Greenlaw v. Williams

70 Tenn. 533
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1879
StatusPublished

This text of 70 Tenn. 533 (Greenlaw v. Williams) 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
Greenlaw v. Williams, 70 Tenn. 533 (Tenn. 1879).

Opinion

Freeman, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

J. R. Williams, originally a citizen of Tennessee, and Wm. M. Watt, a resident of the State of Indiana. The object of the bill is to recover the purchase money paid by Greenlaw to Watt for a lot No. 358, [534]*534in the city of Memphis, as for breach of warranty of title contained in Watt’s deed. Williams was sued in the bill on the assumption probably that as he had sold to Watt with covenants of warranty, he was likewise liable to complainants, having had notice of the suit under which complainant had lost the lot under a claim of superior title, assisted by Gough and wife, Alicia Anne, in right of the wife.

There is no contest over the fact, that after the sale, complainants had been ousted of the possession of the lot by said Gough and wife, and had lost the lot sold. The bill was filed in 1859 in the Common Taw and Chancery Court at Memphis.

At the appearance term, Watt filed his petition for severance of his cause from Williams, and a removal of it to the Circuit Court of the United States, under the act of Congress authorizing suits brought in a State Court against a citizen of another State to be so removed on the terms therein specified. This was granted by the court, it seems, some time after the application filed, the question being probably held under advisement, and the papers duly sent to the Circuit Court. The case thus stood in that court, an answer having been filed and proof taken, when in January, 1870, the surviving complainant moved that court to dismiss the case and remand to the State Court, for want of jurisdiction, which was done. In April, 1871, a copy of the papers was filed and the State Court assumed jurisdiction again of the cause, but to this action on the part of that court the defendant Watt excepted.

[535]*535In the mean time, it is proper to state that Williams had demurred to the bill, so far as it sought relief against him, his demurrer was sustained, and the bill dismissed as to him. This was after the petition for transferring the cause to the Circuit Court as to Watt.

The first error assigned here by the respondent is, that the State Court had no jurisdiction of the cause, after the transfer, and could proceed no further in the cause after petition filed and its prayer granted on the terms of the act of Congress.

We do not think this position is well taken under the facts of this case. At the time of the transfei', the law seems to have been settled, that the case was not one which could be split up, and taken by one party alone to the Circuit Court, The fact that after the application Williams was let out of the suit on his demurrer, did not change the state of the case. When the transfer was made, and this after occurring fact not appearing in the record, as a matter of course as it was sent to the United States Court, the defect in the jurisdiction appeared on the face of the papers, and so the court held.

If the case was not in the United States Court, it certainly remained for purposes of jurisdiction in the Court of the State, where it originally commenced. If the State Court originally had jurisdiction, it could not be deprived of it, by a fruitless effort, which failed to remove to the Circuit Court of the United States. It certainly could not be held, that such an effort dismissed complainants’ bill.

[536]*536Unless this was the result, on failure of the attempted transfer, the case remained where it was when the effort was made, and that court could well proceed to adjudicate the rights of the parties.

The main question in the case, however, and the one on which it must turn, arises on this state of facts. Gough and wife filed their bill in May, 1858, for the recovery of the lot. In November, 1858, Greenlaw gave Watt notice in writing of this suit, requiring him to come forward and protect his title. He also notified him that if a recovery was had against him in that suit by Gough and wife, he would read the proceedings and decree in that case as evidence, in a suit which he would bring against said Watt to recover on the covenant of his, Watt’s, deed. This notice, by mistake, gave the wrong number, in describing the lot; but it is clear this did not mislead the defendant and could not have done so, as he had never conveyed, or warranted the title of but one lot in the city of Memphis to the Messrs. Greenlaw.

In addition to this, it appears beyond all question that Watt wrote immediately to his friend, Mr. Parker of Fayette county, who had been his agent in paying taxes, and other matters, after his removal from the State, directing him to employ Judge Archibald Wright to look after his interest in connection with the suit, and the title to the lot in controversy. Judge Wright being then on the Supreme bench, could not be employed, but the late Judge Henry G. Smith, with his partner Mr. Stovall, were retained in his stead. It is true it pretty clearly appears, that defendant did [537]*537not -wish or intend to be “mixed up,” to use his own language, in the suit between Greenlaw and Gough and wife, and so instructed his agent, who probably so instructed his attorneys. They, however, went into the case as their view of their duty under the retainer, continued to attend to it, argued it in Chancery and in Supreme Court, and were no doubt diligent in their defense in connection.with the counsel of Messrs. Greenlaw. It further appears that this retainer of Smith & Stovall was known to Watt, and probably a correspondence was had between them on the subject during the pendency of the suit.

The bill goes on the theory that this notice to the warrantor made the result of the suit to recover the land conclusive on Watt, as if he had been party in form to such suit, and amounts to a res adjudicates, of the defective title and branch of the warranty given by him to complainants.

The Chancellor so held, and if the law is found to be so settled, the case ends so far as this question is concerned. So far as we are able to see, this is a new question in this State, and no case adjudging the q icstion has been cited by the' counsel in argument. We must, then, decide it on authority and on principle.

We find the result of numerous cases thus stated in Wait’s Actions and Defences, vol. 2, 392: “It is now generally settled in the United States, that upon suit being brought upon a paramount claim against one entitled to the benefit of the covenant of warranty, the latter can, by giving proper notice of the action to [538]*538the covenanter and requiring him to defend it, relieve himself from the burden of being obliged afterwards to prove, in the action on the covenant, the validity of the title of the adverse claimant.” He cites for this, Cooper v. Watson, 10 Wend., 205; Paul v. Witman, 3 Watts & Learg, 409; 26 Ver. R., 708; 34 Com., 195; 5 Halst., (N. J.) 20; 46 Mo., 157, and other cases, and Rawles on Covenant, 4th ed., 218. “And in the absence of any showing of fraud or collusion in such case, the covenantor will not be permitted to prove in the latter action, that the judgment •of eviction was not upon an adverse or superior title, even though the plaintiff, to save himself from eviction under the judgment, purchased the outstanding title.” McConnell v. Danno, 48 Ill., also 15 Ill., 15, cited. See also 49 N. Y., 571; Allen’s R., vol. 11, 370; Freeman on Judgments, 187. The only cases apparently contra to this are from North Carolina. 2 Dev.

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70 Tenn. 533, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/greenlaw-v-williams-tenn-1879.