Moore v. Cole

289 S.W.2d 695, 200 Tenn. 43, 4 McCanless 43, 1956 Tenn. LEXIS 375
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedApril 5, 1956
StatusPublished
Cited by43 cases

This text of 289 S.W.2d 695 (Moore v. Cole) 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
Moore v. Cole, 289 S.W.2d 695, 200 Tenn. 43, 4 McCanless 43, 1956 Tenn. LEXIS 375 (Tenn. 1956).

Opinions

[46]*46Mr. Justice Burnett

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is a suit to quiet title to a tract of land in Memphis, Tennessee, consisting of a house and lot which has at all times, pertinent hereto, been rented to tenants of R. D. or Robert Casey. The question arises by reason of the fact that one Eva B. Casey conveyed the property in question to Lizzie B. Moore and after this conveyance, the petitioners here who were the defendants in the Chancery Court apparently raised the question that they were entitled to a one-half interest in the property and thus Lizzie Moore who was joined by Eva Casey filed the present suit. The Chancellor found in favor of the defendants, petitioners here, that is, that they owned a one-half undivided interest in the property. On appeal the Court of Appeals reversed. A petition for certiorari has been filed and with it an able brief in support thereof as well as a responding brief. The petition was granted and we have heard argument and now have the matter for disposition.

The title to lots 68 and 69, Block 7, Trigg Avenue Place Subdivision, Memphis, Shelby County, Tennessee, which property is improved by a dwelling known as 1439 Greenwood Street, Memphis, Tennessee is involved. On January 14, 1914, the property was conveyed by warranty deed from one E. E. Meachum and son to R. D. Casey and Elizabeth Casey without any recitation as to their status. This deed was filed for record on February 4, 1915. At that time the two Caseys were husband and wife. Elizabeth Casey died July 24, 1927, and this contest is between her heirs and those subsequently claiming the title under conveyances from Eva Casey who [47]*47was a second wife of R. D. Casey, R. D. Casey Laying married ter about a year after Elizabeth. Casey died.

Of course between the period of January 1, 1914 and April 15, 1919, the property acquired by a husband and wife upon the death of either descended to the heirs of the one who died. During that period the doctrine of tenancy by the entireties was not in force in this State; thus under the law as it existed in January 1914, when Elizabeth Casey died without any further conveyance having been made, her undivided one-half interest, which she received by deed, descended to her heirs.

On March 7, 1941, Robert Casey and his then wife Eva B. Casey executed a warranty deed to the property in question to Lula Williamson, which deed was duly and immediately recorded in the Register’s Office of Shelby County, Tennessee, on the following day to wit: March 8, 1941. Immediately thereafter, Lula Williamson executed a warranty deed to Robert Casey and Eva B. Casey which was filed for record on that same day in the Register’s Office of Shelby County, Tennessee. Robert Casey died in 1950 and left a will in which he devised the property in question to his wife Eva B. Casey “in fee simple”. The two courts have concurred in finding that the parties for many years, on up until shortly before the institution of suit here, believed that Robert Casey owned the property in question. The Courts likewise concurred in finding that the purpose of the deed last above mentioned, which was executed on March 7, 1941, from Casey to Williamson and back, was executed for the purpose of effecting a tenancy by the entireties between Robert Casey and Eva B. Casey, his wife. Such holding and the finding that the evidence does not preponderate against the decree of the lower court is in [48]*48effect a concurrence of tire two Courts thus precluding our review of the facts. Bray v. Blue Ridge Lumber Co., 154 Tenn. 342, 289 S.W. 504; Miller v. Kendrick, 153 Tenn. 596, 598, 285 S.W. 51. Under the law as it now exists in this State such a conveyance creates an estate by the entireties. Taul v. Campbell, 15 Tenn. 319, 27 Am. Dec. 508.

Tenants in common are jointly seized of the whole estate, each having an equal right of entry and possession, and the possession of one is regarded as the possession of all until a disseizin of the others by actual ouster. Story v. Saunders, 27 Tenn. 663; Marr’s Heirs v. Gilliam, 41 Tenn. 488; Hubbard v. Wood’s Lessee, 33 Tenn. 279; King v. Rowan , 57 Tenn. 675; Drewery v. Nelms, 132 Tenn. 254, 261, 177 S.W. 946.

In other words i!f the property is owned by tenants in common and one tenant is in possession of the property this tenant in common, who is in possession, is duty bound to look after the property and treat and care for it on behalf of himself and his cotenants and he “cannot buy in the common property at a tax sale, or foreclosure sale, or buy in an outstanding title or other overhead claim, except for the benefit of all.” This is the doctrine of Tisdale v. Tisdale, 34 Tenn. 596, 64 Am.Dec. 775, and many subsequent cases. The doctrine there stated by Judge Caruthers has become a landmark in the law of trusts as well as the rules governing tenants in common looking after the property of their cotenant out of possession. Probably the latest case on the question is Perkins v. Johnson, 178 Tenn. 498, 160 S.W.2d 400. If a tenant in common with another intends to try to take the property away from his cotenants, out of possession, he must either give them actual or construe-[49]*49live notice that he is disavowing their interest in the property. He may do this where he gives notice and then he performs any overt, notorious or unequivocal act showing that he is attempting to claim the whole property. When he does this the statute of adverse possession would run against the tenant out of possession. In the instant case the Court of Appeals held that the making of the warranty deed to Lula Williamson and she in turn making the deed back to Casey and his new wife in 1941 was such notice to their heirs of Elizabeth Casey of a hostile possession by R. D. Casey and Eva B. Casey to arouse them to an active investigation and assertion of their rights, and that since they did not assert any claim for more than seven years that thus Eva B. Casey, by virtue of the seven-year statute, Williams’ Annotated Code, sec. 8582, T.C.A. sec. 28-201, acquired good title to the property and ousted the heirs of Elizabeth Casey, deceased.

In Hood v. Cravens, 31 Tenn.App. 532, 218 S.W.2d 71, 73, it is said:

"Where a tenant makes a deed purporting to convey the land to another, or where a tenant in common makes a deed purporting to convey the entire estate in the land, this amounts to an actual ouster and disseizin which the landlord or the cotenant is bound to notice. Doak v. Donelson’s Lessee, 10 Tenn. 249, 254, 24 Am. Dec. 485; Weisinger v. Murphy, 39 Tenn. 674, 679; Jones v. Mosley, - Tenn.App. -, 198 S.W.2d 652, 655.”

That Court then quotes from Weisinger v. Murphy, supra, to the same effect. It being the same quotation used as authority in the instant case by the Court of Appeals. Both quotations are misleading. A reading [50]*50of the cases shows without question that the tenant in possession conveyed to a third party “who immediately took possession, and have held it ever since, claiming the entire and whole interest in said land as their own.” Weisinger v. Murphy, supra.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
289 S.W.2d 695, 200 Tenn. 43, 4 McCanless 43, 1956 Tenn. LEXIS 375, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moore-v-cole-tenn-1956.