Cooper v. Great Falls Cotton Co.

30 S.W. 353, 94 Tenn. 588
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 27, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 30 S.W. 353 (Cooper v. Great Falls Cotton 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
Cooper v. Great Falls Cotton Co., 30 S.W. 353, 94 Tenn. 588 (Tenn. 1895).

Opinion

SnodgRass, Ch. J.

The original bill in this case was filed September 21, 1892, by William Cooper, W. B. Hill, and C. P. Hill, against Jesse and H. L. Walling and W. P. Faulkner. It was an ejectment bill, and set up title to certain real estate on, or adjacent to, the Great Falls of the Caney Fork River, the strip immediately in controversy being a small space on the southern side of the river, and being included in a grant for twenty- acres issued to John Halterman in 1822. The defendants, Walling and Faulkner, filed an answer disclaiming title to any portion of the land, and showing that it was now the property of the Great Falls Cotton Mills Company.-

Thereupon complainant filed an amended bill November 22, 1892, mailing this -corporation defendant, and asserting the same right as against it. The corporation’s answer denied that complainant had any title to the land, or any good and valid title as against it, or by adverse possession, or otherwise. Both complainant and defendant averred superior title, both by reason of their title papers and by adverse possession, which each asserted they had had for more than seven and for more than twenty years. This answer of the defendant company set up that Asa [590]*590Faulkner made a wheel pit in the water at the Great Falls; that he put in a saw and a grist mill, and operated the same in his lifetime and before he conveyed the property. In 1885 he conveyed it in trust. The trustee resigned, and the land was brought to sale and sold by J. C.. Biles, special commissioner, to Jesse Walling and W. P. Faulkner. Walling sold his interest to W. P. Faulkner on April 30, 1892, and Faulkner, on May 6, 1892, 'sold to the Great Falls Cotton Mills Company.

The statement we have made presents a brief summary of the issue involved. Many questions were asserted and attempted to be made in proof which may be • eliminated by brief statement of the results as to them, without extending the discussion or elaborating. Neither party connected with any grant, nor did the possession of complainants, and Bosson, through whom they claimed, which it was insisted by defendant was by permission of defendant’s vendors, appear to be' such on the weight of the evidence, and, therefore, what possession complainants and their vendors have held will be treated, without more, as being adverse. In the same connection complainants insist that the possession of Asa Faulkner was not adverse to them, because he had bought an interest of one of their vendors, and for some time had held as tenant in common, and consequently his holding had not been adverse. We determine as a. fact that Faulkner’s holding was adverse. He had bought the land in conflict with a [591]*591view to protect himself against litigation, and complainants and their vendors did not understand, nor did he, that his holding on the Warren County side of the river was for both, but, on the contrary, each knew that the claim of the other was adverse.

Another question raised is that complainants are estopped to seek to recover this land, because of the fact that expensive improvements had been made by defendant, Faulkner, and with full knowledge of complainants, who did not assert • an adverse claim.. There is nothing in this defense. As above stated, in respect to the adverse claim of the complainants that defendant was a tenant in common and holding as such, the claims of each were well known to the other, and whatever was done as to improvements was done with the. full knowledge of the adverse claim of the complainants, and in the expectation that it would be asserted, as it has been. The claims of each will, therefore, stand upon the merits of the respective titles. Of course it is proper to observe, in this connection, that complainants, if entitled to recover anything, can recover only upon the strength of their own title, and must, therefore, make out a title for themselves. This they have done by showing color of title in themselves and vendors, with seven years adverse possession of a portion of the twenty acres in controversy, and that this was granted land. Bosson, who bought the Halterman land (though the record does not show any connection through and with the Halterman title), [592]*592built a dam across the river to the southern bank, sometime .about 1843 or 1844. This was maintained for more than seven years — indeed, for more than twenty ' years. Nothing else ' occurring, that would have vested title in complainants, and to the full extent of the land described in the Halterman grant. But defendant, and those under whom it claims, had possession on other parts of the land in controversy so as to' neutralize the effect of the Bosson possession of the land, and to confine it to that part of the land embraced in the Bosson title actually taken possession of by Bosson, or which can be assumed to have been so possessed by the building and maintaining of a dam across the river as indicated. It may be considered as satisfactorily established, at least settled by the weight of the evidence, that their seven years possession with color of title vested in complainants’ vendors title to so much of the land as is now occupied by the wheel pit and race of defendant, prior to the purchases of Asa Faulkner -from Cunningham .in September and October, 1881.

The material inquiry, therefore, is as to the effect of Faulkner’s possession, and those claiming under him since that date, including defendant; for we think, notwithstanding all objections of complainants, it is one continuous possession up to the date of the filing of this bill in 1892. This has been sufficient to vest in defendant title to its building and wheel pit. Whether it extends to the water privi[593]*593lege and so much of the thread of the stream as decreed by the Chancellor, is another question, and remains to be examined in the light of the evidence.

The Chancellor’s decree, as we understand it, was on this theory. He decreed as follows, illustrating by the appended diagram:

N

That complainants were entitled to recover to the southern end of the dam (marked ‘‘D ” on the diagram) and southeast with the line of the river to point “ P ” on the diagram; thence west of the wheel pit diagonally northeast and crossing the river, as indicated by the line “P A.”

The Chancellor does. not give his reasons, and counsel profess themselves to be much at a loss to [594]*594divine any, for what each (for both appeal) term this arbitrary and compromise line. But evidently the Chancellor treated complainants’ adverse claim and possession under color of title prior to 1881, when Faulkner bought of Cunningham, as having-ripened into a perfect title to the southern line on, beyond, or east of the' wheel pit, but that Faulkner’s possession since that date had been a conflict not only as to the actual wheel pit, but as to the race and necessary flow of water thereto and therefrom, and treated defendant’s possession, to that extent, as adverse since said purchase, and that therefore defendant had, under its color of title and such possession, regained of complainants so much of the Halterman land and water as was included in said area, and no more, treating that area as the real possession of Faulkner and, the real conflict, which would occasion a divestiture of so much of this land and water out of complainants by virtue of the operation of the statute of limitations, a nowise arbitrary or compromise conclusion, nor one, we think, difficult to comprehend, whatever may be said of its correctness, about which we will inquire later on.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
30 S.W. 353, 94 Tenn. 588, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cooper-v-great-falls-cotton-co-tenn-1895.