Loy v. Loy

151 S.W.2d 178, 25 Tenn. App. 99, 1941 Tenn. App. LEXIS 78
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedFebruary 15, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 151 S.W.2d 178 (Loy v. Loy) 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
Loy v. Loy, 151 S.W.2d 178, 25 Tenn. App. 99, 1941 Tenn. App. LEXIS 78 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinions

The plaintiff, Mary Etta Loy, filed this bill against her husband, William H. Loy, for a divorce and property settlement by way of alimony. This couple was married in 1897 and have raised a large family of children. They are now old and the husband is a semi-invalid suffering with a heart ailment and complications. They own as tenants by the entirety a small tract of about 20 acres as a home in Anderson County, Tennessee; this property came through the wife's relatives, and while it was not a gift, the husband and wife rendering some services for it, nevertheless they probably would not have acquired the property had it not belonged to kins people. The wife is a thrifty woman, tilling the soil and cultivating the crops while her husband was disabled and house ridden, and the property produced for the couple a living.

But the husband was sick, and his children having matured were living in Knoxville, some of whom were working in a mill, and the children wanted the parents to come to Knoxville and live with them in order that the father could have medical attention and be comfortable, *Page 102 while the mother would assist with the household duties while the daughters were at work in the mill. The wife agreed to move to Knoxville and into the home of their children and try this for a while, with the understanding that if she became dissatisfied they would return to the farm in a year. They moved to Knoxville and rented the small place to the defendant, John Buhl, and for a time all went well, but one of the daughters with whom they lived died, and another moved in, and the mother became dissatisfied and wanted to return to the farm. The husband was very well satisfied and declined to return to the farm, or to permit the wife to return to the farm. This condition continued for a year or two, the wife wanting to return to the farm, but the husband every year rerenting the farm to the defendant John Buhl, and the husband and Buhl together declining to permit the wife to return to her home in Anderson County. Being unable to return to her home and escape from her condition, she hired herself out at the wages of 50 cents a day and worked with strangers for her support. The husband did not strenuously object to this and so the parties by tacit agreement remained separated, the husband continuing to prevent his wife from returning to the home in Anderson County. This farm was rented to the defendant Buhl by the husband from year to year, for a grain rent, and it was agreed that Buhl would pay the rent one-half to the husband and one-half to the wife. Buhl continued to do this, recognizing the wife's interest but he guarded and protected the rent due the husband while neglecting the rent due the wife, leaving them in the field, and permitting her interest in the potatoes to freeze. And Buhl was abusive to the wife when she went upon the premises.

Finally the wife instituted this bill for divorce upon the ground of cruel and inhuman treatment; she claimed that the property came through her and that the title was wrongfully taken in her name and the name of her husband, as tenants by the entirety, and that her husband held title in trust for her. She sought in the bill to have a resulting trust established, but failing in this she asked that the property be allotted her as alimony. She made the tenant John Buhl a party defendant claiming that he was wrongfully in possession of the property without her agreement or consent, and that she was entitled to a mandatory injunction, restraining him from withholding the immediate possession of the property from her. This bill was filed in Knox County and a counterpart issued to Anderson County for the defendant Buhl. A show-cause order was issued and a hearing had upon the mandatory injunction, when the Chancellor held that the tenant was entitled to possession for his rental contract period, which expired on December 31, 1942, and he declined to issue the mandatory injunction during the rental period.

Upon the hearing, the Chancellor granted the complainant a divorce from bed and board for a period of one year, at the termination of which period he would determine her right for an absolute divorce, *Page 103 and by way of alimony he granted the complainant the possession and use of the 20-acre home in Anderson County, and by injunction required the defendant Buhl to turn over the possession of the property at the end of his rental period, or on January 1, 1941, to the complainant. In the meantime the defendant Buhl had asserted by way of an amendment a rental contract to the defendant W.H. Loy, for the year 1941. The Chancellor held that Buhl was estopped to assert this contract for 1941, and further than no such contract was executed. Buhl has appealed to this court, and so has the defendant William H. Loy, who contests the wife's right for a divorce. The assignments of error deal first with the appeal of defendant Buhl and the Court will dispose of his case first.

At the outset Buhl filed a demurrer questioning the jurisdiction of the court. He said that this demurrer should have been sustained for the reasons, first, that the controversy is over the possession of title to land laying in Anderson County, the bill being filed in Knox County, and that it is a local and not a transitory action. Citing Gibson's Suits in Chancery, Sec. 177. The court had jurisdiction of the parties and could control their personal conduct through his injunctive power, so the right of possession or title to the land was only an incident. At any rate, the defendant's possession was not disturbed during his contract period and the court having jurisdiction of his person had authority to restrain him from exercising rights over the land after the expiration of his rental contract.

The second ground is that the bill shows upon its face that the complainant does not have title to the property and is not in a position to maintain an action to oust the defendant from possession, even though the action was prosecuted in the proper county. The defendant was accorded one-half the rent to the complainant and he is estopped to deny her title to the property, or that he was holding his rental contract under her. This is not an action of ejectment.

The third and fourth grounds of the demurrer raise practically the same question of title and the right of the complainant to seek possession and are answered by the answer to the second ground above.

The fifth ground of the demurrer is that the suit is a misjoinder of action and a misjoinder of parties, being an action for divorce and alimony against the defendant Loy below, in which the defendant Buhl has no interest, and an action against the defendant to oust him from the possession of real estate and to inhibit and restrain him from going upon the real estate.

This is not a misjoinder of action or a misjoinder of parties; assuming that the defendant Buhl had a valid rental contract and the land in fact belonged to his codefendant William H. Loy, the husband, nevertheless the wife had the right to subject this land to her alimony and to call in the defendant Buhl to account to her instead of to her husband Loy for the proceeds from the rental contract as alimony. Buhl has no vested right to pay the rents to *Page 104 Loy, and they are under the control of the court as the property of Loy, subject to the alimony of the wife, and it is proper that the tenant be brought before the court in a suit for divorce and alimony between husband and wife, and made to account for the rent as alimony if the court so decrees.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
151 S.W.2d 178, 25 Tenn. App. 99, 1941 Tenn. App. LEXIS 78, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/loy-v-loy-tennctapp-1941.