Hobson v. Hobson

201 S.W.2d 659, 184 Tenn. 484, 20 Beeler 484, 1947 Tenn. LEXIS 401
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedMay 3, 1947
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 201 S.W.2d 659 (Hobson v. Hobson) 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
Hobson v. Hobson, 201 S.W.2d 659, 184 Tenn. 484, 20 Beeler 484, 1947 Tenn. LEXIS 401 (Tenn. 1947).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Tomlinson

delivered the opinion of the Court.

In 1922 Nick F. Hobson executed a deed of trust purporting to convey to J. B. Daniel, Trustee, an undivided interest recited in the deed as “being the 1/6 undivided interest of Hobson” in certain real estate devised by Item IV of the will of his father, N. F. Hobson, this trust deed being executed to secure a substantial debt owed to "W. L. Horn. In 1933, the debt remaining unpaid, the trustee foreclosed and the alleged inters! of Nick F. Hobson in this land was purported to be conveyed by deed of the trustee to the creditor, Horn, he being the purchaser at such foreclosure proceedings. For the present, it is sufficient to note that Item IV of the will of N. F. Hobson probated in 1901 devised the land in question to his widow, Bettie Hobson, for her life or widowhood. She died in 1940 without ever having remarried, and W. Campbell Hobson, Administrator with the will annexed of her estate, sued and procured a judgment in 1941 of approximately $5280 against the above mentioned Nick F. Hobson for money which Mrs. Bettie Hobson had loaned him in 1919. An execution was returned unsatisfied, there being no property of judgment debtor upon which levy could be made.

As a result of this state of affairs, W. Campbell Hob-son, administrator, filed his bill in this cause and insisted that under a proper construction of the will of Nick F. Hobson, the deed of trust from Nick F. Hobson to Daniel, *487 Trustee, and tlie deed from Daniel, Trustee, to the purchaser, W. L. Horn, were nullities' in that Nick F. Hobson under Item IY of his father’s will owned no interest in the land therein devised until his survival in 1940 of the life tenant, Mrs. Hobson, and that it was by reason of such survival that for the first time Nick F. Hobson became the owner of the 1/6 interest purported to be conveyed by the aforesaid deed of trust and deed. The relief sought by the bill is that these two deeds be declared clouds upon the title of Nick F. Hobson in said one-sixth undivided interest and removed as such and that then this interest be sold and the proceeds of sale applied to the payment of the judgment which complainant, administrator, had obtained against Nick F. Hobson. All parties in interest are before the Court and the successors in title of Horn who purchased at the foreclosure sale assert the validity of the deed of trust and the deed, their insistence being that by Item IY of the will mentioned Nick F. Hobson was vested with a one-sixth undivided remainder interest in the land described in the deeds at the time of his conveyance thereof by the trust deed mentioned, it being their insistence that the will devised him a vested remainder in an undivided one-sixth interest in this land.

The issue thus made requires at the outset a construction of the will of N. F. Hobson. By various items thereof, other than Item IY, the testator gave his wife certain property absolutely and identified by name six of his children, and devised them specifically and in fee simple certain property. There is nothing in this will which states expressly or by necessary implication that the six children mentioned are all of the children of the testator, though this is a fact. These provisions of the will are of no importance in this case since they are of no aid in the *488 construction of the controverted provision of Item IV reading as follows:

“I give and devise to my said wife, for and during her natural life or widowhood, three tracts of land as follows . . . (described land). At her death the same shall be divided between my children then living, and if any of them shall have died leaving a child or children living at her death, then such child or children shall take the parent’s share.”

It is insisted by the complainant, administrator, that this devise comes within the class doctrine and that, therefore, Nick F. Hobson owned no transmissible interest in this land at the time he executed the deed of trust, and that he owned no interest in said land until the death of the life tenant in 1940, it being his insistence that the remainder interests were contingent as to persons until the death of the life tenant. On the other hand, the successors in title of Horn, purchaser at the foreclosure proceedings, contend that the class doctrine does not apply and that the remainders created by this devise were vested remainders transmissible by deed', and, therefore, that the trust deed from Nick P. Hobson to Daniel, Trustee, and the deed from Daniel, Trustee, to Horn are valid, and that the latter deed, accordingly, vested in Horn a one-sixth undivided remainder interest in the land described in the deed of trust.

The Chancellor under the authority of Malone v. McGruder, 8 Higgins 526, held that the class doctrine did not apply and that by the above quoted provision of Item IV of the will of Nick P. Hobson acquired upon the death of his father a vested remainder. The Chancellor dismissed the-bill and complainant, administrator, has appealed, and here insists that the class doctrine does apply. This *489 appellant will continue herein to he referred to as complainant.

Satterfield v. Mayes, 30 Tenn., 58, is recognized as the leading authority in this state upon the rule known as the class doctrine. Sanders v. Byrom, 112 Tenn. 472, 477, 79 S. W. 1028. In Satterfield v. Mayes the rule is thus stated:

“Where a bequest is made to a class of persons, subject to fluctuation by increase or diminution of its number in consequence of future births or deaths, and the time of payment or distribution of the fund is fixed at a subsequent period; or on- the happening of a future event, the entire interest vests in such persons only as at that time fall within the description of persons constituting such class.”

We think every feature of the above quoted rule is plainly reflected in that provision of Item IV of the will now under consideration. The land is to be divided on the happening of a future event, to-wit, the death of the life tenant. It is to be divided at that time between only the children of the testator living at that time and the children of any predeceased child living at that time, such children to take the share which their parent would have taken had he been living at the time of the death of the life tenant. One or more children of the testator who were living at'the time of the testator’s death may die before the life tenant or they may each have one or more children born after the death of the testator and before the death of the life tenant and then they or their children may die before the life tenant. These are obvious truths from which it necessarily follows that the devise in question is made to a class of persons subject to fluctuation by increase or diminution of its number in consequence of future births or deaths before the death of the *490 life tenant, and such, as do die before the death of the life tenant take no interest in the remainder. We are nnable to place any other construction upon the language used in this provision of the will.

In the case of Sanders v. Byrom, 112 Tenn. 492, 79 S. W.

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Bluebook (online)
201 S.W.2d 659, 184 Tenn. 484, 20 Beeler 484, 1947 Tenn. LEXIS 401, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hobson-v-hobson-tenn-1947.