Ranson v. Carlisle

8 Tenn. App. 448, 1928 Tenn. App. LEXIS 160
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedNovember 3, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 8 Tenn. App. 448 (Ranson v. Carlisle) 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
Ranson v. Carlisle, 8 Tenn. App. 448, 1928 Tenn. App. LEXIS 160 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

FAW, P. J.

On May 17, 1928, M. M. Ransom and John B. Ransom & Company (the latter being a corporation), as appellees, filed an *449 abridged transcript of the record in this cause, made up by designation of counsel but purporting to be a full transcript of the technical record, for the purpose of obtaining an affirmance of the Re-cree of the chancery court of Robertson county.

It appears from the record that, by the aforesaid decree of the chancery court, M. M. Ransom recovered a judgment against N„ M. Carlisle, defendant ’and cross-complainant below, for the sum of $249.96, and John B. Ransom & Company recovered a judgment against N. M. Carlisle for the sum of $2162.35, and that the costs of the cause were adjudged against N. M. Carlisle.

It was also adjudged and decreed by the chancery court that M. M. Ransom, in his own right, is the owner of a certain house and lot in the town of Springfield, Tennessee (described in the record), in fee simple, and unincumbered by any claim or right thereto or therein of the said N. M. Carlisle.

N. M. Carlisle excepted to said decree and prayed and was granted an appeal to this court, which appeal he perfected in due season by filing the oath prescribed for poor persons in lieu of bond, pursuant to leave granted by the court in said decree.

The aforesaid decree of the chancery court was entered on November 15, 1926, but no transcript of the record was filed in this court until May 17, 1928, when it was filed by the appellees as before stated.

Immediately upon filing the transcript of the record as aforesaid, and on the same day, the appellees filed a sworn petition, in the nature of a bill of revivor, in which (after a recital of the history of the case and of the decree rendered in the chancery court) it is stated that the appellant N. M. Carlisle died intestate at his home in Springfield, Robertson county, Tennessee, in the month of December 1927, leaving seven children surviving him as his heirs at law, as follows: "Walker Carlisle, Coleman Carlisle, Ray Carlisle, Mrs. Lola Bradley, Mrs. Lillie Pendley and Mary Carlisle, citizens of Robertson county, Tennessee, residing at Springfield, and Mrs. Connie Fowler, a nonresident of Tennessee and citizen of the State of Kentucky, residing at Mayfield; and that the said Mary Carlisle is a minor, about fifteen years of age, and has no regular guardian.

It is further alleged in said petition that, at the time of his death, appellant N. M. Carlisle had no property subject to administration or to the payment of his debts, and that no one has ever qualified .as his administrator; that there has been no occasion for anyone to qualify as his administrator, as he left no estate subject to administration, and petitioners charge that no one can be found to, or who will, qualify as administrator of the estate of said N. M. Carlisle.

*450 Petitioners further allege that “the said N. M. Carlisle prior to his death abandoned his said appeal to all intents and purposes. ’ ’ Pursuant to the prayer of the petition, an order was made by this court and entered of record under the style of this cause- on June 26, 1928, as,follows:

“In the above entitled cause it appears to the court from the record herein and especially the sworn petition of appel-lees, M. M. Ransom and John B. Ransom & Company, that on November 15, 1926, in the above entitled cause the Chancery Court of Robertson county, Tennessee, rendered a decree in favor of the appellees, M. M. Ransom and John B. Ransom & Company, which was final, and from which the appellant, N. M. Carlisle, prayed an appeal to the Court of Civil Appeals of Tennessee and filed pauper’s oath to perfect said appeal; that the appellant, N. M. Carlisle, died .intestate at his home in Robertson county, Tennessee, in December, 1927, and that no administrator has qualified upon his estate; that the transcript of the record on said appeal was not filed in this cause during the life time of the appellant, and that a transcript of the record has lately been filed in this court by the appellees; that the said N. M. Carlisle left surviving him as his sole and only heirs at law Walker Carlisle, Coleman Carlisle, Ray Carlisle, Mrs. Lola Bradley, Mrs. Lillie Pendley and Mary Carlisle, citizens of Robertson county, Tennessee, and Mrs. Connie Fowler, a nonresident of the State of Tennessee and a citizen of the State of Kentucky.
“And on this date the appellees, through their solicitors, have moved the court for process to issue for said resident heirs a.t law of the said N. M. Carlisle and that publication be made according to law for said nonresident heir at law of the said N. M. Carlisle to the end that this suit may be revived against said heirs at law; and upon consideration of said motion it is ordered by the court that the clerk of this court will issue process of copy of the petition filed in this court by the appellees and subpoena to answer the same returnable to the first Monday in August, 1928, requiring said heirs at law to enter their appearance herein and make defense to said petition. ’ ’

Scire facias was duly issued and served upon the resident heirs at law of N. M. Carlisle, as above named, and publication was duly made for the nonresident, Mrs. Connie Fowler. Upon the return of the scire facias showing due service thereof, a formal answer was filed by the minor, Mary Carlisle, through her guardian ad litem appointed by this court, Mr. Jno. D. Sprouse, in and by *451 which answer the rights and interests of the minor were submitted to the court, without any averments or expressions of opinion as to whether or not the petitioners are entitled to an affirmance of the decree of the chancery court.

Aside from the formal answer of the minor defendant, by guardian .ad litem,, as aforesaid, the heirs at law of N. M. Carlisle have not offered, by answer to the scire facias or otherwise, to show cause why this suit should not be revived against them, and a proper order of revivor of the suit will be entered,- — the appellees, through their solicitor of record, having appeared at the bar of the court on a former day of the present term and presented a motion for such order of revivor. See Shan. Code, sections 4571, 4575 and 4579; Bandy v. Walker, 3 Head, 568, 569; Foster v. Burem, 1 Heisk., 783; Brown v. Rocco & Co., 9 Heisk., 187. See also. Rules of the Court of Appeals (Rules 25 to 28 inclusive) in Appendix to 1 Tennessee Appeals Beports.

In this connection, it may be said that, in a chancery ease, an appeal, when perfected, vacates the decree of the chancery court, and if a party dies pending the appeal, the suit, not the decree., may be revived in the appellate court. Maskall v. Maskall, 3 Sneed, 207, 210; Furber v. Carter, 2 Sneed 1, 3; McCormick v. Phillips, 140 Tenn., 268, 271, 204 S. W., 636.

A motion has also been made here, on behalf of appellees, for an affirmance of the decree of the chancery court. It was, as before stated, with this in view that appellees procured a transcript of the record to be filed in this court.

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Bluebook (online)
8 Tenn. App. 448, 1928 Tenn. App. LEXIS 160, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ranson-v-carlisle-tennctapp-1928.