Hunter v. Uhlhorn

593 S.W.2d 925, 1979 Tenn. App. LEXIS 374
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedOctober 16, 1979
StatusPublished

This text of 593 S.W.2d 925 (Hunter v. Uhlhorn) 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
Hunter v. Uhlhorn, 593 S.W.2d 925, 1979 Tenn. App. LEXIS 374 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1979).

Opinion

EWELL, Judge.

This is a suit in ejectment filed in the Chancery Court of Shelby County on April 21, 1961, by the original plaintiff, C. W. Hunter Company, against several defendants, including Frances S. Uhlhorn. In the complaint plaintiff contends that an area of land consisting of approximately 200 acres, being a portion of a larger area, bounded on the east by the Mississippi River and known as Island 40, though occupied by Uhlhorn, is the property of Hunter. Because Uhlhorn had begun to cut timber on the land, Hunter applied for and obtained an injunction restraining Uhlhorn from cutting timber; and while Uhlhorn was under such restraint, Hunter contracted with Shannon Brothers Lumber Company to go upon the land and cut a portion of the timber. Thereafter, Uhlhorn filed a cross-action against Hunter claiming damages for the timber cut from the land in question.

During the pendency of this litigation several of the parties died and were replaced by legatees and devisees. By warranty deed dated September 20,1962, Hunter Company conveyed its claim of ownership of the subject land to Manuel J. Hunter, Chatham Hunter and Margaret Polk Aden. About the same time Anderson-Tully Company acquired all the stock of Hunter Company and on September 24, 1962, adopted a plan for the complete liquidation of Hunter Company pursuant to which all its assets were transferred to Anderson-Tully Company.

By consent order Manuel J. Hunter, Chatham Hunter and Anderson-Tully Company were made additional parties cross-defendant to the cross-bill, as amended and supplemented, of Frances S. Uhlhorn. On September 10, 1974, Manuel J. Hunter died and by order entered thereafter the cause was revived and continued in the names of Chatham Hunter, Margaret Polk Aden, Joe M. Russell, Margaret Myers and Louise Glover Dean, as successors in interest to C. W. Hunter Company and as legatees and devi-sees of Manuel J. Hunter, deceased. The plaintiffs and cross-defendants below will be referred to herein as plaintiffs or Hunter.

Frances S. Uhlhorn died during the course of the litigation and thereafter the cause was revived in the names of her lega[927]*927tees and devisees, namely, Frances Uhlhorn Wunderlich, Horace M. Uhlhorn, William V. Uhlhorn, Trustee, Anne W. Broadfoot, Theodore Gilliard Uhlhorn, IV, Walker S. Uhl-horn, Jr., Frances P. Uhlhorn and Aylmarie Alhgren. The defendants and cross-plaintiffs below will be referred to herein as defendants or Uhlhorn.

Upon the final hearing Chancellor William H. Inman, sitting by designation of the Supreme Court of Tennessee, without a jury, found that Hunter Company failed to sustain its claim of title to the subject land and dismissed the original complaint. He also dismissed Uhlhorn’s cross-action holding that Uhlhorn’s interest in the subject real estate was acquired after the timber had been cut. The memorandum opinion of Chancellor Inman filed in the case on November 8, 1977, is as follows:

This is an action in ejectment. The plaintiff1 claims ownership of a 200 acre alluvial tract asserted to be accretionary to the Kensear Land in place, and to the Melvin Entry on land allowed to Kensear. It is not disputed that the plaintiff owns the fee in the Kensear-Melvin acreage; the issue is whether it owns the accretions thereto. Plaintiff deraigns its title to the Kensear-Melvin acreage from a grant, and, in addition to the accretion theory, asserts ownership to the 200 acres by virtue of the usual Statutes, adverse possession, and payment of taxes.
Defendant, Uhlhorn, claims ownership of the accretionary land by virtue of a deed from the State of Tennessee. The area2 has been subject of prior litigation which culminated in the execution of a deed from appropriate State officials to Uhlhorn for the land in controversy. Plaintiff offers much criticism of this deed, including a denial of its validity, because the signatories were not statutorily authorized to execute it. It should be parenthetically noted that at all times material only the Legislature, by Act or Resolution, could convey State-owned property, except those conveyances made pursuant to settlement or disposition of claims. The court does not believe that a conveyance from the State should be treated as cavalierly as the plaintiff urges, and it is upon this conveyance that the Court, in part, predicates the judgment to be entered in this case.
It is a familiar rule of law in Tennessee, that, in ejectment cases, the plaintiff cannot rely upon the weakness of his adversary’s title. He must rely, if at all, upon his own title strength and, absent a strong showing of title in himself, his efforts at ejectment must fail. Plaintiff insists that the Kensear and Melvin lands, which it owns in fee, expanded into the disputed 200 acre tract. If land is riparian, accretions thereto follow the land. This is familiar law. But if accretions have formed when a conveyance of the original tract is made, it is familiar law that a conveyance not describing the accretions is inefficacious to convey them; and approximately half of the accretion-ary lands had formed at times material herein when the land was conveyed. The land claimed by the plaintiff as accretions was land in place, and not conveyed. Therefore, plaintiff’s accretion theory must fail. Similarily, plaintiff’s theories of seven-years color of title, twenty years “adverse possession, registration of thirty years, and payment of taxes must fail because the preponderance of the evidence is not supportive thereof.
The plaintiff’s indices of title3 do not equate to Uhlhorn’s claim of title predicated upon the conveyance from the [928]*928State. This point is perhaps not relevant in an ejectment action, but reinforces the recurring theme that plaintiff must prove his title, and rise or fall upon the strength of it. The point is simply that the defendant’s title is stronger.
Plaintiff cut, removed and sold timber from the two hundred acre tract during the pendency of this action. Uhlhorn seeks damages for this fact, claiming to be entitled to recover the manufactural value of nearly 1,000,000 feet of timber. The point is troublesome, because the removal of the timber occurred prior to Uhlhorn’s acquisition of title. Uhlhorn claims to have been “equitably possessed” of this land to the extent that she should be entitled to the timber, or damages for its cutting, but this contention begs the question and Uhlhorn cannot have the best of separate worlds. She predicates her assertion of title squarely upon the conveyance to her by the State. This being so, Mrs. Uhlhorn can scarcely claim damages for timber removed prior thereto. It is unnecessary here to speculate as to who is entitled to the timber, or its proceeds, in view of the controlling Statute of Limitations, if for no other reason.
Also involved is an eight acre tract. This controversy essentially presents a boundary dispute, and it is sufficient to hold that the Supreme Court settled the issue in the Clements v. Riegel case. The boundary is co-extensive with the Flatt entry.
The Complaint is dismissed; the Counter-Claim (denominated Cross-Bill) for damages is dismissed; the boundary dispute is adjudicated as aforesaid. Judgment accordingly, usual times for perfecting appeal(s) and filing record.
Costs equally to all parties.

Both Hunter and Uhlhorn have appealed.

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Bluebook (online)
593 S.W.2d 925, 1979 Tenn. App. LEXIS 374, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hunter-v-uhlhorn-tennctapp-1979.