Nashville Trust Co. v. Winters

130 S.W.2d 152, 23 Tenn. App. 262, 1939 Tenn. App. LEXIS 32
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMarch 25, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 130 S.W.2d 152 (Nashville Trust Co. v. Winters) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nashville Trust Co. v. Winters, 130 S.W.2d 152, 23 Tenn. App. 262, 1939 Tenn. App. LEXIS 32 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

■ CROWNOVER, J.

The questions involved on appeal in this case are whether the reformation of a quitclaim deed on the ground of mistake can be decreed, and whether the cross-complainant Eugene M. Winters can recover a house and lot devised to him by his father W. M. Winters under the doctrine of election.

The original bill in this cause was filed by the Nashville Trust Company, guardian of the five minor Fulcher children, against Eugene M. Winters, G. N. Winters, J. W. Winters, and Fannie Louise Patton (all devisees under the will of W. M. Winters). The said wards are the children of a deceased sister of the four defendants.

The bill alleged that the complainant Trust Company was the guardian for the five Fulcher children; that W. M. Winters had devised four lots to the defendants Winters which he did not own, which were owned by his children the defendants and the Fulcher children; and that the four defendants had quitclaimed their interest to each devisee in said property (except lot No. 212 Foster Street), and had agreed to pay the Fulcher children $150 for their interest in each of those three lots, and asked the court to confirm this agreement; and a recovery was sought of a one-fifth interest in the house and lot at No. 212 Foster Street under the will of their great grandfather, George W. Winters, after the falling in of the life estate of their grandfather, W. M. Winters. Copies of the wills of George W. Winters and W. M. Winters and the quitclaim deed were filed.

Eugene M. Winters filed his answer admitting the execution of the wills, the devises, and the execution of the quitclaim deed, and filed his answer as a cross-bill against G. N. Winters, J. W. Winters and Fannie Louise Patton, and alleged that the quitclaim deed was executed to carry out the terms of the will of W. M. Winters, and asked the court to reform said quitclaim deed executed by himself and the three cross-defendants, by which they attempted to adj ust their rights in three pieces of property, so as to include the house and lot known as the No. 212 Foster Street property, which he alleged was inadvertently omitted from the quitclaim deed.

G. N. Winters, J. W. Winters and Mrs. Fannie Louise Patton answered the cross-bill and admitted the execution of the wills and the quitclaim deed, but denied that this property at 212 Foster Street was inadvertently left out of the quitclaim deed, and denied that the cross-complainant was entitled to any relief.

George W. Winters, the grandfather of the four defendants and of the mother of the minors, owned considerable property and died in 1915 leaving a will devising a life estate to his wife in the house and *265 lot at No. 212 Foster Street; at her cleatb, then to his son Jesse T. Winters for life, and at his death to his children.

He devised to his son William M. Winters for life, to descend at his death to his children, a house and lot at No. 213 Foster Street, one at No. 1917 Delta Avenue, and one at No. 1919 Delta Avenue.

The will further provided that in the event of the death of any one of his children, without issue, the property devised to said child should go to the survivor for life, and at his death to his issue.

Jesse T. Winters had no children and predeceased W. M. Winters, hence W. M. Winters was vested with a life estate in the 212 Foster Street property.

W. M. Winters thus had a life estate in 212 and 213 Foster Street and 1917 and 1919 Delta Avenue.

W. M. Winters died in 1934 leaving a will in which he undertook to devise 212 and 213 Foster Street to his son Eugene M. Winters, 1917 Delta Avenue to his son J. W. Winters, and 1919 Delta Avenue to his son G. W. Winters. He devised other specific property to which he held a fee simple title to his daughter Mrs. Patton, the Fulcher minors, and his other children.

Eugene M. Winters, J. W. Winters, G. N. Winters, and Fannie Louise Patton (each the owner of a % interest in said two pieces of propei'ty on Foster Street and two pieces on Delta Avenue under the will of their grandfather George W. Winters, which their father W. M. Winters undertook to devise to them) executed a quitclaim deed conveying to Eugene M. Winters a % interest in 213 Foster Street, to J. W. Winters a % interest in 1917 Delta Avenue, and to G. W. Winters a % interest in 1919 Delta Avenue, but the 212 Foster Street property was not mentioned, and it was not intended that said property should be included in the deed.

Written offers were made to the guardian to purchase the minors’ y5 interest in each piece of property conveyed in the quitclaim deed for $150 each.

The original bill in this cause asks the court to authorize a sale of said interests in said property by the minors, and seeks a recovery of a % interest in the 212 Foster Street property on the ground that W. M. Winters had only a life estate in the same and could not devise it, that the fee vested in the heirs of W. M. Winters under the will of George W. Winters.

The defendant Eugene M. Winters filed the cross-bill above mentioned claiming the 212 Foster Street property under the W. M. Winters will, and asked that the quitclaim deed be ‘ ‘ amended so as to include No. 212 Foster Street” as the quitclaim deed was executed to carry out the terms of W. M. Winters’ will.

G. N. Winters, J. W. Winters, and Mrs. Patton testified that there had been no intention on the part of any of them to include No. 212 *266 Foster Street in the quitclaim deed and that it was not inadvertently-left out of said deed.

Eugene M. Winters testified that when the quitclaim deed was executed he thought he owned the 212 Foster Street property in fee under W. M. Winters’ will; that the filing of this bill was the first intimation he had that his father did not own the fee in this lot; that the quitclaim deed covered the 213 Foster Street and the 1917 and 1919 Delta Avenue properties; that he knew when he signed it that it did not include 212 Foster Street.

The other devisees testified that it was not included, and that nothing was said about it, and that they did not intend to convey it at the time.

The Chancellor found that W. M. Winters took only a life estate in said four pieces of property, and that his attempt to devise the same was void and of no force and effect; that the quitclaim deed executed by the four adult parties to this suit did not contain, either expressly or by inference, the tract of real estate in question, known as the 212 Foster Street property; that the omission of same was not inadvertent or a mistake of the parties; and that the cross-bill of Eugene M. Winters was met and denied by the answers thereto and was not sustained by the proof. He found that said property was owned in fee, % each, by the minors and the four adult parties. He decreed that the cross-bill be dismissed and the tract of land be sold for partition,

Eugene M. Winters excepted to said decree and appealed to this court and has assigned errors, which are, in substance, as follows:

(1) The Chancellor erred in refusing to reform the quitclaim deed to include the property at No. 212 Foster Street.

(2) The Chancellor erred in failing to hold that Eugene M.

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Bluebook (online)
130 S.W.2d 152, 23 Tenn. App. 262, 1939 Tenn. App. LEXIS 32, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nashville-trust-co-v-winters-tennctapp-1939.