Craft v. Blass

8 Tenn. App. 498, 1928 Tenn. App. LEXIS 169
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJune 22, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 8 Tenn. App. 498 (Craft v. Blass) 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
Craft v. Blass, 8 Tenn. App. 498, 1928 Tenn. App. LEXIS 169 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

HEISKELL, J.

The subject-matter of this suit is the estate of Rachel Craft, deceased, consisting of valuable parcels of real property in the city of Memphis. Appellee, complainant in the court below, predicates her claim on the will of Rachel Craft, formerly known as Rachel Seelig, dated January 14, 1908. Appellants, defendants below, are the heirs of said Rachel Craft, deceased. Rachel Craft, a widow, departed this life on April 4, 1927; and the alleged will of January 14, 1908 was admitted to probate by the Probate Court of Shelby county on April 11, 1927.

By her will, Rachel Craft, or Seelig, bequeathed to appellee, then known as Victoria Schoenberger, the sum of $350, and devised and bequeathed all of the residue of the estate, real and personal, to her "friend,” William R. Craft.

On April 7, 1911, Rachel Seelig and said William R. Craft intermarried. Appellee, at the time, was making her abode with Rachel Seelig; and on July 26, 1921, said William R. Craft by a proceeding in the probate court of Shelby county, in which proceeding Rachel Craft did not join, adopted appellee as his child, and by the same proceeding her name became Victoria Schoen-berger Craft. Appellee, at the time of the adoption, was between thirty and forty years of age. William R. Craft died on January 4, 1924, and, as stated, Rachel Craft died on April 4, 1927. William R. Craft, by his last will, in actual effect, gave his entire estate, consisting of valuable real property, to appellee, Victoria Schoen-berger Craft. Rachel Craft, the widow, dissented from the will, and, after some controversy, appellee and Rachel Craft compromised their differences and executed a partition deed by which they divided the William R. Craft real estate, and settled rights and interests in other properties. Shortly thereafter, in a settlement of other matters, Rachel Craft signed another document, by which, according to its purport, Rachel Craft, purchasing appellee’s one-half interest in House No. T515 Madison avenue for $3000, agreed to devise the entire interest in said property to appellee. Dissension over the real property being thus composed, the only actual litigation between the parties was a replevin suit instituted by appellee to recover from Rachel Craft possession of an automobile, in which litigation appellee was successful.

*500 ■ Rachel Craft died without issue, as did William Ri Craft; but the Chancellor held that appellee, Victoria Schoenberger Craft, is “issue” of William R. Craft by virtue of the aforementioned adoption proceeding; and as such “issue,” by force of the “lapsed legacy statute” took, not merely the legacy of $350 given to her under the alleged will of Rachel Craft, but also the entire remainder of the estate under the devise and bequest to William R. Craft, who predeceased the testatrix.

The Chancellor also decreed that complainant was entitled to recover No. 1515 Madison avenue under the said contract of Rachel Craft to devise same to complainant.

Defendants, who are brother, sister, nephews and niece, only' heirs of Rachel Craft, have appealed and assigned errors.

As will be gathered from the foregoing statement the suit involves :

First: The right of appellee, Victoria S. Craft, tlhe adopted daughter of William R. Craft, the devisee in the will of Rachel Craft, to take the property of the testatrix, Rachel Craft, under the Lapse Legacy and Devise Statutes of this State, the said William R. Craft having predeceased the testatrix.

Second: The right of appellee, Victoria S. Craft, to have specifically performed and enforced a written contract between herself and the testatrix, Rachel Craft, of date August 4, 1925, by the terms of which said Rachel Craft, for a valuable consideration, agreed to will to appellee a certain house and lot in the city of Memphis, known as 1515 Madison avenue.

These were the contentions presented by the complainants’ bill. The appellants who were defendants in the court below, interposed demurrers to the original bill, and at the same time filed their answers. The sole question presented by the demurrers in this case is: “What construction shall be given the word “issue,” in sections 2938 and 4171, Shannon’s Annotated Code, when considered in connection with the Statute of Adoption, section '5409, et seq., Shannon’s Annotated Code?

These demurrers were overruled by the Chancellor, who, after a thorough investigation, held in a written opinion “that appellee occupied the legal status of issue of the said William R. Craft, the devisee in said will, and as such was entitled to the property left by the said testatrix, Rachel Craft, under and by virtue of said Lapse Legacy and Devise Statutes.”

The answers of defendants admitted for the most part the allegations of the bill, but contained in substance these averments:

1. That appellee, Victoria Craft, at the time she was adopted by William R. Craft, was more than twenty-one years of age.

*501 2. That appellee is an alien and not a citizen o£ the United States.

3. That the contract between appellee and Rachel Craft, deceased, of date August 4, 1925, and filed as an exhibit to the original bill, was procured by complainant’s fraud, covin and guile, and by threat and duress.

4. That said contract was without consideration.

5. There is also an allegation with reference to appelle.e acquiring the property of her father, ‘William R. Craft, under and by virtue of the terms of his will.

The -answer of the appellants, Joe Blass and Minnie Friedlander, wias filed as a cross-bill against Dr. William R. Cox, whom the original bill shows to be the owner of a one-third undivided interest in and to a certain piece of real estate described in subsection 6, paragraph 8 of the original bill, the other interest being owned by appellee, Victoria Craft, and the testatrix, Rachel Craft. The complainant, Victoria S. Craft was not made a party-defendant to the cross-bill. The cross-bill alleges that said Dr. William R. Cox paid nothing whatever for his interest in said property, but secured the same through fraud, covin and guile. It prayed that the interest of said William A. Cox in said property be divested out of him and vested in the heirs of said Rachel Craft, deceased.

The defendant, Dr. William R. Cox, through his attorneys, filed a demurrer to this cross-bill, which demurrer was by the court, sustained and the said cross-bill dismissed. .

The first and second assignments of error raise the question that it was error to hold that the complainant, Victoria Craft, the adopted daughter of William R. Craft who was the devisee under the will of Rachel Craft, occupied toward said devisee the relation of “issue” within the meaning of the Lapse Legacy and Devise Statutes, when considered in connection with the statutes of adoption. There are certain subsidiary questions raised which will be noticed after disposing of the main question.

The Lapse Legacy and Devise Statutes, as found in Shannon’s Annotated Code of Tennessee, are as follows:

“Section 3928.

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Bluebook (online)
8 Tenn. App. 498, 1928 Tenn. App. LEXIS 169, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/craft-v-blass-tennctapp-1928.