 1915, the Lewisburg & Northern Railroad Company conveyed said land to the Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company. Melville Williams died November 12,1927. Melville Williams, .Jr., complainants’ father, died September 30, 1927, a few weeks before his father. All the children of Melville Williams survived him except Melville Williams, Jr., the father of complainants.

The contention of the Railroad Company is that the devise to Melville Williams for life “and then to the heirs of his body by a legal marriage,” should be construed as a devise to said Melville Williams for life and then to his children. Upon this premise, it is argued that, all the children of Melville Williams having joined in the deed to the Lewisburg’ & Northern Railroad Company, the entire estate in remainder thus passed.

Counsel refer to previous decisions of this court in which the words heirs of the tody have been construed to mean children and they urge that in this case such construction is the more plausible by reason of the description of the remaindermen as “heirs of his body by a legal marriage.”

We think, however, that this question has been foreclosed against the contention of counsel for the Railroad Company by previous decisions of this court involving this very will. The will came before Chancellor Cooper for construction and his opinion appears in 1 Cooper’s Chancery Reports, 306. Referring to the clause of the will before us, the learned chancellor said:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
26 S.W.2d 141, 160 Tenn. 477, 7 Smith & H. 477, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/campbell-v-lewisberg-northern-r-r-tenn-1930.