Gates v. Card

24 S.W. 486, 93 Tenn. 334
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 11, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 24 S.W. 486 (Gates v. Card) 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
Gates v. Card, 24 S.W. 486, 93 Tenn. 334 (Tenn. 1894).

Opinion

Wilkes, J.

This bill is filed to perpetually enjoin a writ of possession, issued from the Chancery Court of Marshall County upon a decree and procedendo from this Court. The Chancellor granted the relief prayed, and Card and wife have appealed and assigned errors.

The controversy involves the title to a house and lot in Belfast, Marshall County. Prior to the filing of the bill in this cause, there was a litigation involving the same property between the defendants and Thos. Gates, the style of the cause being Gates v. Montgomery et al. Upon final hearing of that controversy in this Court, it was decreed that the right to the property was in Mrs. [336]*336Card, and the cause was remanded to the Chancery Court of Marshall County, to the end that a writ of possession might issue from that Court to put Mrs. Card in possession, and such writ was issued by that Court. Thereupon, Nannie Gates, wife of Thos. Gates, and C. S. Chapman, as next friend for the minor children of Tl^os. and Nannie Gates, none of whom were parties to the suit of Gates v. Montgomery et al., filed the present injunction hill to stay and perpetually enjoin the execution of said writ of possession, upon the theory that the house and lot belonged to them, and that Thos. Gates, the father, had merely held it as trustee for them.

It appears that, in April, 1883, Thos. Gates bought the house and lot froin B. M. Curtis, and took deed to the same directly to himself and in his own right, and with no conditions, limitations, or trusts. This deed he carried home and placed in a trunk or closet, where it remained until February 10, 1885. At that date another deed was executed by Curtis, conveying the same ■ house and lot to Thos. Gates, as trustee for his wife and children, and with certain limitations not necessary to mention.

What became of the first deed is left in uncertainty. Curtis, the maker, says that he took it up and destroyed it when he executed the second deed, but Gates, the grantee, does not remember whether it was taken up and destroyed by Curtis or not. The last deed remained in Gates’ house [337]*337until February 14, 1890, wben it was registered in Marshall County.

In July, 1885, prior to the registration of this latter ' deed, but after its execution, Mrs. Card bought the property, and took a deed to the same, signed by Gates and his wife, Rannie Gates, and .has paid the purchase-money, and now insists that she is an innocent purchaser from Thos. Gates, without notice of any trust upon the land in favor of Mrs. Gates and her children.

It appears that one R. S. Montgomery acted as agent for- Mrs. Card and her husband in purchasing this land from Gates, and during his negotiations with Gates he inquired about the title, and was assured by Gates that it was all right, and, as an evidence of this, exhibited to him the first deed made by Curtis to him, vesting the title to the property in Gates alone and without any trust. Montgomery, after examining the deed, agreed to buy the property if Gates would have the deed registered, which Gates promised to do.

Montgomery, under the impression that the deed had been registered, as promised, prepared a deed to Mrs. Card, which was signed by Gates and wife and delivered to Montgomery or Mrs. Card. A cash payment was made, and notes executed for the balance of the purchase-money. At this time neither Montgomery nor Mrs. Card had any notice of the second deed, which put the title to the property in trust for Mrs. Gates and her children. [338]*338It was in the possession of Gates and wife, and •had never been registered.

While Mrs. Gates signed. the deed to Mrs. Card with her husband, her name is not mentioned in the body of the deed. It was properly acknowledged by both husband and wife.

About the time of the final decree of this Court in the case of Gates v. Montgomery et al., the'result of which was unfavorable to Gates and in favor of Mrs. Card, for the possession of the property,, the second deed was registered.

Upon these facts the Chancellor was of opinion, and decreed, that Thos. Gates, the husband, had practiced a fraud upon Mrs.' Card, and upon Montgomery, her agent, in representing that he held the land in his own right, and in exhibiting the deed to that effect, but that Mrs. Gates and her children were no parties to this fraud and were not affected by it, and, furthermore, that the father, Thos. Gates, practiced a fraud upon his wife and children in thus making this sale.

He also held that, under the facts as detailed in the evidence, the first deed had never been delivered or accepted, and that the property was bought with the means of Mrs. Gates, under an, agreement that the, title should be taken to -her, as was done by the second deed, and, as a consequence, Mrs. Gates and her children were entitled to the property, and Mrs. Card was perpetually enjoined from obtaining possession of the same, although she was held to be an innocent purchaser for valuable [339]*339consideration paid before any notice of the trust character of the property.

The Chancellor in his discretion taxes Gates and his wife with the costs.

We think the Chancellor is in error upon several grounds.

We are of opinion that the first deed was delivered to Thos. Gates, and accepted by him, in April, 1883. It was received by him and placed in a trunk or closet, and retained until February, 1885. It is true he says this deed was not complete, but he fails to state in what sense it was incomplete. It was exhibited by him to Montgomery, the agent of Mrs. Card, as the muniment of his title, and on the faith of it the purchase by Mrs. Card was made. It was then complete, with the exception that it had not been registered, but was signed and acknowledged by Curtis and wife. It is also true that Mrs. Gates says she did not accept this deed. This is, in a sense, no doubt true, inasmuch as the deed was made to her husband and not to her. It was not incumbent on her to accept it, but it does appear that she had full knowledge of it and made no objection to it, and for two years or more made no demand upon Curtis, the maker, for any correction of it, and not until about the time when Mrs. Card had gained the property in her litigation with Thos. Gates, the husband.

Whether the first deed was destroyed or delivered up is uncertain, and, in our view, immaterial. [340]*340The title to this property was by it vested in Thos. Gates, the husband, and the canceling, delivery up, or destruction of the deed could not affect Mrs. Card, whose rights had been fixed, in the meantime, on the faith of it. When Curtis made the second deed to Gates for ' the benefit of his wife and children, there was no title or estate in him that he could convey, and that deed was a nullity as to Mrs. Card, whose rights had intervened.

The only theory upon which Mrs. Gates and her children can hold the property is, therefore, not this deed, but upon the idea that her means bought it, and were invested in it, under an agreement that the title was to be taken to her, and thus establish a resulting trust in her favor.

■She states, in general terms, that her property or means contributed to the purchase of this property under such an agreement.

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Bluebook (online)
24 S.W. 486, 93 Tenn. 334, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gates-v-card-tenn-1894.