Dalton v. Eller

284 S.W. 68, 153 Tenn. 418
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 6, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 284 S.W. 68 (Dalton v. Eller) 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
Dalton v. Eller, 284 S.W. 68, 153 Tenn. 418 (Tenn. 1925).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Hall,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

*420 The question presented in this cause is as to the proper construction of a deed executed by W. J. Eller and wife, Nancy E. Eller, to the complainant and J. EL Merry-man, jointly. The complainant later took a deed from Merryman for his entire interest in said property.

The deed from W. J. Eller and wife, Nancy E. Eller, to complainant and Merryman reads as follows:' “State of Tennessee, Macon County:

“Know all men by these presents, that we, W. J. Eller and wife, Nancy E. Eller, for and in consideration of the sum of five thousand dollars paid and to be paid as follows: Two thousand dollars cash in hand paid, the receipt of which is hereby acknowledged, and a promissory note, to amount of fifteen hundred dollars and due one year after date, with six per cent, interest from date, and a second note to amount of fifteen hundred dollars due two years after date, with six per cent, interest from date. It is further agreed that payments on these notes can be made in payments of five hundred or more dollars, at any time from date of said notes until paid.

“Have this day bargained and sold and do hereby transfer and convey unto J. H. Merryman and R. 0 Dalton, jointly, their heirs and assigns forever, our entire mill property and fixtures of every kind thereunto belonging, and including the lot of land on which the said mill is now located and situated in the fourth civil district of Macon county, Tenn., and hounded as follows, to-wit: On the west and north by Mrs. Paul Johnson, and on the east and south by R. B. Merryman and Paul Johnson, containing about one and one-half • acres more or less.

*421 “All property on this lot of land is conveyed, except thirty by thirty-six feet in dimensions, one two-room ironclad storehouse, now occupied and owned by A. J. Eller, which is not conveyed. The said A. J. Eller has the privilege to use the land that said house is on and ten feet in addition all around said storehouse, so long as said A. J. Eller uses this storehouse in his merchandise business, but, when he declines to use said house further for said business, then, in that event, said J. H. Merryman and R. 0. Dalton have the privilege to buy said storehouse at cost of building; but, if the said J. H. Merryman and R. 0. Dalton refuse to buy the same, then said A. J. Eller must remove it at once.

“To have and to hold the said mill and mill property, and the lot of land on which the same is located to the said J. H. Merryman and R. 0. Dalton, their heirs and assigns forever. And we warrant the title to same to the said J. H. Merryman and R. 0. Dalton, their heirs and assigns, against the lawful claim or claims of all for whomsoever. We further warrant this property to be unincumbered, except as above herein mentioned.

“This the 30th day of January 1917.

“W. J. ELDER,

“NaNcy E. Eller.”

W. J. Eller and wife, Nancy E. Eller, are the father and mother of the defendant, A. J. Eller.

The bill in this cause was filed by complainant February 6, 1924, seeking to have said deed construed, and to have the following portion of said deed canceled as a cloud upon his title:

“All property on this lot of land is conveyed, except thirty by thirty-six feet in dimensions, one two-room ironclad storehouse, now occupied and owned by A. J. *422 Eller, which, is not conveyed. The said A. J. Eller has the privilege to use the land that said house is on and ten feet in addition all around said storehouse, so long as said A. J. Eller uses this storehouse in his merchandise business, but, when he declines to use said house further for said business, then, in that event, said J. H. Merryman and R. 0. Dalton have the privilege to buy said storehouse at cost of building; but, if the said J. H. Merryman and R. 0. Dalton refuse to buy the same, then said A. J. Eller must remove it at oncé.”

The chancellor dismissed the bill, and complainant appealed, and has assigned errors.

Through his first assignment of error complainant insists that the chancellor erred in dismissing his bill and taxing him with costs.

Through his second assignment of error complainant insists that the chancellor erred in decreeing that the reservation or exception made in the deed from W. J. Eller and wife, Nancy E. Eller, to complainant and J. H. Merryman, was valid.

Through his third assignment of error complainant insists that the chancellor erred in not decreeing a reformation of said deed, and in not canceling that portion of said deed in which it was attempted by the grantors to make a reservation or exception to the defendant, A. J. Eller.

It is the contention of complainant that the attempted reservation or exception of the storehouse, and the use of ten feet of ground around it, is invalid because it was made to defendant, who was a stranger to the deed; that no words of conveyance to the defendant of the storehouse, or of any other property, appear in the deed, and therefore the deed could not carry any title to defend *423 ant; that the whole estate of the grantors had been conveyed to complainant and Merryman in the granting clause of the deed, and the later attempt by the grantors to reserve to a stranger a portion of the property already conveyed constituted, under the technical rules of construction, an exception which was repugnant to the granting clause, and is therefore invalid and of no binding force upon complainant, and the chancellor was in error in not so decreeing.

It is a fundamental principal in the interpretation of deeds that the expressed intention of the parties shall govern. Beecher v. Hicks, 7 Lea, 207; Blackburn v. Blackburn, 109 Tenn., 674, 73 S. W., 109; Savage v. Bon Air Coal, etc., Co., 2 Tenn. Ch. App., 594; Topp v. White, 12 Heisk., 165; Carnes v. Apperson, 2 Sneed, 562; Grimes v. Orrand, 2 Heisk., 298.

The courts have most wisely abandoned technical rules in the construction of conveyances in this State, and look to the intention of the instrument alone for their guide; that intention to be arrived at from the language of the instrument read in the light of the surrounding circumstances. Williams v. Williams, 16 Lea, 164; Kissom v. Nelson, 2 Heisk., 4; Posey v. James, 7 Lea, 98; McNairy v. Thompson, 1 Sneed, 142.

In Fogarty v. Stack, 86 Tenn., 610, 8 S. W., 846, the court said:

“It is insisted for the complainants that the language ‘her heirs in fee-simple forever’ cannot be controlled by the reservation or provision for the property to revert to the grantor contained in the first habendum (there being, as is noticed, two habendums); a provision in the habendum

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
284 S.W. 68, 153 Tenn. 418, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dalton-v-eller-tenn-1925.