Garner v. Home Bank & Trust Co.

107 S.W.2d 223, 171 Tenn. 652, 7 Beeler 652, 1937 Tenn. LEXIS 147
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 3, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 107 S.W.2d 223 (Garner v. Home Bank & Trust 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
Garner v. Home Bank & Trust Co., 107 S.W.2d 223, 171 Tenn. 652, 7 Beeler 652, 1937 Tenn. LEXIS 147 (Tenn. 1937).

Opinion

Mr. Special Judge F. T. Fancher

delivered the opinion of the Court.

■The original hill in this cause was filed by the heirs of George W. Garner and also the heirs of Ellen Bearden Garner, his widow. The Garners had no children born to them, but they adopted a boy named Roy Wjatson who afterwards was called Boy Watson Garner. Mr. and Mrs. Garner both executed wills. The complainants in this bill are the natural heirs at law of Mr. and Mrs. *654 Garner and will be referred to as the Garner heirs and the- Bearden heirs, Mrs. Garner being a Bearden before she was married.

George W. Garner executed a will on April 7, 19261, and died within that year. Ellen Bearden Garner executed a will on May 18, 1931, and died on April 27, 1934. Both these wills were probated soon after the respective deaths. Roy Watson Garner, the adopted son of Mr. and Mrs. Garner, died on January 18, 1933, intestate, without issue and before he reached the age of twenty-one years, leaving surviving him as his only heir, his natural mother, Mrs. Daisy Anderson, one of the defendants.

George W. Garner died seized and possessed of real estate and considerable personal property, the latter amounting to some $14,000. In the second paragraph of his will he bequeathed his real estate to his ‘wife for and during her life, and provided that she should have charge and control of all the real estate during her natural life in order that she might enjoy the same as she pleased, but she was not to dispose of it in any way. She enjoyed the use of this real estate until her death in 1934. She probably acccumulated some property from this estate. He also bequeathed to his wife all household and kitchen furniture, live stock, and farming tools that might be on hand.

In paragraph 4 of his will, Mr. Garner bequeathed to Home Bank & Trust Company, a defendant herein, “all personal property except that disposed of absolutely to his wife” in trust for certain uses and purposes set out. ' ’ ■

In paragraph 5 of the will, the trustee was directed to pay the income derived from said property to his wife *655 for and during’ her natural life. The final report of the executor made in 1930' showed the estate in his hands amounted to $14,400.96. This was turned over to the trustee. The income of this was turned over to Mrs. darner until she died.

By paragraph 6' of the will, Mr. darner directed the trustee, upon the death of his wife, to take charge of all of his property, real and personal.

By paragraph 7 of the will, the trustee was directed, after the death of Mrs. darner, to pay $1,000 to Trevecca College, “the same being a holiness college located in East Nashville, Tennessee.”

By paragraph 8 of the will, Boy Watson darner, if living at the time of the death of Mrs. darner, was to have the income from the trust fund for his support and education; and by paragraph 10 the trustee was directed to turn over the estate to Boy Watson darner at some time after he had arrived at the age of twenty-one and before he was twenty-five years.

By paragraph 12 of the will it was provided: “In the event the said Boy Watson darner dies without issue, before this fund is turned over to him by the trustee, the trustee is directed to pay the entire body of the estate to Trevecca College, a holiness college situated in East Nashville, Davidson County, Tennessee. . . .”

Trevecca College was a holiness college or school located as indicated in the will, and was a chartered corporation. Prior to the death of Boy Watson darner, a general creditors’ bill was filed in the chancery court at Nashville, Tennessee, alleging that Trevecca College was insolvent; it prayed for a receiver and a sale of the property; that the bill be sustained, as a general creditors’ bill. This bill averred that Trevecca College was in *656 solvent and a nongoing’ concern. A report on reference was made by the master on December 27, 1932, and by supplement on March 27, 1933, in which it was fonnd to be insolvent. This report was confirmed by the court. It is averred, and this is borne ont by the insolvency record filed as an exhibit, that the institution became hopelessly involved before the death of Roy Watson Garner. It was also averred by amendment filed before the death of Roy Watson Garner, that Trevecca College had ceased to be a going concern and was not operating as a school, prior to his death.

The chancellor, in his opinion, found that prior to the death of Roy Watson Garner, Trevecca College had ceased to function as a college on account of its insolvency and that it was legally dead and could not perform the functions required of it under its charter as a college. The record bears out this finding. Nowhere in the reference or finding by the master is any reference made as to any interest the college might have in the Garner estate.

In the original bill in this cause, in which the Garner heirs and Bearden heirs join, it is claimed that the Garner heirs own all the real estate that George W. Garner died seized and possessed of, together with one-half of the personal property, and that the Bearden heirs own one-half of the personal property, as provided by the laws of descent and distribution in Tennessee. Various demurrers were filed to this bill by Home Bank & Trust Company, trustee, by the receiver of Trevecca College, by J. Roy Hickerson, as executor of the will of Ellen Bearden Garner, and by Mrs. Daisy Anderson. The latter also filed a cross-bill claiming she is entitled to the entire estate of Georgb W. Garner, she being the *657 only heir of Boy Watson Garner. She charged that Trevecca College had long ceased to he an edncational institution; that they had discontinued the operation of the school conducted under the name of Trevecca College ; that it was being administered under the insolvency laws of Tennessee, as set out in the original hill filed hy complainants. She charged that all of the real estate owned by George W. Gamer at the time of his death and one-half of the personal property should he decreed to her as the mother and heir of Roy Watson Garner.

The chancellor rendered his decree on these demurrers; and boiled down the substance of his finding is that the brothers and sisters and descendants of George W. Garner have no interest in any of the property; that complainant heirs of Ellen Bearden Garner have no interest in her estate. It was held that the devise of Mrs. Garner to Roy Watson Garner did not lapse because of his death prior to the death of Ellen Bearden Garner. It was held that the devise and bequest of Mr. Garner to Trevecca College lapsed because of its incapacity to take the property; that his estate vested in his heir and next of kin as of the time of his death; that is, his real estate was vested in Roy Watson Garner as in a case of intestacy and for like reason the personal estate went one-half to Roy Watson Garner and one-half to Ellen Bearden Garner under the laws of distribution.

The principal question therefore is as to whether the devise and bequest to Trevecca College lapsed. Upon determination of that question, all other questions are easily solved.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
107 S.W.2d 223, 171 Tenn. 652, 7 Beeler 652, 1937 Tenn. LEXIS 147, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/garner-v-home-bank-trust-co-tenn-1937.