Reeves v. Hager

101 Tenn. 712
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 25, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 101 Tenn. 712 (Reeves v. Hager) 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
Reeves v. Hager, 101 Tenn. 712 (Tenn. 1899).

Opinion

Wilees, J.

The bill in this case is filed to assert the right of complainants to a certain parcel of land in Hartsville, now in possession of and claimed by defendant. The only defense insisted on in this Court is that the defendant is an innocent purchaser. He was so held by the Chancellor and the Court of Chancery Appeals, and the appeal to this Court is by the complainants, who are the only heirs at law of Mrs. Martha Reeves, and claim by descent from her. The defendant claims as innocent purchaser from A. S. Reeves, Si'., the husband of Mrs. Martha Reeves, who held under a will of his former wife. Mrs. Reeves died in November, 1879, the owner of the real estate in question. After her death a will purporting to have been executed by her April 1, 1878, was probated in common form in the County Court of Trousdale County. By this will she devised all her property, including the real estate in controversy, to her husband, A. S. Reeves, Sr., the father of complainant. At the time of her death she left two children, W. Hart Reeves, aged about four years, and A. S. Reeves, Jr., aged about four weeks. After her death and the probate of the will, her surviving husband, A. S. Reeves, Sr., assuming to be the owner in fee under her will of her real estate, sold the parcel in controversy to defendant, Hager, in 1885. In 1893, while the children were both minors, they instituted proper proceedings to [715]*715set aside the will of their mother, on the ground that it had been procured by fraud and undue influence, and that the wife and mother was of unsound mind. After a fierce contest the will was set aside, and, on appeal to this Court, the decree setting it aside was affirmed.

The bill in this case was then filed to assert the rights of the children to the land, the older having reached majority, filing it in his own right and as next friend for his minor brother. It is not contended that the defendant, when he purchased, had any reason to question the title which he was acquiring, anti it is conceded he believed that the husband, A. S. Reeves,' Sr., had and could make a good title under the will of his wife, then of record.

The question presented and argued with much force in this Court is whether, under these facts, the defendant can be held to be an innocent purchaser, and entitled to .hold the land against the heir as the true owner after the probate of the will is set aside. As preliminary, or collateral, to the main question, it is insisted that A. S. Reeves, Jr., having been born after the making of the will by the mother, and not being by it expressly disinherited, was only pretermitted in the will, and took a share in the testator’s estate to the same extent as if she had died intestate, and this share did not, therefore, pass to the husband, and could not pass to his assignee. The statute (Shannon, § 3925), provides: “A child born after the making of a will, [716]*716either before or after the death of the testator, not provided for nor disinherited, but only pretermitted in such will and not provided for by settlement made by the testator in his lifetime, shall succeed to the same portion of the testator’s estate as if he had died intestate. ’ ’

We are of opinion that the testatrix intended by the provisions of her will to disinherit her children, whether born or unborn, in favor of her husband, if he survived her, and to provide for all equally if she survived him. There need not be an express clause of disinheritance to bring the .case without the operation of the statute, but it may result as an unavoidable inference. The will provided that the property should go to the husband if he survived his wife; otherwise, to her bodily heirs. This necessarily means that, if the husband survives, he was to take the entire estate to the exclusion of the child or children; if he did not, the children, born or unborn, were to take. In the event the husband took, the child was not pretermitted, but both those born and those unborn were excluded. The Act of 1823, Ch. 28, from which this section is derived, related expressly to after-born children of a father alone and not to those of a mother; and the language of the statute, as now found in the Code, necessarily bears the same limitation and construction, as it uses the language ‘ ‘ a child born after the making of a will, either before or after the death of the testator,” and it could not be supposed that [717]*717a child could be born after the death of the mother. It is questionable, therefore, whether the after-born child of a mother is embraced by the terms of the statute at all.

It is said that the will upon its face is suspicious and its provisions enough to put purchasers on their guard. We are unable to take this view of the case. Upon its face the provisions of the will are entirely natural, and, even if they were not, it would have been immaterial so long as the probate was not attacked. Brown v. Brown, 14 Lea, 257.

It is insisted for defendants that the proceedings to set aside the probate of the will of Mrs. Reeves were collusive between the father and children, and that in fact the will was a good one and should never have been set aside. We think this contention can avail the defendants nothing, as it is simply set up in their answer, and not by cross bill, and, at most, can only be treated as a collateral attack upon these proceedings, and defendants can receive no benefit therefrom. Conway v. Brown, 5 Heis., 237; Griffith v. Association, 16 Pickle, 412.

The real question in the case is, whether the will of Mrs. Reeves, admitted to probate in common form and remaining unattacked from 1879 to 1893, will support a plea of innocent purchaser in favor of a party who bought, in 1885, from the devisee under such will. The defendant, as purchaser, it is conceded, paid full value, took an absolute convey-[718]*718anee, and believed he was getting a good title, and knew, of no facts invalidating the will. On the other hand, the complainants were all the while minors, and, before they reached their majority, set the will aside, as a nullity, by formal proceeding. The equities of the parties appear thus to be equal, and the purchaser in such case must support his equity with a legal title or better right. High v. Batte, 10 Yer., 334; Smitheal v. Gray, 1 Hum., 491.

The question presented is, Did the defendant, Ha-ger, under the facts stated and the law applicable thereto, acquire such a title to the property, by the conveyance from the husband, as would defeat the title of the heirs ? A probate of a will is a proceeding in rem, and operates upon the subject-matter in controversy, and, though in common form, is binding upon all parties, whether adults or minors, until the probate is set aside by a proper proceeding and in a proper manner. Under the rulings of our Court, whatever may be the rule in other jurisdictions, in the absence of fraud or collusion, a probate in common form is conclusive until annulled, both as to the capacity of the testator and as to the testamentary character of the instrument and its due execution, and not even a court of chancery can inquire into these features, even though fraud and undue influence in procuring .the will is alleged. Pritchard on Wills, Sees. 44, 380, and authorities there collated.

[719]*719The case of Williams, ex parte, 1 Lea, 529, illustrates forcibly the extent to which the doctrine is carried.

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Bluebook (online)
101 Tenn. 712, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reeves-v-hager-tenn-1899.