Mathis v. Campbell

117 S.W.2d 764, 22 Tenn. App. 40, 1938 Tenn. App. LEXIS 3
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMarch 26, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 117 S.W.2d 764 (Mathis v. Campbell) 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
Mathis v. Campbell, 117 S.W.2d 764, 22 Tenn. App. 40, 1938 Tenn. App. LEXIS 3 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

CROWNOVER, J.

This cause is before us on appeal arising on a petition or supplemental and amended bill filed by the complainants in the above styled cause making the defendant Campbell’s wife, Mrs. Meedia Campbell, a party defendant, and seeking to enjoin the further prosecution of a forcible entry and detainer suit pending in the circuit court, and to establish the boundary line between the complainants and the defendants.

The original bill in this cause was filed by the complainants against Tommie Campbell in the Chancery Court seeking a mandatory injunction commanding the defendant to remove certain obstructions placed in the creek and to restrain him from committing alleged trespasses, and also to establish the boundary line between the tracts of land owned by the complainants and the defendants.

That original cause was heard by the Chancellor on oral testimony and he rendered a decree sustaining the complainants’ con-, tentions and establishing the boundary line at the place located by the surveyor in the original cause. The decree was affirmed by the Court of Appeals 1 and the petition for a certiorari was denied by the Supreme Court. The cause was remanded to the Chancery Court for the execution of the decree. And when the complainants attempted to remove the fence out to the line as decreed by the court they found that the defendant’s wife, Mrs. Meedia Campbell, had gone into possession of the little strip of land in dispute and claimed to be holding it under a deed executed by Monroe Parker to her and *42 to her husband conveying the tract of land claimed by the defendants as tenants by the entirety. They proceeded to take possession over the protest of Mrs. Campbell, and she obtained a writ of forcible entry and detainer from a justice of the peace, who decided that case in favor' of Mrs. Campbell. The Mathises appealed to the Circuit Court where the forcible entry and detainer suit was again tried resulting in a judgment in favor of Mrs. Campbell.

A motion for a new trial was made by them, and pending a hearing on said motion this petition or supplemental and amended bill was filed in this cause in the Chancery Court by the Mathises against the defendant, Tommie Campbell, making his wife, Mrs. Meedia Campbell, a party to this suit, seeking to enjoin the proceedings in the Circuit Court, and to establish the line as against Mrs. Campbell.

The defendant, Mrs. Campbell, filed a long demurrér setting out ten grounds why the court had no jurisdiction to try the issues made in the petition after the original case had been disposed of in the appellate court.

The demurrer was overruled, and the defendant, Mrs. Campbell, filed an answer insisting that she was the owner of the land in dispute as tenant by the entirety 'and had had adverse possession of the same through herself and her vendors for more than seven years, and she pleaded the limitations of seven, ten, and twenty years in bar'of the suit.

The Chancellor heard the case on oral and documentary evidence under a written agreement as provided by the Public Acts of 1917, Chapter 119, and held that under the evidence the complainants were the owners of the land out to the line surveyed in the original cause, and he taxed each party with one-half of the costs.

The defendant, Mrs. Campbell, excepted and appealed to this court and has assigned the following errors:

(1) The Chancellor erred in overruling the demurrer for the reasons stated in the demurrer and set out in the assignments of errors.

(2) The Chancellor erred in locating the line in dispute as contended for by the complainants, for the reason that the great weight and preponderance of the evidence showed that the line was on the old fence row as contended by the defendant.

(3) The Chancellor erred in not holding that the suit was barred by the limitations of seven, ten, and twenty years.

(4) The Chancellor erred in permitting the petition to be filed in this cause and in admitting the pleadings, decrees, and procedendo to be read as evidence on the trial in this cause, as Mrs. Campbell was not a party to^ the original suit and is not bound by it.

(5) The Chancellor erred in permitting witness to file pictures of marked lines on trees as exhibits to his testimony in rebuttal.

*43 (6) The Chancellor erred in taxing appellant with one-half of the costs.

The facts necessary to be stated are:

The complainants are the owners of a small tract of land bounded on the east and southeast by the lands owned by the defendants.

Prior to 1892 James T. Hale and L. B. Hale owned a tract of land in DeKalb County as tenants in common. On January 11, 1892, they made a partition of said land, in which James T. Hale and wife conveyed the western portion of said land to L. B. Hale, giving the following description:

“Beginning at a chestnut the corner of a tract this day deeded to Blewford Mathis, running south 41% degrees west with a marked line 95% poles to a rock on the hill, then south 78' degrees 15% poles to an old chestnut oak, Spurlock’s corner, then northwest direction to Adamson, his corner, then still a northwest direction with a conditional line and top of the ridge made by Hancock and Mary Hale to two chestnuts the corner of a tract of land -that Mary Hale bought of A. L. Hancock; thence a northerly direction and with a conditional line to a hickory the northwest corner of said land, due west to the beginning, then east with a line to the beginning, containing by estimation 45 acres more or less. ’ ’

And James T. Hale and wife and L. B. Hale and wife conveyed the eastern portion of said land to Blewford Mathis, giving the following description:

“Beginning at a chestnut standing on the ridge on said Blew Mathis west boundary line, running south 41% degrees west with a marked line and stakes 95% poles to a rock on the point of the hill, thence south 78 degrees west 15% poles to an old chestnut oak, Spur-lock’s corner, thence south with his line 20% poles to a chestnut and pointers; thence east 22 poles to a stake and pointers, then north 1% poles to a stake; then east with Hall’s line 19% poles to a down poplar on a hill, then north 10 degrees west with said Hall’s line 15% poles to an elm (formerly a poplar) then east 5 poles to' a stake; then north 70 degrees east with Hall’s line 36 poles to a stake on said Blewford Mathis formerly line to the beginning, containing by estimation 35 acres, more or less.”

Blewford Mathis owned a tract of land just east of and adjoining the Hale land, which was known as the ftuyle land.

L. B. Hale was the father of the complainant, Mrs. Etta Mathis, wife of N. H. Mathis, deceased, and he was the grandfather of the other complainant Mathises. N. IT. Mathis was the son of Blewford Mathis.

After the death of L. B. Hale, the said N. H. Mathis purchased the interest of some of the heirs of L. B. Hale, in 1905, but in taking title thereto an error was made in the description, and the bound *44 aries set out in tbe deed included all of the original Hale tract of land, but N. H.

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Bluebook (online)
117 S.W.2d 764, 22 Tenn. App. 40, 1938 Tenn. App. LEXIS 3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mathis-v-campbell-tennctapp-1938.