Elliott v. Cumberland Coal & Coke Co.

109 Tenn. 745
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 109 Tenn. 745 (Elliott v. Cumberland Coal & Coke 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
Elliott v. Cumberland Coal & Coke Co., 109 Tenn. 745 (Tenn. 1902).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Wilkes

delivered the opinion of the Court.

[747]*747This is an ejectment suit to recover a tract of about four hundred acres of land. Complainant’s title is based upon an adverse possession for more than seven years under color of title of the lands as one tract, although.the area was originally in three separate tracts, covered by three separate entries, Nos. 109, 252, and 253.

No grant appears to have ever issued as to entry 109. Entry 252.is covered by grant No*. 14,727, and entry No. 253. by grant No. 14,725. Defendant claims under two grants, — Nos. 4,975, and 5,061, — each for 5,000 acres. The claim of complainant is to the extent of the boundaries of the 400'acre tract, without reference to its subdivisions into • the original entries and grant. He does not deraign his title from the three original entries or grants, but relies upon a deed made in 1857 by the Branch Bank of Tennessee at Sparta to F. W. Ford, and adverse possession under this deed, which he insists extends to the boundaries of that deed. The actual possessions and inclosures and improvements of the complainant are all on the two grants, 14,725 and 14,727, and all within the boundaries of defendant’s grant No. 4,975. While the possessions of complainant are wholly within defendant’s grant No. 4,975, yet the boundaries of his 400-acre tract held by deed executed in 1857 extend also into grant 5,061; and all of entry No. 109 and small portions of grants 14,725 and 14,727 lie within the grant No. 5,061.

[748]*748Defendant’s contention is, in substance, that, complainant’s possessions being wholly within defendant’s grant No. 4,975, and none of them within defendant’s grant No. 5,061, there has been no adverse holding as to the land, within 5,061, although the boundaries of the 400-acre tract extend into 5,061. In other words, defendant’s contention is that there has been no actual possession or adverse holding within the limits of grant No. 5,061.

It is therefore conceded that complainant has the right to recover all his 400 acres that are embraced in defendant’s grant No. 4,975, because upon that part of the 400 acres that has been adverse possession, but it is insisted he can recover nothing from grant No. 5,061, because he has had no possession within its boundaries.

The contention is still further that, though complainant has adverse holding under color of title, and can claim to the extent of the boundaries of thai title, yet, when the boundaries of that title conflict with grant No. 5,061, complainant can have no recovery, because as to that grant he has had no adverse possession. In other words, stated in another form, defendant’s contention is that the interlap lying -within grant 5,061 is the land in dispute, and, there being no possession on it, the complainant, as to it, makes out no adverse possession. The relative [749]*749situation of tbe several tracts is roughly outlined on the accompanying map:

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Related

State Ex Rel. v. Seals
171 S.W.2d 836 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1942)
Wattenbarger v. Powers
10 Tenn. App. 584 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1928)
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294 S.W. 509 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1927)
Richardson v. Schwoon
3 Tenn. App. 512 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1925)
Elliot v. Hensley
188 Ky. 444 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1920)
Round Mountain Lumber & Coal Co. v. Bass
136 Tenn. 687 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1916)
Camp v. Riddle
128 Tenn. 294 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1913)
Wright v. Hurst
122 Tenn. 656 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1909)
Harriss v. Howard
55 S.E. 59 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1906)
Lieberman v. Clark
114 Tenn. 117 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1904)

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Bluebook (online)
109 Tenn. 745, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/elliott-v-cumberland-coal-coke-co-tenn-1902.