Lenoir v. Mining Co.

14 S.W. 378, 88 Tenn. 168
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 26, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 14 S.W. 378 (Lenoir v. Mining Co.) 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
Lenoir v. Mining Co., 14 S.W. 378, 88 Tenn. 168 (Tenn. 1889).

Opinion

EolKes, J.

This is an ejectment bill, filed in the joint names of the children and heirs at law of A. S. Lenoir, deceased, and the husbands of the married women, and the Crab Orchard Coal Company, a corporation, for the benefit of the latter, who is the real complainant, to recover of defendant the possession of a five, thousand acre tract of land,, granted by the State of Tennessee to A. S. Lenoir, situated in Morgan County.

The bill alleges that several smaller tracts, also granted to Lenoir, lie within the boundaries of the said five thousand acre grant. It is further alleged that said heirs at law and their husbands were seized in fee of the lands above mentioned, on January 1, 1887, and that “on the eighth day of February, 1887, the said heirs, their husbands joining in the deed, sold and conveyed the lands therein described to their co-complainant, the Crab Orchard Coal Company, for whose use this suit is brought; the said vendors joining because at the date of the said sale the defendant was in adverse possession of a portion at least of said land.”

The defendant answering, disclaims as to certain portions of the land, and, as to the remainder, pleads the statute of seven years, averring seven years’ possession under color of title, and that complainants have neglected to sue for more than that length of time.

It denies the authority to use the names of the [170]*170heirs of A. 8. Lenoir for the benefit of co-complainant, the Crab Orchard Coal Company; denies that the practice of “laying a demise” in the name of the vendor for the avowed purpose of avoiding the effect and penalty of the laws against champerty is applicable or tolerable in a Court of Chancery, which looks to the substance and not to the forms of things; avers that the conveyance from the Lenoir heirs to the Crab Orchard Coal Company was made while the respondent and his vendors were holding adversely, and that neither A. 8. Lenoir nor his heirs nor their vendee was ever in possession of any part of the land; avers that complainant corporation not only bought with notice of, but in recognition of and subordination to, respondent’s title and possession, and that the Lenoir heirs entered into a contract in writing with the complainant corporation to that effect.

The Lenoir heirs entered into a contract of date April 2, 1883, wherein it was stipulated that said heirs are to sell and convey the five thousand acre tract involved in this suit, and other lands, not material to be mentioned, to Walter Allen or his assigns, who were therein authorized to use the names of the heirs to sue for the recovery of the lands adversely held. This agreement was assigned by Walter Allen to Crab Orchard Coal Company on October 11, 1883, and on the same date the Crab Orchard Coal Company indorsed on the said contract their acceptance in the following language:

“We accept the within option, and demand [171]*171deeds to be made to the Crab Orchard Coal Company per the terms of this option, this October 11, 1883.
“ (Signed) “ A. H. Gillingham, President,
“Philip S. Mason, Secretary.”

Subsequently, as already stated, the deed from the heirs of A. S. Lenoir was executed in strict confonnity to our statute, the husbands joining in the deed with the separate examination of the wives.

It is -shown in the proof by the testimony of Mr. Mason, secretary of the complainant corporation, that the Crab Orchard Coal Compahy was alone interested in the suit; that the possessions set up 'by the defendant were adverse at the time of the option, and of the deed; and that in settling for the lauds of the Lenoir heirs they paid a “lumping” price.

At the hearing of this cause much learning was devoted to the effort on the one hand to sustain, and on the other to assail, the action of the Chancellor with reference to certain amendments that were sought to be made to the bill, which, undeij‘ the view we have taken of this case, need not be referred to éxcept to say that on the hearing of complainant’s motion to amend his bill by having the suit stand in the name of the next friend of the married women, he refused such an amendment at that time, being of opinion that the plain intent and purpose of the option contract, and the deed made in pursuance thereof, were to [172]*172convey to another lands adversely held, to the knowledge of the vendor and vendee, in violation of the laws against champerty, and to pass to the vendee in the option contract the right to sue for lands so adversely held, and that a Court of Equity would not lend its aid to the carrying out of such champertous and unlawful agreement.

This view of the law of the case was abandoned by the Chancellor in the further progress of the cause, and it was held by him that lands adversely held, at the time of the sale and conveyance, could not be recovered by the Crab Orchard Coal Company, by reason of such deed being champertous; but that the complainants, who were heirs of A. S. Lenoir, deceased, could recover the same, notwithstanding such adverse possession at the time of the sale, and notwithstanding that such possession was for more than seven years, the disability of coverture preventing the statute from running as to such of said heirs as were married women.

Erom the decree, as finally rendered, both complainants and defendants have prayed an appeal and assigned errors. We propose to consider in this opinion only the assignment of errors on behalf of the respondent, which raises the question whether in a bill in equity the vendor and vendee in a champertous contract can be joined as co-complainants, and a recovery be had in favor of the champertous vendor for the benefit of the champertous vendee.

[173]*173Briefly stated, the question for our decision is whether the Act of 1877, Chapter 97, giving to Courts of Chancery jurisdiction concurrent with the Circuit Courts in ejectment suits, authorizes, ■or makes it the duty of, a Court of Equity to adopt and give relief, under the fiction of law which in Courts of Law allows the vendor and the vendee to be joined in an action of ejectment to recover lands conveyed in a deed void under the champerty laws by reason of adverse possession at the time of the sale. That such joinder may he made in Courts of Law is well settled in this State, and we have no disposition to disturb and interfere with the adjudications so • establishing. See Wilson v. Nance, 11 Hum., 190; Augusta Manufacturing Company v. Vertrees, 4 Lea, 83; Nance v. Thompson, 1 Sneed, 327; Planters’ Bank v. Fowlkes, 4 Sneed, 464; Fowler v. Nixon, 7 Heis., 729; Saylor v. Stewart, 2 Heis., 512.

At law a vendee was allowed to filo a count in the name of his vendor, because the deed was void and ineffectual to convey title, leaving it still •outstanding in such vendor, and that the recovery at law in favor of the vendor inures to the benefit of the vendee upon the idea of estoppel in the •deed. Section 3960 of the Code • (M. & Y.) expressly recognizes the continuance of' this rule of practice, and authorizes the filing of separate •counts in the name of several parties, the only difference between the old practice and the new •being that, under the Code, the vendee must ob[174]*174tain the consent of the vendor to use the latter’s name.

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Bluebook (online)
14 S.W. 378, 88 Tenn. 168, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lenoir-v-mining-co-tenn-1889.