Grier v. Canada

119 Tenn. 17
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 119 Tenn. 17 (Grier v. Canada) 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
Grier v. Canada, 119 Tenn. 17 (Tenn. 1907).

Opinion

Mr. Justice McAlister

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The object of this bill is to establish complainant’s title and right of possession to a tract of land situated in Gibson county and comprising about 130 acres.

Complainant, John M. Grier, claims title to the land under the will of his grandfather, A. M. Grier, who died testate in Gibson county, Tenn., about the 17th day of December, 1885, leaving surviving him as his only heir at law James P. Grier, who was the father of the present complainant. The bill alleges that said will was duly and regularly probated before the county court of Gibson county, Tenn., and duly recorded. A copy of the will was- filed as an exhibit to the bill.

The third item of the will of A. M'. Grier is in the fob ]owing language:

[22]*22“That I give and bequeath unto my sou, James P. Grier, as after all my just debts being settled, all my personal property and real estate, and at his death I direct that my real estate be divided equally among his bodily heirs.”

It is alleged in the bill that the James P. Grier referred to in the clause of the will just quoted was the father of complainant, John M. Grier; that the said James P. Grier is dead, and that he died in the month of February, 1889; that the complainant, John M. Grier, is the only child and bodily heir of the said James P. Grier; and that complainant was born on the 19th of March, 1882, in Gibson county, Tenn. It is then alleged that under proper construction of said will James P. Grier, the father of complainant, took a life estate in the tract of land in controversy, and that complainant, as the only bodily heir of the said James P. Grier, was vested under said will with the remainder in fee in said tract of land, and that, said life estate having terminated in February, 1899, by the death of his father, James P. Grier, the complainant became then entitled to the immediate possession of the same; but that the defendants, S. L. Canada and her husband, W. R. Canada, are now and have been since February, 1899, in the possession of said land, exercising dominion over the same, and appropriating the rents and profits thereof to their own use and benefit.

Complainant further states to the court that he was twenty-one years of age on the 19th day of March, 1903, [23]*23and the present hill was filed on the 20th of December, 1905, within three years after he attained his majority. The complainant shows to the court that defendants Canada and wife have claimed said tract under and through a deed executed to them by complainant’s father, James P. Grier, on the 10th day of October, 1888; that said deed does not undertake to show what interest the said James P. Grier claimed in said land, but that the said W. R. Canada, at the date of said conveyance, well knew that the said James P. Grier only had a life estate in said property; that, while said conveyance recited the consideration of $750, the real consideration was much less, and merely a nominal sum; that James P. Grier (or James W. Grier, as the name erroneously appears in the deed) had only a life estate, and could convey no more, and did in fact convey only a life estate.

Complainant further charges that W. R. Canada became involved in debt on the 25th of October, 1889, and made a fictitious conveyance of said land to one J. T. Gordon; that the said J. T. Gordon held the same for some time for the benefit of the said W. R. Canada; that on October 22, 1891, the said J. T. Gordon executed a quitclaim deed to said tract of land to Mrs. S. L. Canada, wife of W. R. Canada; that S. L. Canada held said land until August 10, 1898, when she made some kind of conveyance of the same to her son, W. B. Somers; that the said W. B. Somers pretended to hold the said tract of land for some time, but in fact W. R. Canada and wife, S. L. Canada, were the real beneficiaries of [24]*24the rents and profits during said time; that finally, on the 30th of January, 1905, the said W. B. Somers recon-veyed said land to the defendant S. L. Canada, wife of W. R. Canada, and the defendants are now holding said land under that conveyance. The defendants demurred to the hill, assigning for cause that under a proper construction of the will of A. M. Grier, deceased, the said James P. Grier took the absolute fee in said tract of land, and not merely a life estate, as claimed by complainant in the bill. • The chancellor overruled said demurrer, and on appeal the decree of the chancellor was affirmed by this court at the April term, 1906. It was adjudged by this court that under a proper construction of said will the said James P. Grier only took a life estate, and thereupon the cause was remanded to the chancery court of Gibson county for answer and further proceedings.

On June 6, 1906, defendants Canada and wife filed their joint and separate answers, in which they admitted the death of A. M. Grier and that James P. Grier was his only child and heir at law. Among other defenses in-' terposed, defendants deny that A. M. Grier disposed of or undertook to devise said tract of land by will, or that he ever executed a will to convey real estate, or that he ev^r attempted to do so, or that the alleged will could form any link in complainant’s alleged chain of title. Further answering on this point, respondents state that shortly after the death of said A. M. Grier said alleged will was attempted to be probated in the county [25]*25court of Gibson county as a holographic willbut upon the proof the will was probated simply as a valid will of personal property, and the adjudication of the county court affirmatively shows that it was not and could not be probated as a holographic will, and, if a valid will at all for any purpose, these respondents deny that it was valid as a conveyance of real estate. The alleged probate of said will was made on March 1, 1886.

Since this averment of the answer is based upon the order of the county court probating said will March 1, 1886, it is well at this point to set out said probate order, as follows:

“A paper writing purporting to be the last will and testament of A. M. Grier, deceased, was this day produced in open court, and the handwriting of the said A. M. Grier proven by the oaths of W. J. R. Becton and H. J. Thomas, who, being duly sworn, depose and say that they are well acquainted with the handwriting of said A. M. Grier, and the signature thereto is in his handwriting.
“Whereupon said instrument was admitted to probate as the last- will and testament of W. A. Grier, deceased, and ordered put to record.”

It will be observed that the specific objections to this order of probate is that it does not affirmatively appear that the handwriting of the testator was proven by three witnesses, nor does it appear from the testimony of three witnesses that said paper writing was wholly in the handwriting of the testator; but the probate only re[26]*26•cites that two witnesses proved that they were well acquainted with the handwriting of the testator and that the signature to the instrument was in his handwriting. Further it appears that said instrument was admitted to prohate as the last will and testament of W. A. Grier, ■deceased.

It is to be observed, however, that said order of probate opens the recital as follows: '“A paper writing purporting to be the last will and testament of A. M. Grier, •deceased,” etc.

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Bluebook (online)
119 Tenn. 17, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grier-v-canada-tenn-1907.