Hood v. Cravens

218 S.W.2d 71, 31 Tenn. App. 532, 1948 Tenn. App. LEXIS 111
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedOctober 30, 1948
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 218 S.W.2d 71 (Hood v. Cravens) 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
Hood v. Cravens, 218 S.W.2d 71, 31 Tenn. App. 532, 1948 Tenn. App. LEXIS 111 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1948).

Opinion

FELTS, J.

This is an ejectment suit for about 200 acres of land in Fentress County. The Chancellor held that complainant’s suit was barred by seven years adverse possession by defendant Nova Cravens and those under whom she claimed, and he dismissed the bill. Complainant appealed and has assigned a number of errors upon the Chancellor’s decree.

This 200 acres is a part of a tract of 500 acres granted by the State in 1874 to Jeremiah Hood. He lived on this land till 1889, when he died intestate. His widow, Margaret Hood, and their children continued to live there. Complainant was one of these children. He acquired this 200 acres in a division of the land with his sister, Sarah Jane Hood Choate, and by deed from his brother, E. E. Hood.

This division between him and his sister appears to have been made about 1911 and this deed of E. E. Hood to complainant was made in 1917. Up to that time he lived on this land with his mother, Margaret Hood, and his brother, Jere Marshall Hood. In 1917 he went away and left his mother, Jere Marshall Hood, and the latter’s wife, Dizzie Hood, living on this land. They continued to live there until Margaret’s death in 1930.

It appears that Jere Marshall Hood was an illegitimate child of Jeremiah and Margaret Hood — was born before their marriage. But he was reared by them as part of the family, and, as stated, he and his wife continued to live with his mother on this land long after the other children had left and he and his wife continued to live *535 there after the death of his mother in 1930. He sometimes went by the name of Jeremiah Hood and sometimes as Jere Marshall Hood. While because of his illegitimacy he had no actual interest in the land, he seems to have set up claim to it after his mother’s death. On May 30, 1935, he (signing his name by mark as “Jeremiah Hood”) and his wife, Dizzie Hood, made a general warranty deed purporting to convey the fee simple estate in this land to James Beaty. This deed properly described the land by courses and distances. It was recorded in Fentress County June 5, 1935.

On July 24, 1945, James Beaty by general warranty deed conveyed this land to Dizzie Hood and her daughter, Eunice Hood. On May 8, 1946, they conveyed it by a like deed to defendant Nova Cravens. She claimed her title had been perfected by adverse possession by herself and those under whom she claimed.

Complainant testified that Jere Marshall Hood occupied the land as his tenant and held possession for him. But Dizzie-Hood denied this, and said that Jere Marshall Hood claimed the land himself. The proof for defendant was that after making the deed to Beaty, Jere Marshall Hood occupied the land as tenant of Beaty until January, 1938; that he and his wife then moved and he died in 1940; and that when they left, James Beaty continued to maintain possession of this land by another tenant, Zelph Wright, for one year and thereafter by another tenant, Dillard Atkins, who has occupied the property ever since.

The land was mostly unenclosed woodland but there was a house on it and some ten or twelve acres cleared and enclosed by fences. These tenants of Beaty occupied the house till it was burned, pastured the land, cultivated the fields, and kept up the fences. The proof is that *536 Beaty, as long as lie owned the land, maintained adverse possession of it through his tenants and that such possession was thereafter maintained by the successive owners up to the time this case was tried, Dillard Atldns testifying’ that he was then a tenant and holding possession for defendant Nova Cravens.

Complainant insists that he had left Jere Marshal. Hood on the land as his tenant, and he cites a number of cases holding that where a stranger enters by collusion with a landlord’s tenant, the statute of limitations does not begin to run against the landlord until he has been given actual knowledge of such collusion — until acts are done which are notorious enough to amount to an actual ouster of his possession. And he insists that there were no such acts to start the statute running seven years before the bringing of this suit on November 2, 1946.

It is true that one holding for another, such as a tenant for his landlord, or a tenant in common for his cotenants, cannot hold adversely to such other while that relation exists. But he may throw off that relation, may work an ouster of his landlord or of his co-tenants; and upon such an ouster the statute does begin to run. Where a tenant makes a deed purporting to convey the land to another, or where a tenant in common makes a deed purporting to convey the entire estate in the land, this amounts to an actual ouster and disseizin which the landlord or the cotenant is hound to notice. Doak v. Donelson’s Lessee, 10 Tenn. 249, 254, 24 Am. Dec. 485; Weisinger v. Murphy, 39 Tenn. 674, 679; Jones v. Mosley, Tenn. App., 198 S. W. 2d 652, 655.

“We consider the law to be, and it has often been decided in this state, that, where A enters as tenant at will of B, and conveys to C by deed purporting to be in fee, under which C enters and holds possession openly *537 and notoriously for himself for seven years, either by himself or his tenants, the statute confirms the title of C, because he entered as a wrongdoer at first, and held possession under his deed adversely to B’s title.” Doak v. Donelson’s Lessee, supra, Tenn. 249, 253, 24 Am. Dec. 485.

“. . . On the contrary, it seems to be well settled in this State and elsewhere, that if one tenant in common assume to convey the entire land, or any specific part of it, by metes and hounds, his deed will be a color of title, and possession under it for seven years, will he adverse to the right and title of the cotenants, and bar their action to recover the land conveyed. It is an actual ouster and disseizin of the co-tenant, which he is bound to notice; and in order to create this adverse relation, no formal, or other notice from the vendee in possession, is necessary. Waterhouse v. Martin, Peck, 392, 411; Thurman v. Shelton, 10 Yerg. 383, 388; Ang. on Lim. 97, 98; Higher v. Rice, 5 Mass. [344], 352, [4 Am. Dec. 63]; [Jackson ex dem Krom v. Brink], 5 Cow. [N. Y.], 483; Cullen v. Motzer, 13 Serg. & E. [Pa.], 356 15 Am. Dec. 604; 2 Greenl. on Ev., secs. 430, 557.” Weisinger v. Murphy, supra, 33 Tenn. 674, 679.

Upon these authorities we think that, even though Jere Marshall Hood had been a tenant of complainant, his making and the recording of this deed, purporting to convey the fee simple estate to James Beaty, amounted to an actual ouster and disseizin of complainant, which started the running of the statute, Code section 8582. The recording of his deed, accompanied by the possession of James Beaty by his tenant, Jere Marshall Hood, was notice to complainant of the adverse character of Beaty’s possession under this deed. *538 Weisinger v. Murphy, supra; Southern Iron & Coal Co. v. Schwoon, 124 Tenn. 176, 215, 216, 135 S. W. 785.

Complainant, however, insists that this deed was not entitled to registration, and not notice to him, because the acknowledgment of it was void. It is argued that Jack Green, who took the acknowledgment as Notary Public, was not properly authorized to act as such Notary.

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Bluebook (online)
218 S.W.2d 71, 31 Tenn. App. 532, 1948 Tenn. App. LEXIS 111, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hood-v-cravens-tennctapp-1948.