Lane v. Farmer

79 Tenn. 568
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 79 Tenn. 568 (Lane v. Farmer) 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
Lane v. Farmer, 79 Tenn. 568 (Tenn. 1883).

Opinion

Cooper, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The original hill in this case was filed oh the 29th of March, 1882, and the amended bill in November of that year. The case is before us on demurrer to the bills, and the rights of the complainant turn upon the facts disclosed by the bills. But the record is so badly written by an unskilled, and unintelligent scribe, that it is almost impossible to ascertain the facts with absolute certainty.

On September 14, 1858, S. J. Barnard, as guardian of the five children of his deceased brother, George Barnard, of whom the complainant was one, recovered a judgment in the circuit court of Claiborne county, against Benjamin Cloud and John Devault for $2,494 and costs of suit. In the year 1867, Barnard caused an execution to be issued on this judgment, and levied upon two tracts of land as the property of John De-vault. On August 12, 1867, both of these tracts were sold under the levy and bought by Barnard, as guardian, one of them at $1,000, the other at $1,500 or $500, the record stating the amount both ways. On October 21, 1868, Barnard assigned in writing his bid, and interest in the lands thus acquired to his wife, Nancy Barnard, the assignment having been found in the county court clerk’s office after the filing of the original bill. So far as complainant knows, Barnard never took a sheriff’s deed for the land, and the bill avers the transfer to the wife was fraudulent as to complainant, and that the wife never had possession of the land. Shortly after the date of his assignment, Bar[570]*570nard left the State with his family, and died several years ago insolvent. His widow and heirs were made defendants, as non residents, by publication. In L>e-cember, 1869, John Devault. conveyed one of the tracts of land, the one on which he resided, to bis son, daughter and son-in-law by deed for a recited consideration of $1,000 paid to him or for him on his liabilities. This deed was duly registered on December 15, 1869. The bill charges that the conveyance was intended to defraud creditors, that John Devault continued in possession of the land until his death in 1882, and his heirs and personal representatives are made defendants. In the year 1869, Evans & Thomas, as creditors of S. J. Barnard, filed an attachment bill against him as a non-resident of the State, and attached the other tract ol land as his property, to subject it to the payment of their debt. Such proceedings were had in the cause that a decree was rendered in favor of Evans & Thomas, the land sold thereunder, and bought by Thomas for $409.02. The sale was confirmed, and all the title and interest of Barnard and Devault therein divested out of them, and vested in Thomas in fee. In January, 1872, Thomas sold and conveyed the land by quit-claim deed to Hugh Farmer, who died in 1877 testate, and his devisees are made defendants. The bill charges that Evans & Thomas had personal knowledge that the land was bought by Barnard as guardian, and that the attachment proceedings were void for certain specified defects.

After the recovery of the judgment against Devault in 1858, and before the sale of his lands thereunder, [571]*571two of George Barnard’s children died intestate, without wife or child. The complainant, Nancy, intermarried in 1859 with James Lane. The original bill was filed in the name of the husband and wife, with an allegation that he had 'deserted her for about two years, the wife using the husband’s name for her benefit under the Code, section 2805. Before the filing of the amended bill, the complainant had obtained a divorce from her husband, and she filed that bill in her own name alone.. The complainant says that after the recovery by Barnard of the judgment against Devault and before the sale of the land, he, Barnard, as guardian settled with his other wards, but never paid complainant “anything of consequence” of her share of her father’s estate. Her husband never reduced, or took steps to reduce her interest in the property to possession. She further alleges, on information, that when Barnard bought the lands at the execution sale he bought with her share exclusively. At any rate, she says, she is entitled to a third of the recovery.

The bill seeks to reach the land by way of resulting trust to the' extent of the interest of the complainant in the consideration paid, and for an amount of rents against the defendants who have been in possession. The bill avers, however, that complainant cannot say whether or not the sales of the land under the judgment and execution against Devault are legal and such as to pass title out of Devault. If it should be found that they were not, then she asks that the. bids be set aside so far as they might. go as a- credit entire judgment, and that she have execution of the judg-[572]*572menfc; and that she have execution, at any rate, to the extent of the unpaid balance of the judgment. To this end, she asks that an administrator of the estate •of S. J. Barnard be appointed.

The bill does not show when the complainant came of age, but the fact is perhaps not important. For, upon her intermarriage with Lane in 1859 the guardianship of Barnard at once ceased: Jones v. Ward, 10 Yer., 168; State v. Parker, 8 Baxt., 497. From that time, the husband became clothed with the right to demand, receive, and sue for the distributive share of his wife in her father’s estate, or in any funds in the hands of the late guardian: Cox v. Scott, 9 Baxt., 305. The guardian might settle with him, and pay him the money due the wife: Sanders v. Forgasson, 3 Baxt., 249. And the right of action of the husband and wife against the guardian growing out of the guardianship then accrued: State v. Parker, 8 Baxt., 497. The bill, considering the original and amended bill as one, is singularly reticent as to what may have passed between the husband and the guardian when the latter was settling with his wards. The only statement bearing on the subject is that the husband never reduced, nor took steps to reduce to possession the complainant’s rights and interest in the property mentioned in the bills: But that might have been because he knew that she had no rights. For aught that appears, the husband may have settled with the late guardian as he had the right to do, and received all

The bill, and the argument submitted in support [573]*573of it proceed upon the ground that S. J. Barnard, in the issuance of execution on the judgment recovered by him against Devault, and the sale and purchase of his lands thereunder, was acting as the guardian of the children of George Barnard, or- at any rate of the complainant. But the bill itself expressly avers that Barnard had previously thereto settled as guardian with all his wards except the complainant. He. had, conr sequently, ceased to sustain any fiduciary relation to the other wards, was entitled to their shares of the judgment, and to the extent of those shares was acting for himself, and clearly in his own right. His guardianship of the complainant had also ceased with her marriage eight years before. He was, therefore, not acting as guardian at all in the matter, notwithstanding the averment of the bill, which, in the absence of facts properly pleaded to sustain it, must be considered as the unwarranted inference of the complainant.

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Related

Lebo v. Green
426 S.W.2d 489 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1968)
White v. Knight
238 S.W.2d 745 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1950)

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Bluebook (online)
79 Tenn. 568, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lane-v-farmer-tenn-1883.