Myers v. Wolf

34 S.W.2d 201, 162 Tenn. 42, 9 Smith & H. 42, 1930 Tenn. LEXIS 61
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 17, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 34 S.W.2d 201 (Myers v. Wolf) 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
Myers v. Wolf, 34 S.W.2d 201, 162 Tenn. 42, 9 Smith & H. 42, 1930 Tenn. LEXIS 61 (Tenn. 1931).

Opinion

• Mr. Justice Swiggart

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Complainant’s original hill was filed to enjoin the execution of process in the chancery court, issued under a decree of an independent suit, on the ground that the decree in the former suit was void. After answer had been filed, the chancellor sustained a motion to dissolve a temporary injunction theretofore issued;“and it appearing to the chancellor that the injunction was the *47 principal relief songlit by the bill, the suit was dismissed. Mengle Box Co. v. Lauderdale Co., 144 Tenn., 266. From the decree dismissing the snit complainant has appealed, to this court.

The record does not disclose the grounds of the motion to dissolve the temporary injunction, and the chancellor assigned no reason for his action thereon. It may be assumed, however, that the chancellor failed to find any equity on the face of the complainant’s bill.

The decree, which is sought herein to be adjudged void, was rendered by the Chancery Court of Davidson county upon the bill of E. D. Mouzon filed against the present complainant, Minnie L. Myers, and her husband, J. A. Myers. It recited the conveyance in April, 1927, of a tract or lot of real estate in Davidson county to two defendants, and the execution by them of three promissory notes in part payment, falling due in one, two and three years from the date of the deed, the first two notes being for $1,000 each and the third for $500; for all of which a vendor’s lien was retained. The decree, rendered May 22, 1929, adjudged the default of the defendants at the dates of maturity of the two notes for $1,000 each, and that the note for $500' had become payable by virtue of the right of the holder to declare it due and payable because of the default on the previous notes. The court thereupon gave judgment for the complainant, Mouzon, against the defendants for the aggregate of the thjjee notes, and directed the sale of the real estate covered by the vendor’s lien, with direction that the purchaser should assume a note for $7500, secured by a deed of trust on the property, “and for the balance, that is the equity in said property, the purchaser will pay one-fourth cash and will be required to execute for the *48 balance of the purchase price four notes,” etc. The decree directed that the clerk and master should execute a deed to the purchaser, upon the payment of all the purchase money notes, “divesting title out of the parties to this cause and vesting same in the purchaser.” It was further decreed that the sale should be free from the equity of redemption, homestead and dower.

The bill in the cause now before us recites the holding of the sale under the decree above set out, the confirmation bjr the chancery court of the purchase by J. D. Mc-Carn, and the issuance of a writ of possession, directing that the said J. D. McCarn be placed in possession of the premises.

The present action is brought against E. D. Mouzon, complainant in the first cause, J. D. McCarn, purchaser under the decree of sale, and Joe Wolf, the deputy sheriff in whose hands the writ of possession was placed for execution. J. A. Myers, husband of complainant, who was one of the defendants in the first cause, is not a party to this action.

Complainant’s bill avers that the real estate in question was her sole and separate property; that the deed of E. D. Mouzon conveyed the same to her alone; and that J. A. Myers had no interest thereunder.

The bill avers that the decree directing the sale of the property, the purported sale itself, and the decree confirming the sale, are void because (1) complainant was not a party to the suit, process was not served upon her, and she neither made appearance nor authorized anyone to make appearance therein for her, wherefore the court had no jurisdiction of her person; (2) the adjudication in the decree of May'22,1929, that the owner of the three purchase money notes was entitled to declare the third *49 note due and payable, prior to the date of its maturity, because of the default in the preceding note, was “unsupported by any allegation of said bill and wholly outside of and beyond said bill,” the decree having been rendered prior to the date of the maturity of the third note; (3) the owners and holders of the $7500 first mortgage lien, which the purchaser under the decree was required to assume, being parties in interest, were not made parties to the suit and were not before the court; and (4) the adjudication that the sale should be free from any equity of redemption, and should be made on a credit, was not supported by any averment or application “made in the bill or at the bar.”

The bill prays that the decree of May 22, 1929, ordering the sale of said property, be adjudged void, and that said purported sale be declared void and of no effect; and for general relief.

It is assigned as error by the complainant (appellant) that the chancellor should have held the decree of May 22, 1929, void because there was no appropriate averment in the bill to support a decree on the note for $500 which was not then due, and the bill did not aver that the real estate was so situated that it could not be sold in part to satisfy the two notes then in default, as authorized by sections 5326-5328 of Shannon’s Code (Code of 1858, sections 3563-3565).

The original bill of E. D. Mouzon, exhibit to complainant’s bill herein, averred the liability of the defendants on the three notes for which the vendor’s lien was retained; that nothing had been paid on any of them; prayed specifically for a decree on the first note, in default when the bill was filed; and further prayed: “that complainant be allowed to so amend his bill from time *50 to time as to be granted a judgment on tbe other notes not yet matured as they become due either by limitation of time or by option of holder on account of default, and that complainant be granted a decree enforcing his said lien as provided in his deed to defendants and stated on the face of the notes and that the real estate described in this bill be ordered sold for the purpose of paying said notes and enforcing complainant’s lien, free from all equities of redemption, homestead and dower.”

The decree of May 22,1929, included the amount of the third note, upon the express finding of the chancellor “that the last of the three notes in the sum of $500 has not yet matured by reason of expiration of the time, but under the terms of the deed executed by the complainant to the defendants, it is provided that the holder of said note or notes has the right, after default of sixty days, to declare all the notes due and payable.”

In Murphy v. Johnson, 107 Tenn., 552, it was held that a decree for an amount in excess of that which the bill showed to be due from the defendant, was void as to the excess, because “wholly wiithout warrant in the pleadings.” And it is generally held that “a decree beyond the fair scope of the pleadings is void.” Lieberman, Loveman & Cohn v. Knight, 153 Tenn., 268; Thompson v. Keck Mfg. Co., 107 Tenn., 451.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
34 S.W.2d 201, 162 Tenn. 42, 9 Smith & H. 42, 1930 Tenn. LEXIS 61, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/myers-v-wolf-tenn-1931.