Oldham v. York

41 S.W. 333, 99 Tenn. 68
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedMay 8, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 41 S.W. 333 (Oldham v. York) 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
Oldham v. York, 41 S.W. 333, 99 Tenn. 68 (Tenn. 1897).

Opinion

McAlister, J.

Complainants filed this bill to recover the possession of a tract of land, comprising sixty-five acres, situated in the fourth civil district of Shelby County, and for rents for the use and occupation, as well as the value, of timber alleged to have been cut therefrom. The defendants, J. R. York At ais., are in possession of the land, claiming as the heirs of W. P. York, who died in May, 1892. The Chancellor decreed in favor of complainants as to the possession of the land, but disallowed an account for rents, upon the ground that defendants’ occupancy of said land was under án honest claim of right. Both sides appealed, the appeal of complainant being limited to the action of the Chancellor in disallowing the claim for rents.

Complainant purchased the land in controversy from the heirs of Nancy F. Donehower, who inherited it under the third item of the will of her father, W. S. Garner, namely: “I give and bequeath to my daughter, Nancy F. Donehower, the tract of land I now own in District No. 4, containing, by estimation, 1,407 acres, which I purchased by deed from Kenneth Reynor, and is recorded in the Register’s office of said county, in Book No. 5, page 536, to which reference is here made for metes and bounds, except 300 acres, to be cut off the west end of said tract, by a line running due north and south; [70]*70which 300 acres I desire my granddaughter, Charlotte Ann Garner, to have. The balance of said 1,407 acre tract I give and bequeath to said Nancy F. Donehower and the heirs of her body.”

The lands in controversy were acquired by W. S. Garner from the State of Tennessee by a locative entry made in 1848, estimated to contain 65-J* acres, but by actual measurement is shown to contain only 49tW acres.

In 1850, or prior thereto, the said W. S. Garner purchased of Kenneth Raynor the north half of a 2,500 acre tract in the fourth civil district of Shelby County, Tenn., granted to George Dougherty by the State of North Carolina, which grant is numbered 69, and lies south of and adjoining said entry of sixty-five acres. The complainant claims that the lands embraced in the sixty-five acre entry were devised to Nancy F. Donehower by her father, W. S. Garner, by the said third item of his will, probated in January, 1858, and that Mrs. Donehower having diod in 1865, complainant, Oldham, acquired, by purchase from her heirs, the lands in controversy.

The contention of defendants is, that the sixty-five acre tract is not embraced in the description of the will, or within the intention of the testator; that it is undevised property, and, as such, came by descent to the heirs of W. S. Garner, and that W. P. York, father of defendants, purchased fjj of the interests of the heirs in the land, went into possession in 1884, and claimed, as assignee of these heirs, [71]*71by an open and adverse possession down to his death, which occurred in 1892. It is further claimed, that independent of color of title to the land, which was acquired by the father of defendants by his purchase of of the interests of the heirs of W. S. Garner, defendants have acquired a possessory right by an adverse possession of twenty-five acres of said land, which they have had under fence for more' than seven years prior to the filing of this bill.

The bill admits that W. P. York, the ancestor of defendants, acquired by deed, from Mrs. C. A. Maddox and other heirs of W. S. Garner, deceased, §¶- of their interest in said tract of land, and that the boundaries of said deed embrace a part of the land so purchased by complainant, Oldham, from the heirs of Nancy F. Donehower. The bill also charges that, under said deeds, the said W. P. York, and his heirs, are now in ' possession of 33-J* acres of the lands in said sixty-five ’ acre entry, which they have inclosed, and have built four tenement houses thereon, and are claiming the same adversely to complainants, under said pretended claim; that, in 1885, W. P. York cut timber from said land, and appropriated the same to his own use.

The defendant, York, interposes the following defenses to the bill, viz.:

‘'1. That the lands in said sixty-five acre entry were not devised to Mrs. Donehower under the third .item of the will of W. S. Garner, deceased, nor by any other clause of the will, but pass to his heirs [72]*72by descent; that as to this land the testator died intestate.
“2. That, if they did so pass, they are not embraced in said deeds to complainant, J. D. Oldham, through which he claims title — that is to say, said lands are not within the metes and bounds of said deeds.
“3. That, if they are so embraced, the sales as to the three-fifths interest, sold by R. Y. Donehower and H. Y”. Oldham, were champertous and void, and their deeds to that extent passed no title, because W. P. York was in the actual adverse possession of said lands in November, 1884, when B. Y. Done-hower’s deeds for a one-fifth interest was executed, and also in 1888, when R. V. Oldham sold and conveyed a two-fifths interest in the lands embraced in his said deeds.
"4. That said sixty-five acres passed by descent to the heirs of W. S. Garner, and that W. P. York, the father of the defendants, purchased f-J of the right, title, and interest of his heirs, and took deeds from them for same.
"5. That, even if the title to said lands did pass to complainant, J. D. Oldham, under his several deeds, he could not recover, by reason of the fact that said W. P. York, the father of defendants, took actual possession of the lands in said entry, early in the year 1884, and with notice to complainants, under color of title, and that he and his children have been in the actual adverse possession [73]*73thereof, continuously, ever since, claiming the same in his and their own right, and that, in consequence of such adverse possession for more than seven years prior to the institution of this suit, the right, title, and interest of the -complainants, if they had any, was barred, and their right of recovery extinguished and destroyed by the statute of limitations of seven years, under the Act of 1819.
“6. And the defendants set - up the further defense that, independent of the fact of color of title, the right of recovery of the complainants would be barred and cut off as to the twenty-five acres of fenced lands in the adverse possession of W. P. York, during his lifetime, and the continuation of that actual adverse possession by his heirs, the defendants, since his death, in May, 1892; but he has been in the actual adverse possession, with an occupied house, and fence inclosure of twenty-five acres, for more than seven years before his death. They further state that they paid all -taxes on the lands in said entry since 1883.”

The complainants must show a title in themselves or one of them, and a right to possession, in order to recover the land sued for.

The minors answered and asked the protection of the Court. The Court below decreed—

“1. That the land in said sixty-five acre entry was embraced in said third item of the will of W. S. Garner, and passed to Mrs. Nancy E. Donehower by that devise.
[74]*74‘ ‘ 2. That the complainant, J. D. Oldham, acquired a good and valid title thereto by his purchase of the interests of her heirs, and a deed from the complainant, R,. V.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
41 S.W. 333, 99 Tenn. 68, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oldham-v-york-tenn-1897.