FIRST FED. S. & L. ASSN. v. Dearth

279 S.W.2d 503
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedMay 6, 1955
StatusPublished

This text of 279 S.W.2d 503 (FIRST FED. S. & L. ASSN. v. Dearth) 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
FIRST FED. S. & L. ASSN. v. Dearth, 279 S.W.2d 503 (Tenn. 1955).

Opinion

279 S.W.2d 503 (1955)

FIRST FEDERAL SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION OF MEMPHIS, Tennessee,
v.
Ann Carol DEARTH et al.

Supreme Court of Tennessee.

May 6, 1955.

*504 McDonald, Kuhn, McDonald and Crenshaw, and John A. Osoinach, all of Memphis, for petitioner-appellant.

J.M. Regan, Sol. and guardian ad litem, and Canada, Russell, Turner & Alexander, all of Memphis, for respondents-appellants.

NEIL, Chief Justice.

The sole determinative issue on this appeal is whether or not the First Federal Savings and Loan Association, as mortgagee, is entitled to foreclose its mortgage contrary to the rights and interests of the minor defendants, who claim to be vested remaindermen in fee simple under the will of their deceased grandmother. The father and mother of the defendants were the grantors in the aforesaid deed of trust.

The Chancellor decided this issue in favor of First Federal. The minor defendants appealed to the Court of Appeals, and that court reversed the Chancellor's decree.

We granted the petition for certiorari, and the issue has been orally argued by counsel for the petitioner and the guardian ad litem for the defendants.

The contest between the petitioner and the defendants arose by reason of the following undisputed facts, as recited in the Court of Appeals' opinion.

Mrs. Pauline Dearth died in Memphis, Shelby County, Tennessee, on December 24, 1951, the owner of a house and lot located at 1617 Foster Avenue, in the City of Memphis. It was thought by her son, and only heir at law then surviving, that she died intestate. He had two minor children, Ann Carol Dearth and Cynthia Jane Burr Dearth. Mrs. Pauline Dearth died testate, but her will, which was found in the lockbox of James O. Farrar, father of Granville Farrar, an attorney of the Memphis Bar, was not produced until some time in August, 1952, and was not probated until May 29, 1953, prior to which date there had been no administration of her estate. By the terms of this will the testatrix devised to her son, Cooper Dearth, a life estate in "all her property of every kind *505 and character, real, personal, or mixed, and wheresoever situated" with remainder "to my two grand-children, Ann Carol Dearth and Cynthia Jane Burr Dearth, share and share alike in fee simple, forever." Cooper Dearth was named executor without requirement to make bond. The will was dated May 8, 1950.

On March 22, 1952, Cooper Dearth, using his full name, "Andrew Cooper Dearth", and his wife, Rubye Mae Dearth, applied to the First Federal Savings and Loan Association of Memphis, Tennessee, who will be referred to later as First Federal, for a loan on the house and lot situated at 1617 Foster Avenue in the City of Memphis, and which was owned by Mrs. Pauline Dearth at her death, in the sum of $3,000. The source of title shown in the application is "Inherited December 1951", also that the applicants "had two children, ages twelve and six years". This application was approved on the 2nd day of April, 1952, by the executive committee of the bank, the same being signed by J.H. Weir, Secretary. A note, evidencing the said loan, was dated April 1, 1952, and provided for monthly installment payments, acceleration of payments, and of maturity on default, payment of taxes and insurance. This note was signed only by Andrew Cooper Dearth. The deed of trust, conveying the property to J. Herbert Weir, Trustee, was dated April 1, 1952, and signed by Andrew Cooper Dearth and his wife Rubye Mae Dearth and acknowledged by each on April 8, 1952. It was duly recorded in the register's office of Shelby County.

On April 4, 1952, an "Affidavit of Heirship" was made, signed and sworn to by Cooper Dearth, in which he states that he is the only child and heir-at-law of his mother, Pauline C. Dearth, and that she died intestate on December 24, 1951; that his father died many years before his mother.

"On the same day, Granville Farrar executed an affidavit properly sworn to in which it is stated that he is a distant relative of Pauline C. Dearth and had known her for more than forty years; that she died intestate, a resident of Shelby County, leaving an estate valued at less that $10,000; that she left only one child, a son, Cooper Dearth, who is the next of kin and heir-at-law of said Pauline C. Dearth, and other facts apparently necessary to show the chain of title.
"On April 8, 1952 a check was drawn payable to Andrew Cooper Dearth by said Association, on the Union Planters National Bank & Trust Co., Memphis, Tennessee, in the amount of $2777.50, representing the net proceeds of said loan, which net amount is shown by an undated `Loan Settlement Sheet' the items of expense shown thereby being, abstract $27.50, title examination $30; survey $10, appraisal $15, credit report $2, filing fee, transfer tax etc. $8.15, interest to 4-30-52, $9.45, taxes-Escrow $27.20, insurance — C.R. Weir Co. $21, 1951 city tax and penalty $38.52, 1951 county tax and penalty $33.68, and taking the total of those items from the $3000 leaves the amount of the aforesaid check. This loan settlement sheet is signed by Andrew Cooper Dearth and Rubye Mae Dearth."

Default was made in the payment of the monthly installments beginning April 1, 1953. Cooper Dearth died May 19, 1953.

Two days after his death, or on May 21, 1953, Mr. Granville Farrar informed First Federal that Cooper Dearth had died and that subsequent to the execution of the aforesaid deed of trust, it was discovered that Mrs. Pauline C. Dearth had died testate and that Cooper Dearth was devised only a life estate with remainder in fee to his two children.

On July 2, 1953, First Federal filed its original bill in this cause, reciting all of the foregoing facts, together with averments that following the application for the loan, and approval by its executive committee, and prior to closing the loan, abstracts of title to the property were submitted to its attorneys along with the affidavits of Cooper Dearth and Granville Farrar, attorney, etc., *506 that it was advised that the trust deed would constitute a valid first lien on said real estate; that complainant (petitioner here) had no reason to doubt the validity of the said trust deed until informed by Mr. Granville Farrar of Mrs. Pauline C. Dearth's will being produced and later probated. It was further averred that all parties acted in good faith when the trust deed was executed and the loan completed.

The prayer of the bill was for a decree to the effect that the said deed of trust was a valid first mortgage lien on the property and that the title in the Trustee be held superior to the title of the minor defendants; that the property be sold for the purpose of enforcing the terms of the said deed of trust, etc. The bill also prayed for the appointment of a guardian ad litem to answer and defend on behalf of the minor children. Ann Carol Dearth, aged 14 years, filed a separate answer, and she with her sister, Cynthia Jane Burr Dearth, filed a formal answer by their guardian ad litem.

At the conclusion of the trial the Chancellor announced his opinion, holding that the complainant First Federal was entitled to have its debt paid out of the proceeds of the sale of the property, citing and relying entirely upon Wright v. Eakin, 151 Tenn. 681, 270 S.W. 992. The learned Chancellor, who is now sitting as a member of the Court of Appeals, but who did not participate in its decision, held that the facts in the case at bar, being similar in all respects to Wright v.

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Related

Gibson v. Jones
81 Tenn. 684 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1884)
Raht v. Meek
14 S.W. 777 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1890)
Wright v. Eakin
151 Tenn. 681 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1924)
First Federal Savings & Loan Ass'n v. Dearth
279 S.W.2d 503 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1955)

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Bluebook (online)
279 S.W.2d 503, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-fed-s-l-assn-v-dearth-tenn-1955.