Howell v. Tomlinson

228 S.W.2d 112, 33 Tenn. App. 1, 1949 Tenn. App. LEXIS 120
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedOctober 28, 1949
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 228 S.W.2d 112 (Howell v. Tomlinson) 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
Howell v. Tomlinson, 228 S.W.2d 112, 33 Tenn. App. 1, 1949 Tenn. App. LEXIS 120 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1949).

Opinion

FELTS, J.

Complainant, as executor of Mrs. Martha Y. Thomas, deceased, brought this suit to recover on certain notes which W. H. Tomlinson had given Mrs. Thomas for the purchase of two tracts of land, one of 52y2 acres and another of 70 acres, in Houston County; and to enforce a vendor’s lien on the land.

The land formerly belonged to J. H. Lomax, deceased; and his widow and heirs at law were also made defend *4 ants to the suit. These heirs were his two children, Clifton Lomax, a nonresident, and Edna Lomax Tomlinson, wife of the defendant W. H. Tomlinson. The widow, Cora Lomax, died intestate and the suit proceeded against the others.

These two tracts adjoin and in 1920 were owned in fee simple by J. H. Lomax and occupied by him and his wife. On June 18, 1920, he and his wife mortgaged these two tracts to Mrs. Martha Y. Thomas to secure a note to her in the sum of $1,080, for money she loaned him. This note was for twelve months and became due June 18, 1921. The mortgage was in the usual form of a trust deed, conveying the fee simple estate to Mrs. Thomas, as trustee, and containing the power of sale in case of default.

J. H. Lomax and wife continued to live on this land but paid nothing on the mortgage, lit was about to run out of date, they were old, unable to pay anything, and were about to lose the land. So Lomax undertook to get his son-in-law W. H. Tomlinson to take over the place and assume the mortgage. He got Tomlinson and Mrs. Thomas to agree to this, and he carried through the negotiations which resulted in Tomlinson giving her the notes.

There were ten of these notes, each for $100 dated March 24, 1931, and payable to Mrs. Thomas, the first due on January 1, 1932, and one on each January thereafter, the last one being due January, 1941. Tomlinson and his wife moved onto the place and lived there with J. H. Lomax and wife for some three years, but they paid nothing on the notes except $50.

Mrs. Thomas was an old lady, past 80, and was the mother-in-law of complainant, W. C. Howell, who is Dis *5 trict Attorney General of the Ninth Judicial Circuit. She died in 1934, leaving a will making him her executor. He tried a number of times to get Tomlinson to pay the notes or make some settlement in the matter. But Tom-linson paid nothing and withheld his deed from the record. Shortly after the death of J. H. Lomax, in 1941 or 1942, complainant negotiated an agreement with Tom-linson to deed the land to Clifton Lomax for $400 to be paid in satisfaction of the notes. Tomlinson and his wife signed such a deed, hut the transaction was never consummated. This deed and the ten notes were destroyed by a fire which burned complainant’s office.

The original bill was filed March 29, 1943. It set forth the above matters and averred that in March 1931 the parties had entered into an arrangement by which J. H. Lomax and wife Cora Lomax had agreed for their son-in-law W. H. Tomlinson to take over the land and assume the mortgage debt;.that this agreement had been carried out and J. H. Lomax and wife had deeded the land to Tomlinson and Tomlinson had given Mrs. Thomas the ten notes above described; but that nothing-had been paid thereon.

The defendants filed an answer pleading the statutes of limitations of six and of ten years, Williams Code, Sections 8600, 8601, in bar of the $1,080 mortgage debt. They also denied that J. H. Lomax and wife had conveyed the land to Tomlinson, as stated in the bill. They averred that Mrs. Thomas herself had made the deed to Tomlinson; that she had no title, conveyed none to him, and there was no consideration for the ten notes he had given her. He also pleaded the statutes of limitation of six and of ten years against these notes.

*6 Complainant filed an amended and supplemental bill correcting Ms statement that J. H. Lomax and wife had made the deed of the land to Tomlinson, and averring that Mrs. Thomas had made it and that J. H. Lomax and Tomlinson had agreed that the land be conveyed to Tomlinson and that he give Mrs. Thomas the ten notes therefor retaining a vendor’s lien.

The defendants, W. H. Tomlinson, his wife Edna Lom-ax Tomlinson, and Clifton Lomax, demurred to the amended and supplemental bill, Mrs. Lomax having died in the meantime. The grounds of their demurrer were that the $1,080 mortgage was barred by the statutes of six and of ten years, that there was no consideration for the ten notes given by Tomlinson to Mrs. Thomas, and that certain of these notes were barred by the statutes of six and of ten years.

The Chancellor sustained the demurrer in part. He held that the $1,080 mortgage debt was barred by the statute of six years and its lien by the statute of ten years, that Tomlinson was not personally liable on the first six of these ten notes because they were barred by the statute of limitations of six years, that the vendor’s lien securing the first two of these notes was barred by the ten year statute. The Chancellor overruled the demurrer in all other respects.

Thereafter complainant was allowed to further amend his pleadings so as to aver that in May, 1930, the original $1,080 mortgage had been foreclosed and there had been a foreclosure sale, and Mrs. Thomas had purchased the property for $1,000. But there was no deed made conveying the property to her.

Defendants by amended answer denied that there had been any foreclosure sale. They averred that since there *7 was no written memorandum conveying the land to Mrs. Thomas, the alleged foreclosure sale was void under the statute of-frauds. Williams’ Code, Section 7831 et seq. They further pleaded the statute of limitations of ten years, Code, Sec. 8601, against any effort of complainant to perfect title by the foreclosure proceeding. Also by amendment to their answer Edna Lomax Tomlinson and Clifton Lomax pleaded adverse possession under the statutes of limitation of seven years, Williams Code, Section 8582.

Both sides took a number of depositions, the cause was finally heard, and the Chancellor filed his opinion containing his findings of fact and conclusions of law. He held Tomlinson liable on the last four notes and declared a lien on the land for the amount of the last eight notes. The amount allowed against Tomlinson personally was $600.80 and the amount for which the lien was sustained was $1,201.65. The decree ordered that if the latter sum were not paid the land should be sold on a credit in bar of the right of redemption.

Tomlinson and his wife appealed on the oath and have assigned a number of errors. We think it will not be necessary to discuss each of them in detail. What we say will cover the material questions raised by all of them.

The first matter urged by appellants is that complainant did not make out his title or right to sue on these notes. It is said that he failed to file a copy of, the will of Mrs. Thomas and a copy of the papers showing his qualification as executor, and that the only reference to these matters was brought out in the oral evidence.

It is true appellants could have called for such copies as the best evidence, but there was no objection to *8 tb.e oral proof -upon these matters.

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Bluebook (online)
228 S.W.2d 112, 33 Tenn. App. 1, 1949 Tenn. App. LEXIS 120, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/howell-v-tomlinson-tennctapp-1949.