Marks v. Rosenbloom

2 Tenn. App. 180, 1926 Tenn. App. LEXIS 19
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedFebruary 5, 1926
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Tenn. App. 180 (Marks v. Rosenbloom) 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
Marks v. Rosenbloom, 2 Tenn. App. 180, 1926 Tenn. App. LEXIS 19 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

OWEN, J.

The complainant, Mrs. Mamie L. Marks, the widow of Louis Marks, instituted an ejectment suit to recover a small lot lying in the fourth ward of the city of Jackson, Madison county, Tennessee, situated in the rear of the lot owned by Mrs. Rachel Rosenbloom, one of the defendants to this litigation. The lot in dispute is 52%x45% feet in size. The bill was first filed against J. L. Rosenbloom, it being insisted that he had taken possession of the lot by the consent of complainant, but he was only to use the lot for a garden, and during1 the pleasure of complainant; that complainant, shortly before filing her bill, left Jackson for a visit to Dawson Springs and upon her return home discovered that the de-fehdant Rosenbloom had built a servant’s house upon the com *181 plainant’s lot. Thereupon, she gave J. L. Rosenbloom, one of the defendants and the husband of Mrs. Rachel Rosenbloom, written notice, notifying that he could no longer occupy said lot as tenant, or otherwise.

Complainant filed her bill February 6, 1922. The defendant answered and insisted that the complainant had given the lot to defendant’s wife, Mrs. Rachel Rosenbloom, and that his wife had been in possession of the lot for more than seven years prior to filing complainant’s bill. An amended and supplemental bill was filed March 3, 1922, making Mrs. Rachel Rosenbloom a party. Mrs. Rosenbloom answered, and by her answer it is insisted that she and her husband, and especially she had been in adverse possession of said lot, holding the same adversely, for more than seven years before the commencement of complainant’s suit, and that she held the same by reason of a parol gift of said lot, and she had held under the same for more than seven years prior to the bringing of this suit. She therefore pleads the statute of limitation against any right or claim of complainant.

With the issues thus formed from the pleadings, a number of depositions were taken and upon the hearing before Chancellor Rye he sustained complainant’s bill holding that the defendants in their answers claimed ownership in said lot as a gift from complainant, and also pleading the statutes of limitation and the burden of proof rested upon them to establish these affirmative pleas by a preponderance of the evidence, they failed to meet the requirements of the law, and a decree was entered granting complainant a recovery of the lot. The defendants excepted to this decree, prayed and were granted an appeal to this court, perfected the same and assigned error as follows:

“The Chancellor was in error in decreeing in favor of complainant; that she is entitled to recover of defendants the lot in controversy, and the complainant was the owner in fee of same.”

The complainant insists that this is not a good assignment under the rules of this court, but we will treat the same as being a proper assignment.

The facts, briefly stated, are as follows: Louis Marks, the husband of the complainant, died some two or three years before the institution of this suit. He was the uncle of the defendant, Mrs. Rachel Rosenbloom, she being the daughter of Philip Marks, a brother of Louis Marks. Philip Marks died sometime after the institution of this suit. No children were ever b:orn to Louis Marks and complainant. In about 1911 Louis Marks purchased a lot on the east side of Highland avenue, which avenue runs north and south. Title was taken to this lot in the complainant. This lot was purchased from one Hendrix and had a frontage on Highland avenue of 52 feet, and extended back between right angles 150 feet *182 east to an alley, the alley being 10 feet in width. Fifty-two feet north of complainant’s northeast corner was Hale street, which runs east and west, intersecting with Highland avenue. The fifty-two feet between Hale street and complainant’s lot was owned by one Nord. At the time complainant and her husband purchased the lot fronting on Highland avenue she purchased two lots east of the Highland avenue lot, the first lot fronting 117 feet on Hale street, and being on the south side of Hale street, and extending south 156 feet. Just south of complainant’s lot on Highland avenue, shortly after she made her purchase, the defendant, Bachel Bosen-bloom purchased a lot fronting on Highland avenue 52 feet and extending back 150 feet to an alley. Thus it will be seen that the depth of complainant’s lot fronting north on Hale street is the same as the width of the three lots of Nord, complainant and Bosenbloom, to-wit: one hundred fifty-six feet; but there was an alley from Hale street extending south, which alley was in the rear of the Nord property, complainant’s Highland avenue lot and the defendant’s lot. Complainant’s husband and the defendant Bosen-bloom were both successful merchants in Jackson, Tennessee, and it appears that both purchased the lots on Highland avenue for residence, and saw fit to haye title to said lots placed in their respective wives. In 1914 both the Marks and Bosenblooms began to erect homes on their Highland avenue lots, the same contractors erecting both residences. The Marks residence was finished about the first of May, 1915, and Louis Marks and his wife, the complainant, moved from their home on Deaderick street to their new home on Highland avenue. The Bosenbloom home was finished some three or four months after the Marks’ residence, and the Bosen-blooms moved into their new home. It is insisted by the defendants that they didn’t want to buy the lot on Highland avenue which they did purchase, getting the same from T. J. Murray, Sr., a member of the Jackson bar, and which lot is just north of the home of Mr. Murray, who is now deceased; that the defendants insisted the lots did not have proper depth; that they would need a garden. Thereupon the complainant and her husband who had great love for the defendant Bachel Bosenbloom gave to Mrs. Bosenbloom the lot in the rear of the Bosenbloom home, and which was to be a lot about 50x50' feet, for a garden; that they would never have purchased the Murray lot if this inducement had not been made to the defendants; that Mi*s. Marks, the complainant, wanted to have Mrs. Bosenbloom, the defendant, near the complainant; that the husbands of both complainant and defendant worked in stores at night, and they would be company for each other, especially would Mrs. Bosenbloom be company for and a comfort to Mrs.’Marks. It appears that this love and affectionate feeling came to an end after *183 tbe death of Louis Marks, the family ties were broken, and the relations became very strained.

Complainant insists that she consented for the defendants to use the lot in controversy for a garden during her will and pleasure, and that the deféndants did not enter into possession until the spring of 1916, and that she did not know that the defendants tried to exercise ownership and claim title to the property until the servant’s house was erected on the lot in the fall of 1921. The records shows that after Mrs. Marks filed her bill and after she and some of her witnesses testified, the defendant Rosenbloom moved the house from the lot in dispute on to his own or his wife’s property. His insistence is that he put the servant’s house on the lot in controversy because he didn’t want it so near to his residence, and then he moved the servant’s house off of the lot in controversy because it would shade his garden.

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Bluebook (online)
2 Tenn. App. 180, 1926 Tenn. App. LEXIS 19, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marks-v-rosenbloom-tennctapp-1926.