McClure v. Harris

54 Tenn. 379
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 7, 1872
StatusPublished

This text of 54 Tenn. 379 (McClure v. Harris) 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. Harris, 54 Tenn. 379 (Tenn. 1872).

Opinion

Deaderick, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

[380]*380The questions which arise upon the record in these several causes may be stated and determined without incumbering this opinion with a full recital of the voluminous pleadings, or facts disclosed therein.

Newton. McClure, the executor of Mary A. Harris, the deceased wife of P. N. Harris, filed his bill in the Chancery Court at Franklin, for the construction of her will, made in the execution of a power conferred on her by her deceased father’s will, in which he devised certain real and personal property to her sole and separate use. A, further object of said bill of the executor, was to have the Court declare void, as against his testatrix, certain notes executed by her, as surety for her husband, executed for a tract of land purchased by him of Zachary Allen, the intestate of defendant Winstead.

To this bill Harris answered, and filed his original bill in the nature of a cross-bill, making defendants thereto McClure, executor; Winstead, administrator; the widow and children of said Allen, and his sisters and their husbands; and Holt and Owen, to whom Harris sold the land purchased of Allen.

Harris in his bill alleges that he bought of Zachary Allen in his lifetime, a tract of land of ninety acres in Williamson county for $4,500, of which $1,000 were paid at the time of the purchase^ and one note for $2,000, due January 1, 1863, and one for $1,500, due January 1, 1864, both bearing interest from date, with his wife as surety thereon, were given for the balance of the purchase money, and a bond for the title executed at the time, by which Allen was bound [381]*381to make Mm “a good and sufficient title in fee simple with general -warranty,” to said tract of land, when the - last payment should be made; and that he has paid in all upon said land $3,785.

After Harris purchased the land, he sold it to Holt and Owen, and put them in possession, although no written contract of sale, so far as disclosed in this record, was entered into with them. In part payment, Holt and Owen sold to Harris, without any written conveyance, the Brentwood property in said county at $3,000, and gave him possession of it, paid $600 in cash, and executed their note for $900, the balance of the price agreed upon.

This $900 note was assigned by Harris to Allen, before due, and constitutes part of the sum which Harris claims to have paid Allen. Harris alleges that the administrator of Allen is unable to make him a title to the land because he, Allen, had only an interest in remainder in it; his mother, who was alive at the time of the filing of the bill, having by her husband’s will a life estate in the land and negroes devised to his sons and daughters, and that the land was not to be divided between the sons, nor the ne-groes between the daughters, until after the death of the testator’s widow.

It was further alleged that the land was charged in the hands of the sons, in favor of the daughters, with the difference in the value between the slaves and land at the time for the division and settlement of the estate, and that the slaves were lost by the event of the war, and that the equality provided for [382]*382in the will must be attained through a sale or division of the land for that purpose, and for these reasons he prays a rescission of the contract. Fly and wife and Pate and wife, the wives being the two sisters of Zachary, to whom the slaves were bequeathed, answer and file their answer as a cross-bill, and claim their lien on the land, but say they are willing that the-contract shall be executed if the fund due from Harris, to the extent of their lien, is secured to them.

Owen and Holt jointly file their answer to the bill of McClure, executor, and also to the bill of Harris, and claim their purchase, and insist upon a specific execution of the contract to them by Harris. But they now, in argument by their, counsel, urge that the sale is void and should be rescinded. It does not satisfactorily appear that there is a contract in writing for the sale of the land to Holt and Owen, and if there is not, either party to the contract may resist and defeat its specific execution.

At the April Term, 1869, a decree was pronounced by the Chancellor, in which it was held, and we think correctly, that Mrs. Harris was not bound upon the notes executed by her husband and herself to Allen, and giving, as we think, a correct construction of the will of Mrs. Harris. The Chancellor further decreed that the bargain between Harris and Zach. Allen for the purchase and sale of the 90 acres of land, can not be enforced; nor can the sale of the Brentwood property; and then the decree recites that the Court declines to pass upon and decide the other questions presented and involved in these cases, or either of them, but [383]*383reserving all other questions for further decision, directs the Master to report as to what became of the slaves bequeathed by "William Allen to his two daughters, the amount paid by Harris to Allen, and the amount paid by Holt and Owen to Harris, and what sums, and by whom, were received for rents of the 90 acres of land and for the Brentwood property.

After the rendition of this decree, Elizabeth Allen, widow of Zach. Allen, deceased, filed her bill, setting out that Wm, Allen, deceased, had devised his tract of land to his wife during life, with remainder to his two sons, and also bequeathed his negroes to his wife during her life, with remainder to his two daughters; that Zachary bought, in 1853, from his mother, her life estate in the land, and took her deed for the same, and afterwards sold the 90 acres set apart to him in the will to Pryor N. Harris.

That Zachary Allen, her husband, departed this life in November, 1862, intestate; that the sale to Harris had been rescinded, and that at the death of her husband he was the owner of the 90 acre tract of land encumbered with a lien in favor of the daughters, which could not be enforced until the falling in of the life estate, and praying that dower be allowed and set apart to her out of the 90 acre tract of land.

At the October Term, 1869, the Master reported upon the several matters referred to him by the previous decree. The report was confirmed as to the account of McClure, executor; but upon exceptions taken to the report to the other matters, it was continued to the next term.

[384]*384At the October Term, 1871, the cause came on for hearing upon the report of the Master. Certain exceptions taken by Harris were allowed, and the amount paid by him upon the land ascertained and declared in the decree to be $3,760, exclusive of interest; that the two daughters of Wm. Allen, deceased, have a lien upon the land sold to Harris for $550, the amount due them, with the interest thereon from the death of the widow of Wm. Allen, deceased, and that • this lien is superior to the lien of Harris for the repayment of the purchase-money paid by him; but that Harris’s lien and claim to be reimbursed the money paid by him toward the land is superior to the right of Zach. Allen’s widow to dower, and that said widow is entitled to be endowed only out of so much as may remain after satisfying said two liens.

The land was ordered to be sold to pay the liens, and a further account of rents ordered. The sale to Holt and Owen was also rescinded, and proper accounts ordered to be taken, and the Master was ordered to report to the next term.

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54 Tenn. 379, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcclure-v-harris-tenn-1872.