McCarthy v. Holt

5 Tenn. App. 447, 1927 Tenn. App. LEXIS 74
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJanuary 29, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 5 Tenn. App. 447 (McCarthy v. Holt) 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
McCarthy v. Holt, 5 Tenn. App. 447, 1927 Tenn. App. LEXIS 74 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

SNODGRASS, J.

This bill was- filed for an accounting, and to enjoin the defendants from cutting any trees or committing any other waste on a tract of one thousand acres of land described in the bill, and to enjoin the defendants from removing, selling or in any way disposing of the trees already cut on the land, asking that the title and right of possession to said tract of land be decreed to complainants, and that they be put in possession thereof; that they be given a decree for all the rents and profits of said land by the defendants or any of them received; that full damages be allowed complainants for any and all waste and other injury done to said land by the defendants, or any of them; that an account be taken to ascertain the value of said rents and profits, value of the trees cut, and amount of damages for waste and injury; that the contract executed by Mrs. Annette McCarthy, one of the complainants and Holt Brothers, and the deed from said Holt Brothers to defendants Sands and Andrews, and the deed from Sands and Andrews to the Appalachian Lumber Company, and to the Little River Lumber Company, be declared clouds on complainants’ title and removed as such; that defendants be perpetually enjoined from setting up any claim or doing any acts whatsoever under or by virtue of said written instruments; and that *449 complainants be given such other and further relief as they may be entitled to at the hearing.

The cause was gotten at issue and heard before the Chancéllor, who, embodying a fair statement of the case and his findings of fact therein, entered the following decree:

“This cause came on to be heard this day before the Hon. Ernest E. Taylor, Chancellor, etc., holding the, chancery court of Sevier county at Sévierville, by consent of all parties, at Chambers on the entire record, briefs and arguments of counsel, and after duly considering said cause said court adjudges ' and decrees that the bill of complainant be and is hereby dismissed as to all parties to said bill except defendants J. B. and J. T. Holt, partners carrying on business in the name of Holt Brothers.
“That the court further finds, adjudges and decrees that said Holt Brothers are indebted to complainants, Annette McCarthy and others in the sum of $1,200, with interest from the 16th day of May, 1916.
“The court is further of opinion and so adjudges that there should be a reference in this cause to the master to take proof in the court of what services, if any, were rendered by defendants J. B. and J. T. Holt to the complainants in pursuance of the contract between complainants and defendants dated April 29, 1916, and that upon the coming in of this report and on confirmation of the amount due, if any, that the judgment aforesaid be credited with said amount as an offset against the said judgment of $1,200 and interest thereon from the time said services were rendered.
‘ ‘ The court is’ further of the opinion that the execution in this cause as against J. B. and J. T. Holt shall be stayed until final determination of the question hereinafter referred to the master, and that execution shall issue only for such balance as may be found due to the complainants from the defendants after crediting on said judgment the amount of the value of their services under said contract, with interest as provided.
“The court has filed in this cause a written memorandum opinion, which is made a part of the record and of this decree as its finding of fact in this cause, and is as follows, to-wit: ‘Mrs. Annette McCarthy et al. v. J. B. Holt et ah, Number 1409, chancery court, Sevier county, Tennessee. Memorandum Opinion, filed June 16, 1926.’
“The original bill in this cause was filed on March 26, 1921 by Mrs. Annette McCarthy and the other heirs of Eobert Armstrong, deceased, against J. B. Holt and J. T. Holt, partners under the firm name of Holt Brothers, Appalachian Lumber Company and Southern Spruce Company and their trustees, A. H. Sands and Forrest Andrews, and the Little Eiver Lumber Company. The *450 pleadings in this canse raised various questions and the court will make only a brief statement of the material facts:
“(1) The complainants allege that they are the owners of certain lands in Sevier county, and on April. 29, 1916, Mrs. McCarthy entered into a written contract with defendant Holt Brothers, a copy being made an exhibit to the bill, employing Holt Brothers, civil engineers, to perform the services set out in the contract and for which Holt Brothers were to be conveyed the tract of land containing 100 acres, described in the bill. Certain allegations are made in the bill in reference to the cause of Paul E. Templeton, Trustee v. Evander Mclver et al'., a partition proceeding determined some years ago in the county court of Sevier county, but further reference to this proceeding is not here made, other than to state that the original file in that case is made evidence in this case and had been considered by.the court.
"Complainants further allege that they were overreached in the-contract with Holt Brothers, in that Holt Brothers had certain information in reference to the lands not possessed by them, and further that Holt Brothers, claiming that they acquired title to such premises under said contract, on May 17, 1916, conveyed said lands to Sands and Andrews, trustees, for the defendants, Appalachian Lumber Company and Southern Spruce Company, and that said trustees sold the timber on said lands to the defendant, Little River Lumber Company.
"Complainants charge that the contract of April 29, 1916 was not a deed and did not pass title to Holt Brothers, and that Holt Brothers have failed to perform the conditions of the contract, and that complainants continue to be the owners of said premises. The complainants pray that the defendants be enjoined from cutting timber, or committing waste on said lands; that the right and possession of said land be decreed in them; that they be given a decree for the rents and profits of the land; that the contract of April 29, 1916, the deed from Holt Brothers to Sands and Andrews, trustees, and the deed from said trustees to Little River Lumber Company be declared void and cancelled — and for general relief.
"(2) The Little River Lumber Company answer and admit that they purchased the timber standing on certain lands from the Appalachian Lumber Company and the Southern Spruce Company, but do not admit that the 100 acres in question was included in their purchase and aver that if any timber was cut by them from said lands that it was done more than three years before the filing of this suit and plead the statute of limitations of three years.
"(3) The defendants, Sands and! Andrews, trustees, (where reference is made to such trustees, their principals are also in- *451 eluded) answer and deny that complainants, are tbe owners of tbe lands in question and charge that they (said respondents) have an indefeasible title to such lands and are.entitled to possession thereof.

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Bluebook (online)
5 Tenn. App. 447, 1927 Tenn. App. LEXIS 74, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccarthy-v-holt-tennctapp-1927.