Fraker v. Fraker

603 S.W.2d 135, 1980 Tenn. LEXIS 478
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 4, 1980
StatusPublished

This text of 603 S.W.2d 135 (Fraker v. Fraker) 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
Fraker v. Fraker, 603 S.W.2d 135, 1980 Tenn. LEXIS 478 (Tenn. 1980).

Opinion

OPINION

HARBISON, Justice.

In this action for a declaratory judgment the Chancellor held that the plaintiff, ap-pellee here, owned fee simple title to a tract of 63.96 acres of land as surviving tenant by the entirety. The Court of Appeals affirmed.

It is the insistence of the defendants, appellants here, that by reason of the operation of a rule of law pertaining to the partition of land by tenants in common, appellee took “no new title” as a result of certain partition deeds and that she has only a widow’s rights in all but a small [136]*136fraction of the title to the tract which she and her husband received in a division of a family farm in 1940.

The facts are undisputed. Prior to his death intestate on October 24, 1940, T. P. M. Fraker owned a fee simple some 191 acres of land in Jefferson County, which he had acquired by purchase in 1920. He operated this as a family farm. One of his sons, Frank L. Fraker, was the husband of appel-lee, Inez .Fraker. This son and his wife moved onto the family farm shortly after their marriage in 1931. At first they lived in the elder Mr. Fraker’s home. Later they built their own house and several improvements on a portion of the farm, consisting of a tract of about thirty-five acres. They never received a deed to this tract prior to the death of T. F. M. Fraker, but apparently they occupied it as their residence, farmed it and paid taxes on it.

When T. F. M. Fraker died interstate in 1940, he was survived by his widow, Sarah Catherine Fraker, and four children, Frank, Fannie, Carrie and Albie. Title to the property passed under the laws of interstate descent to the four children as tenants in common, subject to the rights of the surviving widow.

In February and March, 1941, Fannie Fraker sold her one-fourth interest in the farm to her two brothers and their wives, by separate warranty deeds. Under one of these, dated February 20, 1941, Fannie conveyed one-half of her interest to Frank L. Fraker and his wife, the present appellee, Inez Fraker, for a consideration of six hundred dollars. By a separate warranty deed dated March 19, 1941, she sold the remainder of her one-fourth interest to her other brother, Albie O. Fraker and his wife Dean Fraker.

As a result of these transactions, of course, Inez Fraker and her sister-in-law Dean Fraker became owners of undivided interests in the entire farm as tenants by the entirety with their respective husbands. They were not “coparceners” in the sense of that medieval term having reference to joint heirs of ancestral property. They held by “purchase,” not by “descent,” and held interests in the whole acreage.1

A few months later, on June 16, 1941, all of the members of the family having ownership interests in the farm executed four separate deeds, under which the farm was divided into four acreage tracts. These deeds were apparently written by an attorney, who has since died. They were all deeds with full warranties — not mere quitclaim deeds. At’ the top of two of them, including the deed to appellee and her husband, were typed or written the words “Partition Deed.” Each of these instruments recited a consideration of one dollar “and the further consideration of a partition of the T. F. M. Fraker lands.”

One of the deeds was made by the other family members as grantors to Frank L. Fraker and wife Inez Fraker, covering two parcels totaling 63.96 acres. Like instruments conveying separate tracts of differing amounts of acreage were made to the widow and to the other two children of T. F. M. Fraker, one of these deeds being made to Albie Fraker and wife Dean Fraker.

There was no monetary consideration for any of these deeds. In the ancient term of conveyancing among cotenants, no “owelty” [137]*137was paid by any of the grantees to any of the grantors.2

The four deeds were recorded simultaneously, and apparently the respective grantees entered into immediate possession of their designated tracts. Appellee testified that the 63.96 acres which she and her husband received included the thirty-five acres on which they had been living prior to the death of her father-in-law in 1940. Ap-pellee and her husband Frank Fraker continued to live on their tract and to farm it until his death intestate in 1960. Thereafter she occupied the tract for a period of time. Later she went to live with a sister in Jefferson City, but she rented her land and apparently claimed ownership thereof to the exclusion of anyone else for a period of some eighteen years after the death of her husband, until the filing of the present suit in April 1978. She paid taxes on the property and was renting it on shares to a tenant at the date of the trial.

Shortly before filing the present suit, ap-pellee attempted to sell part of the tract which she and her husband had acquired in 1940. Questions were raised about her title, however, by a title examiner, and she filed this suit for declaratory judgment to determine whether she was or was not the fee simple owner of the tract as surviving tenant by the entirety.3

Appellants rely upon the ancient rule of real property law, having its origins in the Middle Ages, that Partition deeds create no new title or changes in degree of title. The leading Tennessee case adopting the rule is Cottrell v. Griffiths, 108 Tenn. 191, 65 S.W. 397, 57 L.R.A. 332 (1901). There the Court said:

“We think the proposition of law is soundly settled, in best-reasoned cases, that partition [by decree] or partition deeds between tenants in common, when they are married women, and the deed or decree includes husbands, with their wives, as decretal parties or joint convey-ees, carry no other or more interest to the husband, than if such decree or partition deed had been made to the wife alone. Such decree or deed only adjusts the rights of the interested parties to the possession. It makes no new title or change in degree of title. Each does not take the allotment by purchase, but is as much seized .of it by descent from the common ancestor as of the undivided share before partition. The deed of partition destroys the unity of possession, and henceforth each holds her share in severalty, but such deed confers no new title or additional estate in the land, or, we may add, less estate than that descended. The title being, already in her, the deed merely designated her share by metes and bounds, and allotted it to be held in severalty.” 108 Tenn. at 195, 65 S.W. 397 (Emphasis added).

In that case, as indicated in the quoted material, three daughters inherited land from their intestate father. When they undertook to partition it, the husband of one of them was added as a grantee, and in the Cottrell case it was held that the husband acquired no interest in the property by that deed.

This case has been followed in numerous other Tennessee cases, most of them involving joint heirs dividing inherited ancestral property. The most recent of these cases is Hurt v. Martin, 216 Tenn. 525, 393 S.W.2d 1 (1965). There the Tennessee cases are collated and the ancient rule of property law dealing with “coparceners” followed, despite the contention that the expressed intention of the parties to a deed should be given controlling consideration and effect. The deed involved in the Hurt case was executed in 1888.4

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Related

Collins v. Smithson
585 S.W.2d 598 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1979)
Cochran v. Frierson
258 S.W.2d 748 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1953)
Roney v. Dyer
161 S.W.2d 640 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1939)
Administration & Trust Co. v. Catron
102 S.W.2d 59 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1937)
Holt v. Holt
202 S.W.2d 650 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1947)
Cottrell v. Griffiths
57 L.R.A. 332 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1901)
Robinson v. Blankenship
116 Tenn. 394 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1906)
Jones v. Jones
150 Tenn. 554 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1924)
Johnson v. Beard
332 S.W.2d 208 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1960)
Hurt v. Martin
393 S.W.2d 1 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1965)

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Bluebook (online)
603 S.W.2d 135, 1980 Tenn. LEXIS 478, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fraker-v-fraker-tenn-1980.