Cutshaw v. Shelley

13 Tenn. App. 580, 1931 Tenn. App. LEXIS 97
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedDecember 23, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 13 Tenn. App. 580 (Cutshaw v. Shelley) 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
Cutshaw v. Shelley, 13 Tenn. App. 580, 1931 Tenn. App. LEXIS 97 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

PORTRUM, J.

The complainant filed this bill against her mother, brothers" and sisters, to partition 70 acres of land, and for a construction of the deed covering the land in order to determine the rights and interests of the mother and children therein. The Bank of Sevierville was made a party defendant as the holder of notes secured by a trust deed upon the land, executed by the mother' and some of the children, and for the purpose of removing this trust deed as a cloud from the interests of those who did not join in its execution. The complainant’s right to partition is .dependent, upon her interest in the land and if the deed is a vested interest or a contingent interest. This interest is determined from a construction of the deed under which she and her co-tenants claim. The material part of this deed reads:

“I, Elijah Ballard, hereby transfer and convey to Emily Barthula Cunningham the following described tract of land, to her use and benefit and her children and their benefit, the said land lying in Sevier County in District Number Fourteen on the waters of Saginaw Creek, bounded as follows: Beginning on a hickory . . . to the beginning, by estimation seventy acres of land, and I warrant the above title against all persons whomsoever.
“"Witness my hand and seal this the 11th day of October, 1884.”

*582 The grantor, Elijah Ballard, was the father of Emily B. Cunningham, the main grantee; at the time of the execution of the deed, the grantee, Emily B. Cunningham, was a widow with three minor children and these children were living with their grandfather, the grantor. The names of these children were Grettie Cunningham, J. W. Cunningham and Bennie Cunningham. Eleven years after the execution of this deed the mother married a man by the name of Shelley, and two children were born when Bennie Cunningham died at about the age of fifteen years, and his interest, if a vested interest, descended to his heirs at law. Thereafter another child was born. These five children survived and are parties to this suit; the second husband, Shelley, is now dead.

The parties assert title to the land as follows:

1. The widow, Emily B. Shelley, says that she owns the land in fee, (a) that the only interests her children took was the right to live with her in their home and enjoy the fruit of the income, (b) that the conveyance was complete when she was named as grantee, and the words “and her children and 'their benefit” were surplus-age.

2. The complainant insists that the deed passed title to her mother and her and her two brothers as tenants in common at the time of its execution; that the grandfather had in mind the mother and her three children and he intended to convey the land to them as individuals and not as a class; that if the conveyance was made to the grantees as a class, the class included the mother and since she was individualized the class doctrine fails, and the mother and three children take the property as individuals and tenants in common.

3. The children by the last marriage claim that they have an interest in the land because their mother took a life estate in the property and the remainder interest passed to her children as a class which opened and permitted the entry of after born children, therefore they have an equal interest with the children by the first marriage.

The chancellor construed the deed as follows:

“The court finds that under the terms and provisions of said deed from Elijah Ballard to said Emily B. above referred to, that the title in and to said tract of land was vested in said Emily B. Cunningham in trust for herself for life and then for her children, such as were then in existence and such as have been born since the execution of said deed. That said children take the remainder interest in said land as a class at the date of the death of said Emily B.”

We will consider the contention of the parties in the above order. The mother did not take the fee in this estate; we have examined *583 the three eases relied upon as authorities for the position that the children only took an interest in the use clause, or the right to live in the home and enjoy the fruits of the farm while they were members of the family; the facts in these cases are dissimilar to the facts in this — the cases are Hix v. Gosling, 69 Tenn., 561, Harris v. Anderson, 36 Tenn., 251, and Moore v. Simmons, 39 Tenn., 545. And we cannot regard the reference to the children as surplus-age. Beecher v. Hicks, 75 Tenn., 211; Code 1858, Section 2006.

The Cunningham children insist that the property went to their mother and themselves as tenants in common. This is true if the mother was not given a life estate and the children the remainder. ¥e had as well state here that we think the mother was given a life estate and the remainder passed to her children, because:

“A very slight indication of an intention that the children shall not take jointly with the mother will suffice to give the estate to the mother for life, with remainder to her children, as well in the case of a deed (Moore v. Simmons, 2 Head, 546), as of a will.” Beecher v. Hicks, 75 Tenn., 210.
“A bequest to a mother and her children, without more, would give an equal interest to each in the legacy; (citing authorities). A slight indication of an intention that the children shall not take jointly with the mother, would give a life estat.e to the mother, with the remainder to the children; (citing authorities). And the fact that there were no children at the death of the testator would be a sufficient circumstance to require the latter construction.” Cannon v. Apperson, 82 Tenn., 576.

We think the indication of an intention to give the mother a life estate is present in this deed; the benefits were divided, “to her use and benefit and her children and their benefit.” The interest being divided, it necessarily follows that one must preclude the other and the last was deferred until after the enjoyment of the first. We think this sufficient to indicate a purpose on the part of the grantor to give to the mother a life estate, with the remainder to her children.

However, it is further insisted, in the event the mother took a life estate then the three living children, at that time, took a present interest in the remainder, and they, as grantees, were individualized, so the remainder passed to them at that time as a vested remainder. A gift to children without naming any of them is a gift to a class.

“If the persons to take can be ascertained only by inquiring who answers the general description, there being no other special designation of them, they necessarily take as a class, and those who take take all.” Rood on Wills, Sec. 43, page 417.
“The class notion is disintegrated by any language in the will from which the Court can see that the testator or testatrix had in *584 mind any special inviduals as the object of the bounty intended as distinguished' from a composite class.” Tate v. Tate, 18 Cates (126 Tenn.), 179.

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Bluebook (online)
13 Tenn. App. 580, 1931 Tenn. App. LEXIS 97, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cutshaw-v-shelley-tennctapp-1931.