Clark v. Dodds

208 S.W.2d 334, 186 Tenn. 45, 22 Beeler 45, 1 A.L.R. 2d 469, 1948 Tenn. LEXIS 516
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 16, 1948
StatusPublished

This text of 208 S.W.2d 334 (Clark v. Dodds) 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
Clark v. Dodds, 208 S.W.2d 334, 186 Tenn. 45, 22 Beeler 45, 1 A.L.R. 2d 469, 1948 Tenn. LEXIS 516 (Tenn. 1948).

Opinion

Mr. Justice TomlinsoN

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The origin of this suit was a bill in Chancery filed by Mrs. Maurine Grlenn Clark against her sister, Carolyn Grlenn Dodds, and her brother, Hugh B. Glenn. The purpose of the suit was to procure a partition in kind of two tracts of land, if practicable; otherwise, by sale -and division of purchase money.

The bill alleged that the. grandfather of complainant and defendants did by deed of record in a specified book and page of the register’s office of Shelby County convey one tract of this land to their father for life and at the father’s death to his children, and that their grandfather by will probated in the Probate Court of Shelby County devised the other tract to their father for life and at the father’s death to his children. It was then alleged that this father, Hugh B. Glenn, died in February of 1945 before the filing of the bill in December thereafter, and that the complainant and her brother and sister, the two defendants, are all the children and heirs at law of the said Hugh B. Glenn, and that at his death “said tracts of land immediately became vested in the children of the said Hugh B. Glenn — each being entitled as tenants in common to an undivided one-third interest therein” and that these three children “are the sole owners of the property. ’ ’

The answer of the brother and sister admit the allegations with reference to the deed and will and death of their father leaving the three children above mentioned as all *47 bis beirs. Tbe answer then states that these three children thereby “were — tenants in common in said lands,” but denied that complainant is entitled to partition because, so they allege, there was an oral partition after their father’s death, and that each of the three children has taken possession of the part so allotted to him or her. The defendants demanded a jury and filed for submission to it this issue of fact:4 4 Did the said Maurine Glenn Clark enter into an oral agreement or partition, — and did each one go into possession of their respective portions of land prior to the filing of the bill in this cause ? ’ ’

When the case was reached on the call of the docket each counsel stated his version of the case to the jury, and the Chancellor then 4 4 directed complainant to present her proof.” Her counsel replied that she 4‘had no proof in chief to offer.” Thereupon, on motion of deféndants and over objection of complainant, the Chancellor withdrew the case from the jury and dismissed the bill, holding that complainant had failed her duty to prove that she and the defendants were .tenants in common, or that shfe had any title in the land at the time she filed her suit. The Court of Appeals in reversing this decree of the Chancellor said:4 ‘The answer admits all the allegations as to’title but denies the right of 'partition by reason oi'an hlleged oral partition — the defense of an oral partition is affiima'-tive and the burden of proof is upon thé defendants on that question. ” We granted original defendants ’ petition for certiorari, wherein they complain of this holding' of the Court of Appeals. ’

The bill alleged the existence at the" time'of'its filing of a tenancy in common and the recorded chain' of title back to the source' common to complainant and defendants, and the resulting rights of the' parties. The defendants in their answer admit the chain of title', but *48 in order to avoid the partition, allege an affirmative fact which they say occurred after they became tenants in common, to wit, an oral partition and possession thereunder. So, the point at issue is whether it is the duty of the defendants to first offer evidence to establish the oral partition and possession which they allege or whether it is the duty of the complainant to first offer evidence that there has been no oral partition.

In City National Bank v. Barnes, 164 Tenn. 450, 453, 51 S. W. (2d) 503, 504, it was held that “the burden of proof . . . rests upon that party whose material affirmative allegations are not expressly, or impliedly, admitted by his adversary.” The defendants made the “material affirmative allegations” that there had been an oral partition of the land, thereby destroying the otherwise admitted tenancy in common. Tested by this rule, it would seem to be the duty of the defendants in the state of the pleadings to first offer proof in support of their affirmative allegation that an oral partition had occurred after the three became tenants in common.

These defendants, in support of their insistence that it is the- duty of the complainant to first offer proof that there had been no partition since the three became tenants in common, cite Section 1061 of Gibson’s Suits in Chancery wherein it is stated that “if any of them dispute complainant’s right to a partition, the complainant must make such proof as would entitle him to a recovery in ejectment.” In Worthan v. Cherry, 40 Tenn. 468, 470, it is held that “it is a well established principle in the action of ejectment, that where both parties claim title under the same third person, it is sufficient to prove the derivation of title from him.” In Hyder v. Butler, 103 Tenn. 289, 297, 52 S. W. 876, 878, it was held: “In the next place, it is urged that the plaintiff cannot recover the land now *49 in dispute, because he has not made a full deraignment of his title. He has in fact produced only the deed of the sheriff and the record supporting it; yet that is sufficient, since he and the defendant both claim under Maupin. De-raignment to the common source is all that the law requires in such a case. ’ ’ The complainant in this case has deraigned title to the common source and that deraignment has been admitted by the answer. It would seem, therefore, under these authorities that complainant has complied with this rule, as stated by Gibson.

The text of 47 Corpus Juris, page 420, Section 383, in so far as pertinent to this question, is in this language: “If an agreement for partition or an executed prior partition agreement is set up by defendant, the burden is on him to prove it.” In support of this text, the writer cites the Yirginia case of Brooks v. Hubble, 27 S. E. 585, and the Illinois case of Page v. Page, 301 Ill. 191, 133 N. E. 658. In the Virginia case [27 S. E. 586], the Court held: “It is true that oral partition of lands could at that time be made by co-parceners, yet where it is relied on as a defense to a bill filed by one of the parceners, or his or her heirs, for partition of a certain tract of land, the burden of proof is on those setting it up to show clearly that such partition was made; and, it is not sufficient to show simply the fact that it was made, but the burden of proof is not lifted until it is shown to whom the several lots were assigned. Until this is done, there is only a partial and ineffectual compliance with the obligation growing out of the burden of proof.”

In the Illinois case [301 Ill. 191, 133 N. E. 659] referred to the language of the Court is: “ The only serious contest in the case is as to the alleged agreement fixing the division line between the two owners.

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Smith v. Packard
27 S.E. 586 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1897)
Glovier v. Dingus
4 S.E.2d 551 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1939)
Brooks v. Hubble
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Page v. Page
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Brown v. Brown
32 N.E. 1128 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1893)
Hyder v. Butler
52 S.W. 876 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1899)

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Bluebook (online)
208 S.W.2d 334, 186 Tenn. 45, 22 Beeler 45, 1 A.L.R. 2d 469, 1948 Tenn. LEXIS 516, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clark-v-dodds-tenn-1948.