Roten v. Hicks

338 S.W.2d 225, 47 Tenn. App. 312, 1960 Tenn. App. LEXIS 82
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedFebruary 26, 1960
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 338 S.W.2d 225 (Roten v. Hicks) 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
Roten v. Hicks, 338 S.W.2d 225, 47 Tenn. App. 312, 1960 Tenn. App. LEXIS 82 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1960).

Opinion

AVERY, P. J. (W. S.).

This cause was heard before the Chancellor on oral testimony by consent of the parties, and the bill of exceptions consists of about two typewritten pages purporting to show the substance of the proof in greatly condensed narrative form.

Certified copies of all the deeds and transactions which occurred with respect to the real estate are exhibits to the pleadings, and made parts thereof.

The question to be determined is whether or not, at the time the bill was filed in this cause, Albert M. Hicks was the owner, in fee simple, of the tract of land involved, conveyed to him by his father, P. M. Hicks, who died after the suit was instituted, or whether by virtue of the method by which P. M. Hicks held the recorded title before he attempted to convey it to his son, Albert M. Hicks, he possessed said lands so that he held it in trust for his children, only one of whom was his said son, Albert M. Hicks.

The learned Chancellor filed a 4-page Memorandum Opinion which appears as a part of the transcript of the technical record. The Chancellor held that P. M. Hicks, [315]*315who had obtained a deed from the Staté after the tax sale in the manner hereinafter set out, was a tenant by curtesy prior to his purchase of the land from the State and thereafter he held said land in trust for the children of himself and his deceased wife.

The original bill was filed by Lora J. Roten and Ruth Dunaway against F. M. Hicks, Albert M. Hicks, Grace McGee, Gladys Cooper, and Oliver Hicks, who are all and the only children and heirs at law of their mother, Mary Russom Hicks, deceased. F. M. Hicks, the father of these six children, was made a defendant and the stipulation shows his death pending the litigation.

The purpose of the bill was to have the title decreed as vested in said six children as tenants in common, and have a partition of said real estate, by sale, among them. The Chancellor having held that the real estate belonged tó said children as tenants in common, ordered a sale of said property for division in accord with his Decree, and from that Decree he granted an appeal to this Court by the defendant Albert M. Hicks, who claimed to own said real estate in fee. This appeal was perfected, errors assigned, the cause heard by this Court, and is disposed of by this Opinion.

The answer to the original bill and the pleas filed thereto, and the contention made by the defendant, is that—

(a) Sarah Jane Russom, the widow of W. Q. Rus-som, deceased, had a homestead or dower interest, or a life estate in said lands;
(b) F. M. Hicks had no curtesy estate in the lands in question;
[316]*316(c) Complainants were guilty of such laches as prevented a recovery by them of any interest in said lands;
(d) The children of Mary Hicks did not hold title to said lands as tenants in common;
(e) Albert M. Hicks had a recorded muniment of title for more than 7 years before the bill was filed, and therefore no cause of action accrued prior to that period of limitations; and that Albert M. Hicks held fee simple title to said lands by virtue of the deed from his father, P. M. Hicks.

The Chancellor seems to have decided each of the issues advanced by defendants against them, and Assignments of Error from I to V, inclusive, raise the same questions as were raised by the answer and pleadings.

It should be said that Ancil Ferguson, a purchaser of certain timber from the involved lands was made a defendant, but the bill was later dismissed as to him and he has no issue pending before this Court.

Demurrer was filed to the bill by Albert M. Hicks, which raised the question of the curtesy right of F. M. Hicks, as shown by the face of the bill. The statute of seven years adverse possession, T. C. A. sec. 28-201 et seq., was plead, and that the deed from F. M. Hicks, the father of Albert M. Hicks, to the said Albert M. Hicks vested him with good and indefeasible title in fee to the land.

The answer of Grace McGee, Gladys Cooper, and Oliver Hicks states that it is their belief that their co-defendant-brother, Albert M. Hicks, has good and indefeasible title, legal and equitable, in said real estate, [317]*317and that “they disclaim any and all right, title, interest or claim in and to the land involved in this suit”.

A careful reading of the original hill clearly shows that the right of action on the part of the complainants to establish that the six children of Mary Hicks each own a l/6th interest in said lands, was based upon the, theory that after the death of W. Q. Russom, the lands were inherited by his said two daughters, subject to the homestead interest of his widow, and that after the partition deeds first executed after his death between these two daughters and their respective husbands, whereby the lands were divided, the widow of W. Q. Russom owned the life estate in all the lands and held it as a homestead; that Mrs. Hicks then owned a remainder interest subject to both the homestead and dower right of her mother, and that her husband had a curtesy right in the real estate, if he survived her.

The complainants by their original bill averred that F. M. Hicks had a curtesy right, as the husband of Mary Hicks who owned the remainder interest in the lands after division between her and her sister, subject to the life estate which is averred to be a homestead outstanding in her mother, who survived the said Mary Hicks; that F. M. Hicks became possessed of that curtesy right after the death of his wife subject to a life estate of his mother-in-law ; that being the father of the six children of Mary Hicks, deceased, all the subsequent transactions that occurred, in view of the fact that he owned the curtesy right, created a trust for the benefit of each of his children and that he had no right to make a conveyance to anyone which would defeat the inheritance of the children of Mary Hicks.

[318]*318In the prayer of the original bill and in Sec. 7 thereof, it is prayed that the land be sold “subject to the curtesy estate of F. M. Hicks ’ \ who was then living.

An amendment to the original bill was later filed in which it quoted all the allegations of the original bill which averred that the said F. M. Hicks was possessed of a curtesy right, asked that all said averments in that respect be stricken from the original bill, and that there be inserted in paragraph designated with Eoman Numeral IV, the following:

“That the said F. M. Hicks has lived upon the land, occupied and used it as his own before and since the date of the partition deed referred to under Eoman Numeral II”.

And further, after striking out all of the allegations with respect to curtesy right of F. M. Hicks, there be inserted in paragraph designated Eoman Numeral V the following:

‘They further state that F. M. Hicks, as their father, occupied a position of trust at the time he paid the back taxes and took the deed from the State of Tennessee, and that such payment made by him was in a fiduciary capacity for the benefit of the common interest, and the complainants stand ready and willing to contribute their proportionate part of the amount actually expended by him in the payment of the taxes.”

It also struck from the prayer of the original bill the words:

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Related

McKinney v. Widner
746 S.W.2d 699 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1987)
Fariss v. Bry-Block Company
346 S.W.2d 705 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1961)

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Bluebook (online)
338 S.W.2d 225, 47 Tenn. App. 312, 1960 Tenn. App. LEXIS 82, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roten-v-hicks-tennctapp-1960.