Richardson v. Mitchell

237 S.W.2d 577, 34 Tenn. App. 318, 1950 Tenn. App. LEXIS 151
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedDecember 8, 1950
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 237 S.W.2d 577 (Richardson v. Mitchell) 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
Richardson v. Mitchell, 237 S.W.2d 577, 34 Tenn. App. 318, 1950 Tenn. App. LEXIS 151 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1950).

Opinion

HICKERSOlSr, J.

The original bill was filed by R. P. Richardson, Jr., in his individual capacity and as trustee for Margaret Richardson Womack and P. Watt Richardson against various nonresident defendants to partition land in kind. The land consists of many thousands of acres of mountain land lying in Marion, Grundy, and Sequatchie Counties, Tennessee.

An amendment to the original bill struck the word “Jr.” wherever it appeared after the name of R. P. [322]*322Richardson; struck the names of Margaret Richardson Womack and P. Watt Richardson from the bill; and alleged that R. P. Richardson was the owner of the record legal title to an undivided 8.9397% of the lands sought to he partitioned.

The nonresident defendants were brought before the court by publication and the cause proceeded upon a pro confesso as to them.

Commissioners were appointed under the usual procedure to partition the land in kind and report to the court. These commissioners made their report as follows:

(a) R. P. Richardson was allotted land in severalty representing 8.9397 % interest in all the land.

(b) James R. Stevens, III, and Mrs. Elsie D. Stevens were allotted land as tenants in common, representing 2.5543% interest in all the land. Wé shall refer to this group as the Stevens interest.

(c) W. S. Mitchell, Sr., W. S. Mitchell, Jr.,' Mrs. Lois Roots Hemingway, and Mrs. Miriam Roots Crawford were allotted land as tenants in common, representing 33.588% interest in all the land. We shall refer to this group as the Mitchell interest.

(d) Milton M. Eagan, P. K. Lutkin, and N. B. Hinkley were allotted land as tenants in common, representing 54.9175% interest in all the land. We shall refer to this group as the Eagan group.

This report of the commissioners was confirmed by chambers decree in which the solicitors for complainant were awarded a reasonable fee for their services; and. a reference was ordered to ascertain the amount. Proof was taken upon the reference, and a report of the master was confirmed fixing this fee at $10,000. The fee was allocated amongst the various owners according to their [323]*323interests in all the land; that is, against the Richardson interest for $893.97; against the Stevens interest for $255.43; against the Mitchell interest for $3,358.80; and against the Eag’an interest for $5,491.47. This decree provided: "In the event said fees are not paid within 60 days from date of entry of this order the lien herein fixed and declared shall be enforced with reference to the lands of any or all the parties hereto who have failed to pay the amount of fee herein adjudged against them by the sale of the lands or such portion thereof as is necessary; and to this end, in event default is made in the payment of said fees by all or any of the parties against whom the same have herein been fixed and allowed, the Clerk and Master is directed to sell the property, or such portion as is necessary, according to law, at the east door of the courthouse in Jasper, Tennessee, on terms of one-third cash and the balance on credit of six and 12 months to the highest and best bidder, taking notes with security, drawing interest from date, and retaining' a lien on the lands for further security; said sale to be made in bar of the equity of redemption, the title of the purchaser to be absolute.”

That part of the fee which was awarded against the Richardson interest and against the Stevens interest was paid. That part of the fee which was awarded against the Mitchell interest and against the Eagan interest was not paid.

In obedience to the decree fixing the fee, the clerk and master sold all the lands which represented the Mitchell interest and the Eagan interest on May 11, 1946; and A. A. Kelly and Burnett Sizer, solicitors for complainant, became the purchasers at a bid of $500 for the Eagan lands and $1,000 for the Mitchell lands. These purchasers complied with the terms of the sale by credit[324]*324ing their judgment against the Eagan interest with $500 and against the Mitchell interest with $1,000.

Burnett Sizer and A. A. Kelly assigned their bid to S. P. Raulston and Paul D. W. Kelly; and the sale was confirmed to them on June 29, 1946.

On May 1, 1946, prior to this sale, W. S. Mitchell, Jr., one of the nonresident defendants who had been brought before the court by publication, filed a petition in the cause to set aside the former decrees alid permit him to file an answer and proceed, “as if the cause were then newly begun.” Code Section 10462.

The chancellor denied the petition, and the Court of Appeals affirmed. The Supreme Court reversed and stated, Mitchell v. Richardson, 187 Tenn. 189, 213 S. W. (2d) 111, 115: “It is insisted in brief that certain decrees of the Chancery Court proceeding or with reference to the partition decree and the attorneys’ fee decree are void; also in reply brief, that certain rights of bona fide purchasers have intervened and cannot be interfered with. This opinion is not to be understood as ruling upon any of these questions, but is limited to holding that petitioner Mitchell may file an answer within such time as is allowed by the chancellor, and thereupon witnesses on either side may be examined and such other proceedings may be had thereon ‘ as if the cause were then newly begun’. The validity or invalidity of any action already taken will, we take it, be determined by the Chancellor, if properly raised, upon these further proceedings. ’ ’

S. P. Raulston and Paul D. W. Kelly sold part of the land which they had purchased as assignee of the bid of A. A. Kelly and Burnett Sizer to Sam Anderson by deed dated December 16, 1946; and they sold part of it to [325]*325H. E. Hoodenpyl and C. C. Parker by deed dated October 18, 1946.

On September 8, 1947, tbe Mitchell interest filed a petition in the canse, later amended, by which they sought leave to answer and by cross bill to have all former decrees in the cause declared void and to have the conveyances based upon such decrees declared to be a cloud upon the title of the Mitchell interest in all the land and cancelled and removed as such.

This petition was granted, and on March 8, 1948, the Mitchell interest filed their answer and cross bill.

On September 13, 1948, Charles C. Moore was allowed to intervene and become a joint party complainant to the cross bill. He alleged that he had purchased all of the interests of all of the tenants in common in the land sought to be partitioned in the original bill, except the land located in Grundy County which had been allotted to R. P. Richardson and to the Stevens interest by the commissioners and confirmed to them by the court; and that the owners of the different interests had, by agreement, partitioned their lands in kind amongst themselves.

R. P. Richardson filed a petition in the cause on September 10, 1948, in which he alleged that he, Charles C. Moore, and P. B. Kemp owned as tenants in common all the lands sought to be partitioned in kind in the original bill; that they had partitioned the lands by agreement amongst themselves; and that they had executed and delivered deeds to each other to carry the partition agreement into effect. He prayed that this partition, made by the parties by agreement, be ratified and confirmed by the court, “without prejudice to the prosecution of the cross bill to determine issues arising thereunder. ’ ’

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Bluebook (online)
237 S.W.2d 577, 34 Tenn. App. 318, 1950 Tenn. App. LEXIS 151, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/richardson-v-mitchell-tennctapp-1950.