Polston v. Scandlyn

108 S.W.2d 1104, 21 Tenn. App. 252, 1937 Tenn. App. LEXIS 29
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJuly 3, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 108 S.W.2d 1104 (Polston v. Scandlyn) 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
Polston v. Scandlyn, 108 S.W.2d 1104, 21 Tenn. App. 252, 1937 Tenn. App. LEXIS 29 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

PORTRUM, J.

This is an ejectment suit in which the complainants seek to recover from the defendants 4% acres of land of a value of about $800 and to enforce the recovery by a writ of possession; the chancellor’s findings of fact were meager indeed; he only stated in the decree that he found the legal title was in the complainant, and upon this premise he granted a recovery. Ordinarily an- ejectment suit requires a more extended finding of facts by the lower court to be of any aid to this court, and the appellees insist that the decree below should be affirmed because of the absence of a *254 sufficient finding of facts under the authority of Stiner v. Powells Valley Hardware Co., 168 Tenn., 99, 75 S. W. (2d), 406; but the rule laid down in this case is applicable only when the findings of the chancellor have been suppressed; when none are made, the rule is to remand the case for a finding of facts. Hicks v. Hicks, 168 Tenn., 539, 79 S. W. (2d), 802. If the appellees had made a motion to remand for a finding of facts, the court would have been inclined to grant it, but for the fact that the erroneous holding of the chancellor is apparent from the first few conveyances' in the chain of title of the respective parties. The court needs no additional finding as an aid to the determination of this suit.

The parties claim through a common source, and the respective chains of title will be stated here in a consolidated form and in the order of the execution of the different instruments. Beginning with the common soureé:

In October, 1920, L. W. Lewis was the owner of a tract of 131 acres of land lying in Roane county, Tenn., and upon the 15th day of said month and year, he sold this boundary of land to Vernou W. Barnawell for a recited consideration of $5,000, evidenced by his promissory note of even date, nonnegotiable and due ten years from date. On the same date and as a simultaneous transaction, the grantee Barnawell, joining with his wife, executed a trust deed on the 131 acres of land to secure payment of the purchase money evidenced by the $5,000 note. One N. Giles Carter was named as trustee in the trust deed and held the legal title for the purposes of the trust. These two instruments were duly registered on the 19th day of October, 1920.

On February 24, 1921, only a few months after the execution of the above-mentioned instruments, Vernon ~W. Barnawell and wife, Pauline Barnawell, executed their warranty deed to S. P. Loggins, conveying 4% acres of the 131-acre tract and covenanted that the 414. acres was unencumbered, that they had a right to convey the same, and they possessed the legal title, the covenant being in proper form. Lawrence W. Lewis, the mortgagee who owned the $5,000 debt secured by the aforementioned trust deed, executed this instrument by signing under the signatures of the grantors. His name did not appear in the body of the deed, but he duly acknowledged the instrument on the 11th day of March, 1921, in an acknowledgment which designated him as “the bargainor.” This instrument was duly registered on April 7, 1921, when the grantees under the same went into possession of the property. The property had no improvements on it and was unfenced; about one acre was in cultivation and the balance in woodland. Two acres of this woodland has been cleared and put under cultivation by the grantee S. P. Loggins, and his successors in title. Crops have been planted and harvested from the land since 1921 by the said Loggins and his successors in title, but *255 tlie land perhaps lay idle intermittently during some of the cropping seasons. Loggins owned 40-odd acres adjoining this 41/sracre tract which he consolidated into one tract, but'transferred the land to his successors in title in one instrument containing separate descriptions of the two tracts. The court does not deem this possession important other than to reflect actual notice upon third parties dealing with and attempting to purchase this 414-acre tract while it was in the actual possession of Loggins and his predecessors in title.

On April 27, 1925, Vernon W. Barnawell and wife Pauline, the mortgagors in the aforementioned trust deed, conveyed the land.covered by the trust deed, the 131-acre tract they had purchased from L. ~W. Lewis, including the 4],4 acres they had subsequently deeded to Loggins, and which they adjoined, to the said mortgagee L. W. Lewis; the recited consideration being the release of the $5,000 note held by Lewis and secured by the trust deed. This deed was registered June 11, 1925.

Thereafter, namely on December 22, 1928, Lewis and wife deeded the 131-acre tract as described in the trust deed and his first warranty deed, to C. B. Harvey, which deed was registered December 29, 1930.

C. B. Harvey and wife deeded the identical land to Lizzie Poison, John Poison, and Tasco Poison, by deed dated December 20, 1930, and registered December 5, 1932. These last-named parties are the complainants in this action suing to recover Hie 4%-acre tract which is in the possession of the defendants, who claim their title to the 4!4-acre tract through a direct chain of title from S. P. Loggins, the original purchaser of this tract, the deed of which is above described. It is unnecessary to follow these purchases and conveyances down to the present owners, since they admittedly own whatever title Loggins acquired by the aforementioned purchase.

To recapitulate the title: Lewis sold to Barnawell October 15, 1920, for $5,000 evidenced by note, and Barnawell conveyed to Giles Carter, trustee, in trust to secure the note the land he had purchased from Lewis. Barnawell and wife conveyed 414 acres to S. B. Loggins on February 24, 1921, by warranty deed containing covenants against encumbrances, and which instrument was signed and acknowledged by L. W. Lewis, the mortgagee, who held the lien securing $5,000 against the entire tract of 131 acres, which -included the 4% acres. He acknowledged this instrument in an acknowledgment designating him as “the bargainor.” Loggins went into possession immediately. In April, 1925, Vernon W. Barnawell and wife, Pauline, conveyed their equity in the .tract of land describing the entire 131 acres, to their original vendor, L. W. Lewis, who was also the mortgagee, for the surrender and release of the $5,000 note held against the property and secured by trust deed, whereafter Lewis transferred the title, or such as he had, to C. B. Harvey and he in turn conveyed to *256 the complainants in this cause. In the meantime, Loggins, the purchase!’ of the 4% acres, had transferred his title to pass by mesne conveyances to the defendants in this cause.

The chancellor was of the opinion that since L. "W. Lewis was not named as a grantor in the deed by which Vernon W. Barnawell and wife transferred the title to S. P. Loggins that no interest passed out of Lewis by reason of any jointure, and that he acquired the legal and equitable title by the subsequent deed of Barnawell and wife to him, that Lewis’ subsequent vendees and his successors in title acquired Lewis’ title which was superior to the Loggins title. Upon .this hypothesis he held that the title was in the complainants and they were entitled to recover the possession of the land.

The court thinks this an erroneous conclusion. The legal title was conveyed by Barnawell and wife to Carter as trustee to secure the purchase money.

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Bluebook (online)
108 S.W.2d 1104, 21 Tenn. App. 252, 1937 Tenn. App. LEXIS 29, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/polston-v-scandlyn-tennctapp-1937.