Ragsdale v. McFall

145 Tenn. 684
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 145 Tenn. 684 (Ragsdale v. McFall) 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
Ragsdale v. McFall, 145 Tenn. 684 (Tenn. 1921).

Opinion

Mr. L. D. Smith, Special Judge,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an action of ejectment in which the complainants sued to recover a five thousand-acre tract of land in Wayne county. Only a portion of the land sued for is involved, inasmuch as defendants disclaim title to any portion thereof except two small tracts which are described in the answer as follows:

“That he is the owner of two tracts of land situated in the Fifth civil district of Wayne county, Tenn., one containing fifty-seven acres and the other one hundred and [687]*687four acres, which two tracts of land may he within the boundaries given in the complainants’ bill,” which he acquired “under a deed duly executed and delivered to him on the 26th of December 1908.”

The complainants’ record title is not disputed, but the defendants pleaded the statute of limitations, and rely upon the fact that at the time ,the suit was brought they were in the actual possession of the two tracts of land referred to in their answer, and had been claiming adversely under the deed referred to for more than seven years, and, therefore, they say: First, that they have perfected their title to the boundaries of the land described in the deed; second, that complainants are barred from a recovery of any of the land described in said deeds by reason of their having had more than seven years’ adverse possession; and, third, that the complainants cannot recover because the deed to them is champertous and void.

It is conceded by the complainants and established by the proof that the defendants were at the time of the institution of the suit, and had been for more than seven years, in the actual possession, using and cultivating large fields within the boundaries of the complainants’ grant, and' within the boundaries of the deed relied upon by the defendants, if the land claifned by the defendants is sufficiently described and can be located by the deed.

So the real question here and the one determinative of the three defenses mentioned is whether the deed of the defendants sufficiently describes the land so as to identify it as being the land claimed and as including within its boundaries the defendants’ improvements aforesaid.

The deed upon which the defendants rely describes the 'land as follows:

[688]*688“In the Fifth civil district of said (Wayne) county on the waters of Second creek and hounded as follows to-wit:
“Beginning at the southeast corner at a stake and running east sixty poles to the cornér on a Spanish oak; thence north one hundred and fifty-two poles to a black oak; thence west sixty poles to a Spanish oak; thence south one hundred and fifty-two poles to the beginning. One other tract beginning at a black oak on the southeast corner; running west one hundred and eighty poles to a stake with chestnut oak pointers; thence north ninety-four poles to a rock corner; east one hundred eighty poles to a beech tree; thence south ninety-four poles to the beginning, containing by estimation one hundred and fifty-two acres to be the same more or less. Said land is bounded on the north by Budd Johnson and M. A. McFall.”

It will be observed that this description treats the land as one boundary composed of two tracts. This is evidenced by the fact that the deed calls for the boundary to contain one hundred and fifty-two acres, and it takes both parcels to make up that quantity of land. It will also be observed that following the number of acres called for in the deed are the words, “said land is bounded on the north by Budd Johnson and M. A. McFall.” While the deed indicates that the two tracts form one boundary, there is absolutely nothing to show how they are situated with reference to each other. It cannot be told whether the first tract lies north, south, east, or west of the second tract. There is nothing to indicate its location with reference to the other. The evidence shows that the second tract described in the deed does adjoin on the north the lands of Budd Johnson and M. A. McFall as called for in the deed, and the defendants claim that the first tract lies south of the second, [689]*689and that the southeast corner of the second tract is the northeast corner of the first tract. But is is impossible to give the first tract this location by any of the calls in the deed itself. Even though both tracts be treated and considered as one boundary of land, that portion of it referred to as the first tract cannot be located unless it be by the testimony which shows that the parties themselves have by marked lines established it as claimed by them.

The location of the first tract cannot therefore be aided by the call for adjoining lands which the evidence shows applies only to the second tract.

There must be some definite description in the deed which will.identify the lands as being that claimed thereunder. If the lands are not described in the deed, it lays no foundation for a claim beyond the actual possession. Slatton v. T. C. Iron & Coal Co., 109 Tenn., 415, 75 S. W., 926. The deed must identify the particular tract of land in order to be an assurance of title under the first section of Acts 1819, chapter 28. If the description is indefinite and uncertain so as to make it impossible from the deed to locate the land, the conveyance and holding thereunder is void as a basis for constructive possession. Hebard v. Scott, 95 Tenn., 467, 32 S. W., 390; Goodloe v. Pope, 3 Shan. Cas., 634.

It will be observed that in describing the first tract the deed calls to begin at its own southeast corner at a stake and to run east therefrom sixty poles to a Spanish oak. Of course it could not begin at the southeast corner and run east therefrom. This may be considered as a clerical error, and the line treated as running west from the southeast corner, and it might be treated as starting as the southwest corner and running east; the most favorable inter[690]*690pretation for the defendants is that it runs from the southwest corner sixty poles to the Spanish oat, and that the Spanish oak is the southeast corner. There is nothing whatever to indicate where either one of these corners is located, further than that the land itself is in the Fifth civil district of Wayne county on the waters of Second creek. It would he impossible to locate the land without referring to evidence not afforded by the description itself. The land which defendants claim is the first tract in this deed adjoins the second tract, and has for its northeast corner the southeast comer thereof. But there is nothing in the deed to so identify it. The deed does not afford any description of the trees called for as corners or any information that would lead to the location of the trees. It is true that there are marked lines and trees standing on the ground where the defendants claim their corners and lines are located, but this is insufficient, unless there is something in the deed that will lead to the location of these lines. The rule of law is that parol evidence is admissible to show where the land is that fills the description given in the writing, but it cannot supply material parts of the deed. It is permissible to apply, but not to supply, description. It is not permissible to show that the parties intended to designate a particular tract by the description when the description may be applied to several different tracts.

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Bluebook (online)
145 Tenn. 684, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ragsdale-v-mcfall-tenn-1921.