Remke v. Remke

11 Tenn. App. 301, 1929 Tenn. App. LEXIS 90
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedDecember 6, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 11 Tenn. App. 301 (Remke v. Remke) 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
Remke v. Remke, 11 Tenn. App. 301, 1929 Tenn. App. LEXIS 90 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

FAW, P. J.

At the September, 1924, term of the Court of Civil Appeals at Nashville a decree of the Chancery Court of Lawrence County in this cause, in favor of the present appellees, was reversed, and the cause was remanded to the Chancery Court of Lawrence County for a rehearing, with leave to both parties to introduce such competent evidence as they desired. After pending in the Chancery *303 Court for several years, the case was again beard by tbe Chancellor on tbe former record and additional proof, and thereupon the Chancellor rendered a decre which was, in substance and effect, the same as his former decree. The complainants appealed from the latter decree of the Chancery Court and the case is before this court for decision of the questions raised by appellant’s assignments of error.

A copy of the opinion of the Court of Civil Appeals (filed January 17, 1925) accompanied the procedendo on the remand ordered by that court, and is copied into the transcript on the present appeal. For a statement of facts and issues pertinent to the questions arising on the present appeal, we quote and adopt a part of the aforesaid opinion of the Court of Civil Appeals, as follows:

£iThe litigated question in this case relates to the title and ownership of a tract of land situated in Lawrence County, Tennessee, containing 153 acres which is fully described in the record, and to which we will refer as the 153-aere tract.
“The chancery court adjudged and decreed that George Ffliegel, one of the defendants, is the owner of said land, in fee- simple, by virtue of a deed from his mother, the defendant Kate Remke, and that the complainants have no right, title or interest in said 153-acre tract, and the complainants’ bill was dismissed, at their cost, insofar as it was sought thereby to obtain a decree adjudging that complainants are the owners of said land to the extent of an undivided four-sixths interest therein. The complainants prayed an appeal to the Supreme Court, which was granted by the trial court and perfected by the complainants. At its December term, 1923, the Supreme Court transferred the case to this court.
“Valentine Remke died intestate at his home in Lawrence County, Tennessee, on December 25, 1917. He left surviving him a widow (Mrs. Kate Remke), and his heirs-at-law consisted of five children and two grandchildren. Both Valentine Remke and his surviving widow had been married prior to their intermarriage, and each of them had four children as the issue of such previous marriage. Two children were born to them as the result of their union. All of the heirs-at-law and dis-tributees of the estate of Valentine Remke were sui juris at the time of his death, and, on February 7, 1918, they entered into and executed a written agreement by which a full settlement and division of the personal estate of Valentine Remke was effected, and it was recited in said written contract that, as a part thereof, it was agreed and understood that Kate Remke (the widow) shall have the use and benefit of the aforesaid *304 153-acre tract of land, ‘during her natural life, and that she or her estate shall have the benefit and use of same also for the full year in which she may die, and up to December 31st of said year.’
“The present bill was filed on February 25, 1919, to obtain a sale of the real estate of Valentine Remke, deceased, for the purpose of partition, and, to that end, to remove alleged clouds from the title of- the complainants as heirs-at-law of Valentine Remke.
“The complainants are Tony Remke, Louis Remke and Martha Lafigenecker, children of Valentine Remke by his first marriage, and Joe Remke and Frank Remke, children of a deceased son of Valentine Remke by his first marriage. The defendants are A. R. (Adam) Remke, and Andrew R. Remke, children of Valentine Remke by his last marriage; Mrs. Kate Remke, the widow, and George IT. Pfliegel, one of the children of defendant Kate Remke by her first marriage.
“It is alleged in the bill, among other averments, that said Valentine Remke died seized and possessed of three parcels of land situated in Lawrence County, Tennessee,. as follows: (1) A tract of 30 acres in the 8th Civil District of said County; (2) a town lot in the.town of Lawrenceburg; (3) a tract of 153 acres in the 8th Civil District of'said county (the latter tract is the 153-acre tract mentioned in a preceding part of this opinion). Each of said parcels of land is fully described in the bill. Following the description of the above mentioned lands, the bill continues in these words:
“ ‘Complainants are informed that this last described tract of land is worth about the sum of $10,000.
“ ‘Complainants now state that notwithstanding the ownership of said lands by the children and grandchildren of said Valentine Remke deceased as above set out, the defendant Kate Remke widow of the said Valentine Remke, deceased, has recently and since the death of her said husband, to-wit on February 38, 1918, undertaken to convey said tract of 153 acres last above described to the defendant George H. Pfliegel by deed recorded in deed Book No. 41, page 565, in the Register’s Office of Lawrence County, Tenn., a duly certified copy of which deed is herewith filed as Exhibit “B” to this bill and made a part hereof but need not be copied, and the contents of which alleged conveyance are referred to for a full understanding of the same. The said alleged conveyance recites a consideration of $4000, and also the further consideration of contributing to the support of the defendant Kate Remke, and of which $4000, it recites that $2000 is paid cash, and that the remaining $2000 is evidenced by two promissory notes due in *305 one and two years, and it is stated that “the support (is) to be given as she may need and demand.” But complainants state that said defendant George H. Pfiiegel is a nonresident of Tennessee and resides in Cincinnati, Ohio, as complainants are informed, and the defendant Kate Remke is still living upon said land. Complainants charge that the defendant Kate Remke could not make a transfer of the title to said land to her said co-defendant George H. Pfiiegel, that she held no title in fee thereto, and that the said deed cannot convey title; that the defendant George H. Pfiiegel obtained no title to said lands by virtue of said deed, and that said deed is a cloud upon the title of the heirs at law of Valentine Remke who are the owners of said land as hereinbefore set out, and complainants are advised that they have the right to come into your Honor’s court and have said deed declared void and set aside and removed as such cloud.
‘ ‘ ‘ Complainants are informed that the defendant Kate Remke is'claiming that she is entitled to execute such deed by virtue of an alleged marriage contract, but complainants deny that any such authority, right or title is vested in the defendant Kate Remke as claimed by her.’
“So far as is material to the issues arising on this appeal the prayer of the bill is as follows:
“ ‘That the rights, titles and interests of complainants Tony Remke, Louis Remke, Martha Langeneeker, Joe Remke and Prank Remke, and defendants A. R. Remke, Andrew P.

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Bluebook (online)
11 Tenn. App. 301, 1929 Tenn. App. LEXIS 90, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/remke-v-remke-tennctapp-1929.