Hampton v. Manuel

405 S.W.2d 47, 56 Tenn. App. 95, 1965 Tenn. App. LEXIS 226
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJanuary 29, 1965
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 405 S.W.2d 47 (Hampton v. Manuel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hampton v. Manuel, 405 S.W.2d 47, 56 Tenn. App. 95, 1965 Tenn. App. LEXIS 226 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1965).

Opinion

CARNET, J.

Fred Hampton has appealed from a judgment of the Circuit Court of Shelby County, Tennessee, adjudging him to be the owner of only a one-half interest in and to a house and lot which was condemned by the State of Tennessee for highway purposes. The state deposited with the Clerk of the Circuit Court the sum of $9,700.00 representing the full value of the house and lot which was condemned and the appellant, Fred Hampton, was permitted to and did withdraw the sum of $4,850.00 representing a one-half interest in said house and lot which admittedly he was the owner of.

The Trial Judge held that the other one-half interest in said house and lot was owned by the defendants-appellees who are the heirs of a sister of Flora Hampton who was married to Fred Hampton in 1918.

The house and lot located at 132 West Illinois Street in Memphis, Tennessee, was deeded to Fred Hampton and wife Flora, as tenants by the entirety in 1926. They occupied the property as man and wife until November 9, 1934, when Flora Hampton deserted Fred Hampton, left Memphis and moved to the State of Mississippi. [98]*98The parties had no children. Fred Hampton continued to live in the home nntil the condemnation snit was filed in 1963.

On August 19, 1944, he filed snit in the Circuit Court of Shelby County seeking* a divorce from Flora Hampton in which he averred that she had deserted him in 1934. No mention was made of the house and lot in the decree. The Circuit Judge granted Fred Hampton a divorce on the grounds of two years wilful desertion. The divorce decree was entered November 6, 1944. In 1945, Fred Hampton married his present wife, Georgia Hampton. Flora Hampton died in 1952 in the State of Mississippi without children.

On April 9, 1963, the State of Tennessee through its Department of Highways and Public Works and acting by and through the City of Memphis filed a petition in the Circuit Court of Shelby County seeking a condemnation of the house and lot occupied by Fred Hampton and wife, Georgia Hampton. Fred Hampton and his wife, Georgia, were made parties defendant as well as all of the appellees who were named defendants as the heirs at law of Flora Hampton, deceased. By their deed dated May 2,1963, the defendants, Ollie Mae Jones, lola Allen, Flora Marry and Annie Mae Manuel, executed a quitclaim to Fred Hampton to the house and lot described in the condemnation suit and also assigned to him all of their interest in the proceeds to be awarded for condemnation of such property and the suit then pending in the Circuit Court of Shelby County, Tennessee. Their deed was executed without consideration. The Trial Judge set the deed aside.

On October 7, 1963, Fred Hampton and wife, Georgia Hampton, filed a petition in the condemnation snit asking [99]*99tlio court to pay over to him the remaining $4,850.00 representing the other one-half interest in the real estate. He averred that he had become the owner in fee simple of the property because he had been in the exclusive and uninterrupted possession of the real estate continuously from the date of desertion in November, 1934, by Fiora Hampton to April 9’, 1963, the date of filing the condemnation petition by the State of Tennessee and that during this time he had improved the property, he had collected all the rents, he had paid all the taxes, and had claimed the property as his own and that during all this time neither Flora Hampton nor any of the present appellees ever made any claim upon him or questioned his title to said property in any manner.

Also he stated in his petition that four of the defendants named above had executed a written instrument assigning their interest in the money representing the real estate to him. The present defendants-appellees were all made parties defendant to the petition and process by personal service and publication was had against them.

The defendants, Ollie Mae Jones, Iola Allen, Flora Belle Marry and Annie Mae Manuel, had until November 7, 1963, in which to answer and they failed to answer the petition of Fred Hampton and on November 8, 1963, a pro confesso was entered against them. On November 19, 1963, they filed a sworn petition asking the court to set aside the pro confesso and allow them to answer averring that they did not realize before Friday, November 15,1963, that they should have filed an answer to his petition. The Trial Judge set aside the pro confesso and allowed the petitioners to file answer and cross petition. Fred Hampton excepted to the action of the court in not [100]*100requiring a payment of costs as condition for setting aside the pro confesso pursuant to T.C.A. Section 21-506.

On December 13, 1963, Ollie Mae Jones, Iola Allen, Flora Belle Marry, and Annie Mae Manuel filed an answer and a cross petition averring that Fred Hampton never did perfect title to Flora Hampton’s one-half interest in said property and also averring that the quitclaim and gift of their interest in the award was obtained by Fred Hampton by fraud; that they trusted him as their uncle; that he did not mention anything to them about their having any interest in the real estate and that they did not know that they had any interest in the real estate or that there was any money for them.

The Trial Judge granted the cross petition, set aside the deed of gift to their interest in the property and awarded the appellees all of the interest formerly owned by Flora Hampton in and to said house and lot. Fred Hampton has appealed and assigned error.

Assignment of error No. I insists that it was mandatory for His Honor the Trial Judge to assess the costs against the defendants upon granting their motion to set aside the pro confesso. Our Supreme Court has held that the provision of T.C.A. Section 21-506 relating to payments of costs was not mandatory but was within the discretion of the Chancellor. Ezell v. Hake (1947), 184 Tenn. 319, 198 S.W.2d 809. In this case the Trial Judge, sitting without a jury, was acting as a Chancellor and we see no merit in this assignment. It is respectfully overruled.

By assignment of error No. Ill the appellant, Fred Hampton, insists that the court was in error in failing to hold that he was the owner of the entire fee in the property by virtue of the doctrine of presumption of title [101]*101arising out of his continuous, exclusive, uninterrupted possession beginning with the abandonment of him and the property by Flora Hampton in 1934 and continuing more than twenty years and up until April, 1963.

By assignment of error No. IY the appellant, Fred Hampton, insists that his divorce from Flora Hampton in 1944 amounted to an ouster of her as a tenant in common in said property and that he had continued in the exclusive uninterrupted possession of said property for a fraction less than the full twenty year period and that he was entitled to the fee simple title to said property.

In support of assignment of error No.

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Bluebook (online)
405 S.W.2d 47, 56 Tenn. App. 95, 1965 Tenn. App. LEXIS 226, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hampton-v-manuel-tennctapp-1965.