Huffine v. McCampbell

149 Tenn. 47
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 149 Tenn. 47 (Huffine v. McCampbell) 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
Huffine v. McCampbell, 149 Tenn. 47 (Tenn. 1923).

Opinion

Mr. Malone, Special Judge,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

While several questions are discussed in the briefs of ■ counsel and in the opinion of the court of civil appeals, the determinative question here is whether a certain compromise agreement is enforceable under the statute of frauds,, and, more particularly, the effect of a deposition voluntarily given by a litigant, and its possible use as a memorandum to satisfy the fourth section of the statute of frauds.

[50]*50This section of the statute of frauds, as embodied in Acts 1801, chapter 25, section 1 (Shannon’s Code, section 3142), contains the following provision with regard to sales of land:

“No action shall be brought: Whereby to charge . . . any person . . . upon any contract for the sale of lands, tenements, or hereditaments, . . . unless the promise or agreement, upon which such action shall be brought, or some memorandum or note thereof, shall be in writing, and signed by the party to be charged therewith, or some other person by him thereunto lawfully authorized.”

The parties chiefly concerned in this matter the three sisters, Miss Josephine, Miss Bell, and Miss Lena McCamp-bell, who lived near Knoxville on a small farm of some twenty-six acres, in which (as well as in' certain other real estate) they held undivided interests.

Miss Bell McCampbell married W. G. Huffine. Her sisters thought him “no account” (to use their own phrase), and refused to let him live on the place. This caused an estrangement between the sisters, Mrs. Huffine and husband being arrayed on the one side against Misses Jose-' phine and Lena McCampbell on the other.

After some effort to make a division of the twenty-six acre property, a bill was filed by Mrs. Huffine, in her own name, against her sisters, alleging that complainant and defendants were tenants in common of the twenty-six acre farm, each owning an undivided one-third interest; that the three sisters were also joint owners of the crops being raised on the premises (including certain hay, potatoes, onions, and other produce), and in like manner owned two mules, two wagons, and certain other agricultural [51]*51machinery, their ownership in said property being one-third each; that complainant believed the real estate capable of being advantageously partitioned in kind. The prayer was that the rights of the parties be declared; that the real estate be partitioned, and the personalty divided; and that, if such partition and division were impracticable or inadvisable, the land be sold, and the proceeds divided.

To this pleading the defendants filed a long answer and cross-bill, in which they claimed that, on account of various transactions, fully set forth, the interest of the complainant was not one-third in all of the twenty-six acres, but in a part thereof was only one-fourth; that she was not entitled to a one-third interest in the crops on this portion of the land, but only to a one-fourth interest; that the real estate could not be advantageously partitioned in kind, and that it was to the manifest interest of the parties that the same be sold, and the proceeds divided. The prayer was in accordance with the averments of the bill.

To this answer and cross-bill the original complainant filed an answer, reiterating the claims set forth in her original bill, and insisting that, if the court should find that the property was not susceptible of partition in kind, a sale should be had under the original bill, and not under the cross-bill.

On these pleadings an order of reference was made by the chancellor to ascertain whether the premises were so situated that just partition could be made; the interests of the parties in the property, real, and personal; whether it was to the interest of the parties that the property be sold instead of divided.

[52]*52Pending these proceedings in the partition suit, the parties entered, into negotiations for a settlement, through the purchase of the interest of the complainant, Mrs. Huffine, in the property described in the partition proceedings, and also her interest in a small tract of some four acres, not involved in the pending litigation.

At this time Gen. Charles T. Gates was the solicitor for Misses Josephine and Lena McCampbell, and Mr. K. E. Steinmetz was the solicitor for Mrs. Huffine, in the partition suit. By authority of his clients, General Cates made an oral proposition of settlement, which was accepted by Mrs. Huffine by her solicitor, Mr. Steinmetz, in the following letter:

“Steinmetz & Mitchell, Lawyers,
“Suite 228-229 Mechanics’ Bank Building, Knoxville, Tennessee.
“September 27, 1919.
“Chas. T. Cates, Esq., Empire Bldg.,^ City — Dear Sir: Mrs. W. G. Huffine accepts the proposition you communicated to me by telephone yesterday on behalf of Lena and Josephine McCampbell, and which I have this afternoon for the first time been able to submit to Mrs. Huffine.
“That proposition is: That Lena and Josephine Mc-Campbell will pay Mrs. Huffine three thousand nine hundred fifty (|3,950) dollars for all her interest in the tract of land involved in the partition proceedings pending in the Knox county chancery court between these parties, and for her one-fourth undivided interest in the tract on the north side of the Straw Plains pike containing less than five acres; that complainant and respondents will pay the costs accrued on their respective behalves in said proceedings and, that Mrs. Huffine will dismiss her partition [53]*53bill and execute the necessary conveyances to effect the compromise.
“Yours very truly,
“K. E. Steinmetz.”

The record shows, without contradiction, that Mrs. Huf-fine was present in the office of her counsel Mr. Steinmetz, when this letter was written, and authorized him to write it. She and Mr. Steinmetz both so testify.

This letter was received by Gen. Oates on Monday morning, September 29, 1919, and during the day his client, Miss Lena McCampbell, brought to his office the original deeds covering the property therein mentioned, and on the same day he prepared a deed in conformity with the proposition and the acceptance, and sent this to Mr. Steinmetz either that afternoon or the next morning. On Tuesday, September 30, 1919, Mrs. Huffine and her husband went to the residence of Miss Lena and Miss Josephine, on the home place (the husband not entering the house), and Mrs. Huffine told her sisters that she would not execute the deed because |3,950 was not enough for the property.

This was communicated to Gen. Oates, and he telephoned Mr. Steinmetz on October 1, 1919 (without, however, disclosing the conversation that had taken place between the sisters at the residence on the previous day), and strongly urged him to have his client sign the deed. There is some disagreement as to one part of this conversation. Mr. Steinmetz understood Gen. Oates'to say that unless the deed was executed by 12 o’clock on October 2d the $3,950 offer would be withdrawn, and he made a memorandum to this effect at the time. Gen. Oates says if Mr. Stein[54]*54metz so understood him (and he does not question his good faith in the matter) this was an error, as he had no authority from his clients to withdraw the proposition. His clients support him in this statement.

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Bluebook (online)
149 Tenn. 47, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/huffine-v-mccampbell-tenn-1923.