Harlan v. Harlan

82 Tenn. 107
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1884
StatusPublished

This text of 82 Tenn. 107 (Harlan v. Harlan) 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
Harlan v. Harlan, 82 Tenn. 107 (Tenn. 1884).

Opinion

Cooper, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Ejectment bill filed September 5, 1881, by the complainants, as the children and heirs of James P. Harlan, who died August 8, 1870. The land is claimed by the defendant Benjamin Harlan under a sale, June 13, 1870, by execution upon a judgment against James P. Harlan. The chancellor granted the relief sought, but held the land subject to a lien for the money paid by Benjamin Harlan, and ordered an account for rents and permanent improvements. Both parties appealed. The Referee's report in favor of affirming the decree.. Both parties except, opening the whole case.

Under a bill filed in the chancery court of Hick[109]*109man county, by L. H. Nunnelly and others, beneficiaries in a trust assignment made by W. H. Carothers, against Carothers and others, to execute the trust by a sale of the property, W. M. Johnson, the clerk and master of the court, was appointed special receiver of the property, and ordered to sell the same for the benefit of the complainants, Nunnelly and others. At the sale, James P. Harlan purchased largely, and, in compliance with the decree of the court, executed his note with security, due at twelve months, for the amount of his bids. On August 9, 1869, judgment by motion was taken on this note against James P. Harlan and his sureties for l$l,775.36 and costs. The entry of judgment is headed with the name, of the case, L. H. Nunnelly and others against ~W. H. Carothers and others, and recites the purchase by Harlan of property at the clerk and master’s sale, and the execution of his note, which note is set out in full, and shows on its face that it is given “for property bought at sale of W. H. Carothers,” and made payable to W. M. Johnson, clerk and master and special receiver. The judgment is that “W. M. Johnson, as such clerk and master and special receiver,” recover of James P. Harlan and his sureties, naming them, the sum specified', and the costs of the motion. On December 13, 1869, a ji. fa. issued on this judgment to the sheriff of Maury county, which follows the judgment in all respects, except that it states the recovery as in favor of “ L. H. Nun-nelly and others,” instead of W. M. Johnson, clerk and master and special receiver. This execution came [110]*110to the hands of the sheriff on February 6, 1870, and was levied on the land in dispute on February 10, and returned too late to sell. On the back of the execution the sheriff acknowledges receipt of his levy fee, and the clerk and master, on November 15, 1869, gives a receipt for $100 on the judgment. On May 17, 1870, an alias fi. fa. was issued to Maury county, which came to the hands of the deputy sheriff on the 25th of the same month. This fi. fa. follows the other in all respects. It is endorsed with the style of the case in which the judgment was rendered, viz.: “L. H. Nunnelly and others against W. H. Carothers.” The clerk and master also copied on the execution the levy made on the previous execution, preceding it with these words: “You will sell the following described tract of land. W. M. Johnson, clerk and master.” Immediately below the levy, James P. Harlan wrote as follows: “ I waive the necessity of advertisement, and accept personal notice, and agree that the within land may be. sold in Columbia, at the court-house, on the second Monday, being the 13th of June, 1870. James P. Harlan.” The deputy sheriff then makes a return that he sold the land accordingly, at the court-house in Columbia, on the 13th of June, 1870, when the land was bid off by W. C. Whitthorne “for the plaintiffs,” at the sum of $1,864.55, being the amount of the principal of the debt and interest, “the cost paid to me by defendant.” The proof shows that Whitthorne was the attorney for “Nunnelly and others,” the complainants in the suit in which the judgment was recovered.. James P. [111]*111Harlan died August 8, 1870. A. B. Cathey became administrator of his estate, and suggested its insolvency in 1871. In the month of June, 1872, and prior to-the 13th day of that month-} the defendant, Benjamin Harlan, paid to W. M. Johnson, clerk and master, the sum of $2,084.25, being the amount of the judgment against James P. ' Harlan, with interest, and this money was afterwards paid out by W. M. Johnson,, as clerk and master, to Nunnelly and others, the parties beneficially entitled to the judgment, who received the same. Benjamin Harlan, on January 1, 1873, went into possession of the land sold under the judgment and execution as aforesaid, ‘ and has been in possession ever since. On December 26, 1874, W. A. Alexander, then sheriff of Maury county, and W. M. Johnson, as clerk and master, unite in executing a deed conveying the land to Benjamin Harlan, which deed was registered in September, 1876. This deed, after setting out the recovery of judgment in -the chancery court at Centreville, Hickman county, Tenn., in the ease of L. H. Nunnelly and others against W. H. Carothers, on the — day of August, 1870, by W. M. Johnson, clerk and master, against the proper parties, for the proper • sum, recites the issuance of execution ‘to the sheriff of Maury county, which came to his hands on May 23, and was levied on May 17, and the sale on June 13, and says that the land was then and there struck off “ to W. C. Whitthorne for said W. M. Johnson.” The deed then adds that in consideration of the premises, and of the sum of $2,084.25, paid ■ fey Benjamin Harlan to W. M. John[112]*112son, the said Alexander, as sheriff, and the said “W. M. Johnson, clerk and master, etc.,” do grant and convey, etc.

In order to have all the facts before us on -which the bill and cross-bill rest,' it may be well to add .that in June, 1872, Benjamin Harlan was not a judgment creditor of James P. Harlan. He had, after the death of James P. Harlan, filed his bill to enforce his lien as vendor on a tract of land sold to James P. Harlan in his lifetime, and, on August 31, 1873, recovered a judgment against A. B. Cathey, as administrator, for $14,774.88, and obtained an order for the sale of the land ' in satisfaction thereof. The land was sold accordingly on November 15, 1873, and bought by Benjamin Harlan at the price of $9,530.00, which sale was confirmed in the month of December following. This left a balance due on the judgment of over $5,000. The estate of James P. Harlan • was largely insolvent, paying only a pro-rata of ’ the debts filed against it. Benjamin Harlan did not file his decree for its pro-rata, being content, he says, to consider it extinguished by the excess of value of the land sold under the Nunnelly execution over the amount he had paid in satisfaction of the Nunnelly debt. The cross-bill of Benjamin Harlan* was filed to have the amount paid on the Nunnelly judgment and the unsatisfied balance of the decree against the administrator declared a lien on the land now in controversy in his favor, if the complainants recovered the land.

The judgment under which the defendant, Benjamin [113]*113Harlan, claims title to the lands in controversy, it is conceded, is a valid judgment, and would therefore-sustain an execution issued upon it. The contention is that the original and alias fieri facias actually issued so vary from the judgment in the name of the judgment creditor as - to, render them void. The judgment, it will be remembered, is upon a sale note given for property sold for the benefit of the complainant in the case of L. H. Nun nelly and others against W. H. Carothers and' .others, and is rendered in favor of W. M.

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Bluebook (online)
82 Tenn. 107, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harlan-v-harlan-tenn-1884.