McClure v. Couch

188 S.W.2d 550, 182 Tenn. 563, 18 Beeler 563, 1945 Tenn. LEXIS 255
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedJune 9, 1945
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 188 S.W.2d 550 (McClure v. Couch) 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
McClure v. Couch, 188 S.W.2d 550, 182 Tenn. 563, 18 Beeler 563, 1945 Tenn. LEXIS 255 (Tenn. 1945).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Prewitt

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This cause is here on a petition for certiorari filed by the complainant, Jennie B. McClure, as the result of a *565 decision by tbe Court of Appeals by which that court reversed the chancellor’s conclusion in her favor. The writ has been granted and argument heard.

In her bill the complainant charged that in 1913 a violent avulsion occurred in Duck River in Humphreys County that cut off the west end of her father’s farm creating an island of 20 or 30 acres. Her father, H. R. Barnhill, executed a will in 1914 in which he devised to complainant 27 acres of land, which included the 2 or 3 acres on the west end of the property devised and which was then west of the new channel of Duck River. This will was probated after complainant’s father died in 1917. The description given in said will was as follows: “Lying and being in the 12th Civil district of Humphreys County, Tenn., beginning on a stake and runs north with IT. M. Mclllwain’s west boundary line 50 poles.to a stake; thence west 40 poles to a stake at the foot of the hill; thence southwardly and with the foot of the hill 50 poles to a stake; thence west 192 poles to a stake on the bank of Duck River, thence south with the meanders of said river 12-3/4 poles to a stake; thence east 230-poles to the beginning, containing 27 acres, more or less, the same being the lands which I purchased from S. A.'Larkins by deed dated July 28, 1884 . . .”

In the same will IT. R. Barnhill devised a long rectangular tract of land to his daughter, Izora Barnhill, which at the time his will was probated extended across the new channel of Duck River created by the avulsion in 1913.

The above 27-acre tract, which Mr. Barnhill willed to his daughter, Jennie B. McClure, was also a long rectangular tract lying immediately south of and adjoining the tract that was willed to Izora Barnhill. This tract also extended across the new channel of Duck River to *566 the old channel of the river, which included only 2 or 3 acres on the west side of the new channel^

This suit was filed in August, 1942, and the hill stated that since the avulsion in 1913 accretions had become deposited against the south bank of complainant’s 2 or-3 acre tract which lay west of the new channel of Duck Eiver and became hers by reason of the law controlling accretions, and that the accretions amounted to 26.9 acres.

Complainant charged that she' and her father had . claimed, used and controlled said tract of land, including the 26.9 acres of accretions* and that they had been in open, adverse, notorious and continuous possession thereof, using and cultivating the same and paying* the taxes thereon for more than twenty years.

Complainant also charged that her title thereto and her possession thereof had not been questioned by any one until the Tennessee Valley Authority undertook to buy a reservoir to be formed by Gilbertsvillp Dam, which would cause the overflow of said 26.9 acres as well as some other lands belonging to her. She charged that the TVA was negotiating with her for the purchase of the tract of 26;9 acres of accretions when she learned for the first time from the TVA purchasing agent that the defendants, Pearl Couch and W. M. Tolley, claimed that they were entitled to portions of the accretions. Complainant further charged that none of the defendants had ever been in possession of any part of said accretions and had never made any such claims until that time.

Complainant, therefore, filed her bill for the purpose of removing the cloud on the title by reason of the verbal claims made by the defendants, Pearl Couch and W. M. Tolley.

*567 To this bill the defendant, Pearl Couch, filed an answer in which she denied all of the allegations of the complainant which were adverse to her claims. She claimed that she was the owner of said accretions by reason of their having’ become attached to her farm of 8% acres, which farm was on the west side of the old channel of Duck River previous to the avulsion in 1913' and also west of the complainant’s property.

None of the other defendants, including’ W. M. Tolley, filed any pleadings but suffered judgments pro confesso to be taken against them. The contest is, therefore, between the complainant, Jennie B. McClure, and the defendant, Pearl Conch.

The defendant, Pearl Couch, received her property by deed from her father and mother, IT. A. Link and wife, the deed being dated February 11, 1938. The two tracts were described as follows:

“Tract No. 2: Lying and being situated in the same civil district as the above tract, and in Duck River bottom, and described as follows: Beginning at a stake on the road on the bank of Duck River, and runs thence north 70 degrees west 25 poles on-the road; thence south 46% degrees west 57 poles to a stake; thence due east 25 poles to Duck River; thence up said river with its meanders to the place of beginning containing 8 acres more or less.
“Tract No. 3: Beginning on the dividing line of the above described tracts 2 & 3, as described in the original bill 16 poles due west from Duck: River, and runs thence east 16 poles to Duck River; thence down said river with its meanders to a point due south from the point of beginning'; thence due north to the beginning, containing about Three-fourths of an acre; .said last two tracts being as set aside by D. 0. Collier upon a survey made *568 for that purpose; and the last two tracts above are the same lands conveyed to H, A. Link by deed of date of May 2,1904:, and being the lands sold in the County Court of Humphreys County, Tennessee, in the case of H. A. Links et al. v. Lennie Oliver et al., said deed being recorded in Deed Book No. 18, page 270' of the Register’s office of Humphreys County, Tennessee.”

The accompanying plat filed as exhibit No. 1 to the deposition of E. C. Collier, former county surveyor of Humphreys County, serves better to acquaint one with the lay- of the land as it existed at the time of the trial in this cause.

There were some twenty witnesses who testified. From this testimony the chancellor and the Court of Appeals concurred in finding as a fact that the west end of the land owned by H. R. Barnhill’s daughter Izorá and the complainant, Jennie B. McClure, was cut off suddenly *569 by an avulsion in 1913, which left some 2 or 3 acres on the west side of the new channel of Duck River belonging to the complainant.

The chancellor and the Court of Appeals also concurred in finding that after the avulsion in 1913 and up to the time this bill was filed in 1942 that the channel gradually and steadily moved eastwardly and southwardly eroding the east bank of the new channel and depositing accretions on the west and south sides thereof.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
188 S.W.2d 550, 182 Tenn. 563, 18 Beeler 563, 1945 Tenn. LEXIS 255, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcclure-v-couch-tenn-1945.