Mengel Box Co. v. Ferguson

124 Tenn. 433
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 124 Tenn. 433 (Mengel Box Co. v. Ferguson) 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
Mengel Box Co. v. Ferguson, 124 Tenn. 433 (Tenn. 1911).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Buchanan

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The Mengal Box Company filed its original bill in the chancery court of Lauderdale county against J. Bt Fer[436]*436guson. The bill was predicated on the breach by Ferguson of the covenants of warranty and seizin contained in a deed made by Ferguson to the company, dated June 27, 1902, and purporting to convey to the company a tract of land in Dyer county. The consideration expressed in the deed, and paid by the company to Ferguson, was $10,000 cash.

The bill averred an eviction of the company from an undivided four-fifths interest in the land, and a decree of the chancery court of Dyer county holding that the company by the deed from Ferguson acquired no title to the said undivided four-fifths, and an appeal by the company from said decree, and the affirmance of said decree by the supreme court of Tennessee at its April term, 1909, all of which occurred prior to the filing of the bill in this cause, and that under saM decree the only title and interest acquired by the company in or to the land in said deed described was an undivided one-fifth interest; that when the suit which so resulted began the company notified Ferguson of the fact, and called on him to defend the title, which Ferguson failed to do, though at all times advised of the progress of the suit; that the company made proper defense to said suit at its own expense. The items of damage laid by the bill were as follows :

First, for the four-fifths of the $10,000 of consideration money; second, for interest on said four-fifths consideration money from June 27, 1902, which was the date of the deed; third, for taxes paid by the company [437]*437after the execution of the deed; fourth, for court costs paid by the company in defending the title to said land in said eviction suit.

The prayer of the bill was for a decree for the amount due by reason of said breaches of covenants of warranty and seizin, and for such other both general and special relief as it might be entitled to under the pleadings and proof in the cause.

The chancellor granted a decree in favor of the company:

First, for four-fifths of the consideration money; second, for interest on same from June 27, 1902, until the date of the decree; third, for costs paid by the company resulting from its loss of the eviction suit.

Both parties excepted to this decree, and each party appealed therefrom, and each has assigned errors here.

The land described in the deed from Ferguson to the Company, on the breach of the covenants of which this suit is based, comprised 1,000 acres, and this land and an additional 1,000 acres was conveyed by Isaac Sampson, owner of the fee therein, nn the 8th day of July, 1861, to M. D. Pate and W. B. Sampson, or the survivor of them, as trustee for the sole and separate use and benefit of Lou P. and Sarah B. Sampson, during their natural lives, free from the contracts, debts, and control of any future husband either of them may have, and to the issue of their bodies at their death. The conveyance of said land to said trustees was as one tract. Subsequently by a partition proceeding the 2,000 acres were di[438]*438vided, and that part of tbe land described in the Ferguson deed was set apart in severalty, to Sarah B. Sampson (who had by marriage become Sarah B. Carson) and those claiming the remainder interest under her. From her and her husband Ferguson bought said land in 1899, paying therefor the sum of $2,500 cash, and accepted a deed from them purporting to covey the land, on advice of counsel that the title was good.

Thereafter, Ferguson executed the deed to the Mengel Box Company; the latter acting under the advice of counsel that the title was good. After the latter purchase, when the company was about to cut timber on the land, the suit was instituted in the chancery court of Dyer county against the company by Sam S. Carson, G. F. Carson, Maggie Carson, Lou Carson, and Oleo K. Carson, the only children and heirs at law'and issue of the body of said Sarah B. Carson. This suit was filed in 1907, and before it was finally heard the mother of the complainants died, and her death was suggested, and the bill amended, setting up the falling in of the life estate, and that complainants were entitled to the fee in the land.

The chancery court so decreed as to all of the complainants, except Sam S Carson, who by his conduct in acting as salesman of the land for his mother and father to Ferguson was held to be estopped to set up any claim of title to an undivided one-fifth interest in the land against the company, Ferguson’s vendee, and this decree as already stated, was by the supreme court affirmed.

[439]*439The covenants in Ferguson’s deed to the company were as follows: “We covenant with the Mengel Box Company that we are well seized of the said tract of land, that we have a good right to convey the same, and that it is unincumbered, and that we will warrant and forever defend the title thereto to the said Mengel Box Company, its successors and assigns.” It is important to note that the complainant in the present suit is asserting a legal demand against the defendant, that is to say, a demand not belonging to the exclusive jurisdiction of courts of equity, and the defendant is not here calling upon a court of equity for the exercise of remedies peculiar to such courts. The demand in this suit and the prayer of the bill, is for damages for the breach of covenants of seizin and warranty, which under the rulings of the courts determine the measure of damages and the amount of recovery.

It is also to be noticed that the present suit is not one for damages for a total breach of the covenant contained in the deed. It is manifest, from what has already been stated, that neither of the covenants sued on has been wholly breached; for, whatever may be said as to the lack of power in the grantors of Ferguson to convey title to him, because the same was vested in the trustees, it cannot be denied that the deed by the grantors of Ferguson would have effectually estopped the usufructuary life tenant from asserting any right, title, or interest in the land against Ferguson, or his vendees. Nor can it be denied that the deed by the vendors of Ferguson [440]*440coupled with the acts which constituted the estoppel against Sam S. Carson, operated to place in Ferguson the title to an undivided one-fifth interest in the land. It must follow that the deed from Ferguson to the Box Company was not void; for, under it, rights and title to an undivided one-fifth interest in the land passed to the Box Company. Ferguson held this undivided one-fifth interest in the land from the date of the deed to him in 1899 to the date of the deed by him to the Box Company in 1902. There is no insistence in the present suit that the deed by Ferguson to the Box Company was void for champerty, or for failure of consideration, or any other cause which might invalidate it. The sole contention in respect of its invalidity is made in the answer of the defendant, on the ground, as claimed by the answer, that the decree of the chancery .court, which was affirmed by this court, pronounced the deed to Ferguson void. This contention in the answer results from a misconception of the decree of the chancery court. It does not adjudge the deed to Ferguson void. Nor did the decree, of this court, affirming the decree of the chancery court, amount to such an adjudication.

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Bluebook (online)
124 Tenn. 433, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mengel-box-co-v-ferguson-tenn-1911.