Fehringer v. Fehringer

439 S.W.2d 258, 222 Tenn. 585, 26 McCanless 585, 1969 Tenn. LEXIS 465
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 26, 1969
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 439 S.W.2d 258 (Fehringer v. Fehringer) 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
Fehringer v. Fehringer, 439 S.W.2d 258, 222 Tenn. 585, 26 McCanless 585, 1969 Tenn. LEXIS 465 (Tenn. 1969).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Humphreys

delivered the opinion of the Court.

In 1933, Anthony L. Fehringer died testate, survived by two sons, Louis and Anthony J., and two grandchildren, Marie Fehringer Hartman and Vincent Fehringer, the children of his son John, who predeceased him. His will contained the following clauses pertinent to the determination of this appeal:

. “SIXTH-: I hereby give, devise and bequeath unto my two sons, Louis Fehringer and Anthony Fehringer, *587 tlie following described real property situated in the County of Obion, State of Tennessee to wit: Seventy-five acre tract of land located and situated in Section 12, Route 1, Obion County, Tennessee, known as the Fehringer Farm, to have and to hold for and during their natural life only and upon death of either of my said sons their interest in the above described real property, I hereby, give devise and bequeath unto the heirs of his body * * *” (emphasis added).
“SEVENTH: All the rest, residue and remainder of my estate, real, personal and mixed, wheresoever situated, of which I may be entitled at the time of my deceased, I give, devise and bequeath to my two sons, Louis Fehringer and Anthony J. Fehringer, share and share alike. ’ ’

In 1960, Louis brought suit to have the will construed and to sell the farm for partition. The suit, Fehringer v. Fehringer, 212 Tenn. 75, 367 S.W.2d 781 (1963), was concluded in this Court, where it was held Lords had a life estate in half of the farm with a contingent remainder in the heirs of his body, who at that time could not be ascertained; that Anthony L. had had a life estate in one-half, and the remainder after his death in 1949 had vested in fee simple in his daughter, Ellen Jane. It was also held that the farm could be sold for a partition.

Louis died testate in March 1965, leaving his estate to his widow, Mrs. Huida Fehringer, who brought this suit (revived after her death in the name of her sole heir and beneficiary Dorothy Seebeck) to set up a one-fourth interest in the farm.

The Complainant’s theory of suit, with which the Chancellor agreed, is that when Louis died without heirs *588 of his body, the reversion in the undivided one-half interest, after the contingent remainder, vested in fee in Anthony L.’s estate, and passed under the residuary clause, Item 7, of his will, to Louis and Anthony J. That on Louis’s death, one-half of this one-half interest passed to Louis’s widow, Huida, and through her to Dorothy Seebeck.

An alternative theory of the Complaint is, that if Anthony L. died intestate as to the reversion, one-third of this one-half passed to Louis, as heir, and through him to Dorothy Seebeck.

The theory of defense is that Louis owned no interest he could transmit. That under the Sixth Item of Anthony J.’s will, the contingent remaindermen were Louis’ heirs at law, those who would take his property according to the statute of descent and distribution, T.C.A. 31-101. And the property being ancestral property, it would go under the statute to Louis’ nearest relatives on his father’s side. It was contended that this, in effect, had been the holding by this Court in the first case, and is the law of the case.

As indicated, the Chancellor held the reversion passed under the residuary clause, so Dorothy owned an undivided one-fourth interest in the farm, and was also entitled to this share in the rent realized on the farm after Louis’ death.

Appellant’s argument that the first Fehringer case settled the main issue in their favor, and is the law of the case, seems to flow from the statement made in that opinion that the “remaindermen” could only be determined at the death of Louis Fehringer. From this statement it is reasoned and argued that the Court had in mind *589 that there -would necessarily be remaindermen. And that since the heirs of Lonis Fehringer could comprise such a class, that the Court, in that case, held, in effect, in favor of Ellen, Vincent, and Marie Hartman, Appellants.

This contention is based on a misconception of this Court’s holding in the first case. Instead of defining a class, the Court purposefully refrained from doing this, conscious of the two possibilities which might arise in the future; one of which has arisen in this case.

Since, neither expressly nor by implication was the proposition contended for by appellants decided in that case, but, instead, was expressly passed over as “moot”, not ready for decision, the ease is not res judicata of the quéstion presented by the appeal. Estill v. Taul, 10 Tenn. 467, 2 Yeager 467, 24 Am.Dec. 498; Hull v. Vaughn, 23 Tenn.App. 448, 134 S.W.2d 206.

Although the Court used the word “remaindermen” in its opinion, it was not holding that in fact there had to be remaindermen, and that these could consist of the heirs of Louis. The remainder was recognized as contingent, and not ready for definition.

Appellants bottom their main contention, that the property vested in remainder in those who would be Louis’s heirs to ancestral property under the Statute of Descent and Distribution, on the cases of Spencer v. Stanton, 46 Tenn.App. 688, 333 S.W.2d 225, and Butler v. Parker, 200 Tenn. 603, 293 S."W.2d 174. In Spencer, Judge Carney, quoting at length from Chancellor Mara-ble, one of the finest legal minds to grace the Bench of this State, held that when a limitation is in favor of the “heirs” of a designated person, or is in other words of similar import, then, unless a contrary intent of the *590 testator is found from additional language or circumstances, the persons so described by the limitation as con-veyees or devisees are those who, under the application of local law, would succeed to property of the type which is the subject matter of the conveyance, if such ancestor died owning the property and intestate at the time when the group is to be ascertained.

Applying this principle, which was taken verbatim from 3 Restatement of the Law of Property, sec. 305, p. 1671, it was held that the meaning of the word “heirs” must be determined in Tennessee by our Statute of Descent and Distribution, T.C.A. 31-101, and in that case, the class would include only those persons who would be the “heirs” of the conveyor under the Statute if he had died intestate. And that the property, being ancestral, would descend as such.

However, this conclusion was dictated by the terms of the testator ’s will, which expressly vested the remainder in the life tenant’s “heirs”.

That is, of course, not the situation in the present case.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
439 S.W.2d 258, 222 Tenn. 585, 26 McCanless 585, 1969 Tenn. LEXIS 465, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fehringer-v-fehringer-tenn-1969.