Childers v. Wm. H. Coleman Co.

122 Tenn. 109
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 122 Tenn. 109 (Childers v. Wm. H. Coleman Co.) 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
Childers v. Wm. H. Coleman Co., 122 Tenn. 109 (Tenn. 1909).

Opinion

Mr. Justice McAlister

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Complainant filed this bill, alleging his ownership in fee of a tract of land in Hardeman county comprising three hundred acres, and that the defendants Wm. H. Coleman and J. M. and F. L:- Marshall had entered upon said land and were committing waste by cutting and removing timber. Defendants answered the bill, averring that on March 7, 1904,- and prior to complainant’s purchase of said land, its then owner, J. S. Neely, [112]*112sold and conveyed to one W. E. Small all of the white oak timber on said land, and that on July 12, 1906, the said W. E. Small, for value received, assigned all of his rights and title to said timber contract to the William H. Coleman Company without recourse.

It is averred in the answer that under the original contract the said W. E. Small was allowed three years from the date of said contract to cut and remove said timber, and that thereafter J. S. Neely, the vendor, extended the time for the removal of said timber for a period of two years from July 12, 1906. Hence it is seen that the defense interposed on behalf of defendants is that the William H. Coleman Company had acquired title to the white oalc timber on said tract of land by assignment of a contract made with J. L. Neely, the vendor of complainant, some time prior to the sale of said land by the said Neely to complainant, Childers.

On the coming in of the answers, complainant filed an amended bill, alleging:

“That on the 3d of October, 1907, J. S. Neely and wife, E. A. Neely, were in the actual possession of the lands described in the original bill, and represented to him that said land was unincumbered; that he paid to them $800 the cash consideration, and executed his two promissory notes, due in one and two years, for $800 each, and delivered the same to J. S. Neely and wife, and prior to that time ■ complainant had no notice, actual or constructive, of any alleged claim of defendants; that, when he purchased said land, defendants were [113]*113not in possession, and so far as complainant knew, were not claiming any right to enter upon said land; and be states on information and belief that defendants bad never been in actual possession of said land or the timber, bad never cut or removed, and bad never attempted to cut or remove, any white oak or other timber from said land up-to and for some time after complainants bad purchased said land.”

Complainant further states as follows:

“He was put in possession of the land by said J. S. Neely on the 3d of October, 1907, and knew nothing of the claim of defendants until after he filed his original bill; that he is an innocent purchaser for value, and had no notice of the sale or transfer of the white oak timber then standing on said, land, and that he paid a valuable consideration for the same; that defendants had entered upon said lands, without the knowledge of complainant or his consent, ciit and removed and wasted valuable timber, and otherwise damaged complainant to the extent of $300.”

It is further charged in the amended bill:

“That the instruments purporting to be deeds of conveyance under which defendants claim a superior title were neither actual nor constructive notice to complainants, for the reason that said assignment did not describe the land, and the instrument purporting to extend the time limit, contained in the original contract for the removal of the timber, was obtained through fraud, and was not properly acknowledged, and the cer[114]*114tificate of the notary was not in compliance with tbe statute.”

It was therefore charged that said instruments were not entitled to registration and that no notice was thereby conveyed to complainant.

The prayer of the amended bill .is that complainant be declared an innocent purchaser for value without notice, and that he be decreed the title and possession of said land, etc.

Proof was taken, and on the hearing the chancellor, Hon. E. L. Bullock, presiding, decreed that the title of complainant to the land and timber was superior to any claim of the defendants, and that the conveyances under which defendants claimed title constituted a cloud on complainant’s title. The chancellor made perpetual the injunction restraining the defendants from cutting and removing timber or otherwise committing waste, and pronounced a decree in favor of complainant for the value of timber already cut, and the damages accruing by reason of said waste, and ordered a reference to the master to take proof and report the amount of said damages. At the March term, 1909, the chancellor rendered a judgment in favor of complainant against the defendants for the sum of $150 for the trees cut and removed by the defendants, and the further sum of $9 as damages caused to the small timber by reason of the trees cut falling against and injuring same. The W. H. Coleman Company appealed from all of said decrees and has assigned errors.

[115]*115The first assignment is as follows:

“The chancellor erred in decreeing that the title of complainant, E. J. Childers, is superior to the claim of defendants in and to the land and timber described in the. pleadings, and that the claim of the defendants to the white oak timber on said lands is not valid, hut constitutes a cloud on complainant’s title, because the proof in the record shows that the contract under which the Wm. H. Coleman Company claimed ownership and title to the white oak timber was. prior in time, and therefore superior in right, to any claim or title that complainant, E. J. Childers, had to said white oak timber. J. S. Neely, from whom both complainant, E. J. Childers, and the defendant Wm. Coleman Company claim title, conveyed and transferred all of the white oak timber on the three hundred acres of land described in the pleadings to W. É. Small, by contract dated March 7, 1904; that on July 12, 1906, he extended the time for the cutting of the white oak timber on the lands sold to Small, and later sold to W. H. Coleman Company, to two years from date.”

The second assignment of error will be considered in this connection, and is as follows:

“Second. The chancellor erred in making the injunction perpetual. The weight of the proof is that the ap-pellee had notice of the timber contract of J. S. Neely with appellant at the time that he bought the land. The rule ‘'caveat envptor’ applies to him.”

The facts established by the record are that in Oc[116]*116tober, 1907, complaijnant, Childers, who resided at Pulaski in Giles county, purchased this land, lying in Hardeman county, through a resident agent, one Ca-mody. At the time of the sale Mr. Isaac Orme represented the vendor, J. S. Neely and wife. An abstract of title to the land was prepared at the instance of the vendor and sent to Mr. Childers at Pulaski; and, the title having been pronounced perfect by the abstracter, Mr. Childers accepted the deed and made a cash payment of $800, executing his notes for the two deferred payments of $800 each. ■ The deed was executed on the 8d of October, 1907, and Mr. Childers was immediately put in possession of the land. The complainant had no actual or constructive knowledge, at the time he purchased the land, that the defendant W. H. Coleman Company claimed any right, title, or interest in the white oak timber on said land.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

A & P Excavating And Materials, LLC v. David Geiger
Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 2020
Remote Woodyards, L.L.C. v. Estate of Neisler
340 S.W.3d 411 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 2009)
James L. Peach, et ux. v. Robert Wesley Medlin
Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 2004
Flora Scruggs v. Gordon Bell - Concurring
Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1997
Roysdon v. Choate
15 Tenn. App. 295 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1932)
Lenzi v. Colberg
13 Tenn. App. 535 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1931)
Wilkins v. Reed
300 S.W. 588 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1927)
Spencer-Sturla Co. v. City of Memphis
290 S.W. 608 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1927)
New River Lumber Co. v. Blue Ridge Lumber Co.
146 Tenn. 181 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1921)
Herron v. Harbour
1919 OK 55 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1919)
Galloway-Pease Co. v. Sabin
130 Tenn. 575 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1914)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
122 Tenn. 109, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/childers-v-wm-h-coleman-co-tenn-1909.