Jones v. Mosley

198 S.W.2d 652, 29 Tenn. App. 559, 1946 Tenn. App. LEXIS 91
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedOctober 26, 1946
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 198 S.W.2d 652 (Jones v. Mosley) 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
Jones v. Mosley, 198 S.W.2d 652, 29 Tenn. App. 559, 1946 Tenn. App. LEXIS 91 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1946).

Opinion

FELTS, J.

The numerous, pleadings and the proof in these consolidated suits presented these two ultimate and controlling issues:

(1) Whether a mining lease of coal land in what is known as- the Jacob Brown tract in Sequatchie County, made July 7,1937, by J. 0. Mosley and wife to Fred Jones and John Cartwright, is valid and, if so, whether it covers all the coal land in this tract, including that later leased by Mosley and wife to Ed Tate and Ernest Layne.

*562 (2) Whether J. C. Mosley acquired title to this tract from the heirs of Jacob Brown, deceased, excluding a one-tenth undivided interest disclaimed by him and claimed by Marion Glen Brown, including a one-tenth interest claimed by him and by Anna Drake, both through Octa Brown Mclllvenna, and a one-fifth claimed by him and by Fred Wilson, both through Ihby Brown Farris; that is, whether this one:tenth and this one-fifth are owned by Mosley or the former is owned by Mrs. Drake and the latter by Fred Wilson.

The only attack upon the validity of the lease to Jones and Cartwright was that made by Mosley; he sought to rescind for fraud and failure of the lessees to pay royalties required by the lease. Wilson and Mrs. Drake did-not question the lease, hut merely asserted their respective claims to an interest in the reversion and their rights to share in the royalties which had been paid into court and to have an accounting from Mosley for royalties he had received and timber he had sold from this land for several years.

The Chancellor found and decreed that the lease by the Mosleys to Jones and Cartwright was'valid and covered “the- coal in the entire land known as the Jacob Brown tract,” that the later lease to Tate and Layne was fraudulent and void, and that Jones and Cartwright recover for the trespasses on their premises; and he ordered a reference to fix the amount of their damages.

He found and decreed that the land was owned by tenants in common as follows: J. C. Mosley three-fifths, Fred Wilson one-fifth, Mrs. Drake one-tenth, Marion Glen Brown one-tenth subject to the dower of his mother, Mrs. Drake; that these tenants should share in these proportions, the royalties paid into court; and that Mosley should account to the others for their shares of the royal *563 ties lie liad received and tlie timber lie liad sold, less -tlie expenses he had incurred in defending an ejectment suit which had been brought against him by the Tennessee Consolidated Coal Company to recover this land. The Master was directed to state the account in the reference ordered. The Chancellor also decreed that the land should be sold for partition under Wilson’s crossbill.-

J. C. Mosley appealed and insists that the Chancellor erred in decreeing that the lease to Jones and Cartwright ‘ ‘ is valid and covers all the land in the entire tract known as the Jacob Brown tract,” and in allowing them a recovery against him for damages; and that the Chancellor should have sustained his claim to a nine-tenths interest in the land and should have held that the claims of Mrs. Drake and Fred Wilson were barred by his adverse possession and their deeds were champertous and void.

The Mining Lease. J. C. Mosley and wife leased this land to Jones and Cartwright in June 1937, describing it as the Jacob Brown tract “containing about 425 acres in the whole tract but second party leases 100 acres on the east side of said tract above the main clifts.” The parties later decided to make another lease with a better description. From one of Mosley’s deeds Jones and Cartwright had drawn the lease of July 7, 1937, which stated the land was in Sequatchie County, Tennessee, and described it as follows:

“Lying on the top of Cumberland Mountain; beginning at the top of the hill in the branch in John Layne’s line; thence with the meanders of said branch to Levi Hackworth’s line; thence with Levi Hackworth’s line north 60 poles to a stake and pointers; thence north 30 west to the creek; thence up said creek to a white oak, near the fork of said creek; thence south 31 east to John Layne’s corner; thence with Layne’s line east to another *564 corner of John Layne’s line; thence sonth 24 east to the beginning, containing 376 acres, more or less. This lease covers only 100 acres coal land on east side of said tract. ’ ’

Mr. and Mrs. Mosley both read this lease, and he suggested some changes, which were made, one of them being the insertion of the last sentence above quoted. Then all the parties signed the lease in the- presence of two witnesses. The great weight of the proof shows that the Mosleys signed this lease understandingly and no advantage whatever was taken of them.

But apart from this, they were in no position to rescind, since they had not returned or offered to return the royalties they had received over a period of some two or three years. Brady v. Oliver, 125 Tenn. 595, 147 S. W. 1135, 41 L. R. A., N. S., 60, Ann. Cas. 19130, 376; Hawkins v. Byrn, 150 Tenn. 1, 261 S. W. 980; Lamborn & Co. v. Green & Green, 150 Tenn. 38, 262 S. W. 467.

The preponderance of the proof is that the Jacob Brown tract actually contains only about 120 or 125 acres, that practically all the coal is within the area above ‘ ‘ the main clifts ’ ’ and within the east 100 acres covered by the lease to Jones and Cartwright, and that the coal land later leased to Tate and Layne is within this 100 acres. See county surveyor’s map (Tr., Yol. II, p. 41).

So we concur in the Chancellor’s finding that the lease to Jones and Cartwright is valid and covers all the coal land in the Jacob Brown tract, including that later leased to Tate and Layne; and we think the Chancellor properly declared the later lease void and properly allowed Jones and Cartwright a recovery for the damages sustained by them.

The Ownership of the Reversion. This entire tract was owned by Jacob Brown, who died intestate about 1905. *565 He liad five children: (1) John Brown; (2) Priscilla (Sil-ler) Brown Oliver; (3) Laura Brown Hicks, deceased, represented by her fonr children; (4) Marion Brown, who died intestate in 1903, leaving his wife (now Mrs. Drake) and his two children, Octa Brown Mclllvenna and Marion G-len Brown (called Ira Brown in his youth); and (5) Ibby Brown Farris. Mosley was related to the Jacob Brown children and was reared in their home. Many years ago all of them left this land and went elsewhere to live, Mrs. Drake and her two children living in Illinois and Mrs. Farris living in Mississippi.

J. 0. Mosley took possession of this land some twenty-five or thirty years ago and has been in possession ever since. John Brown and Siller Oliver conveyed to him their two-fifths interest in the land by deed dated January 30, 1925, recorded January 27, 1931. The four Hicks children conveyed to him their one-fifth 'by two deeds, one dated January 23, 1942, recorded March 5, 1942, the other dated March 1, 1942, recorded November 10, 1943. There is no dispute as to his ownership of these three-fifths of the land.

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Bluebook (online)
198 S.W.2d 652, 29 Tenn. App. 559, 1946 Tenn. App. LEXIS 91, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-mosley-tennctapp-1946.