Rounds v. Grandview Coal & Timber Co.

12 Tenn. App. 210, 1930 Tenn. App. LEXIS 55
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJuly 12, 1930
StatusPublished

This text of 12 Tenn. App. 210 (Rounds v. Grandview Coal & Timber Co.) 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
Rounds v. Grandview Coal & Timber Co., 12 Tenn. App. 210, 1930 Tenn. App. LEXIS 55 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1930).

Opinion

DeWITT, J.

This action in ejectment involves the title to two tracts of land in Marion county. The conflict is between grant No. 5999 to John Lea, dated March 21, '1838, based on entry 1686, dated January 16, 1838 (under which complainants claim) and grant No. 6055 to Alexander Hilliard, dated April 11, 1838, based on entry 1383, dated March 11, 1836, and grant No. 8585, to Charles Haley, dated November 23, 1841, based on entry 1676, dated November 24, 1837 (under which defendant claims).

The grants on which defendant relies are therefore younger than the grant on which complainants rely, but are based on older entries, which defendants insist are special, causing their grants to relate back to the dates of the entries and to take priority over the grant relied on by the complainants.’

The tract described in complainants’ grant overlaps upon.the tracts described in defendant’s grants. Its interlap with the Haley tract is a long, narrow strip along the westerly portion of the Haley tract, and it covers nearly all of the land described in the Hilliard grant. A concededly accurate map showing the location of these lands is a part of the record.

The Chancellor dismissed the bill, holding that the grants under which the defendant claims were based on special entries and that therefore the defendant has the superior title.

The Hilliard Entry, No. 1383, is as follows:

“Alexander Hilliard enters two thousand (2000) acres of land in Marion county, on top of Walden’s Ridge, on the waters of Mullins Creek, adjoining a three hundred (300) acre entry of Joel Hilliard, and fifty (50) acre survey in the name of Joel Marshall, beginning on the northwest corner of said three hundred (300) acres, and running north to the top of the ridge, thence east and south for quantity to the best advantage, excluding older entries. March 11, 1836.”

Concerning this entry complainants’ counsel say:

“The proof shows that the Joel Marshall survey was a well known tract of land at the time the Joel Hilliard entry was made on March 10, 1836, and-complainants concede that the Joel Hilliard entry calling to begin on the northeast córner of this Joel Marshall survey and to adjoin the same, is a special entry. It results that the call in the Alexander Hilliard entry No. 1383 to begin at the northeast corner 'of this Joel Hilliard *212 entry is a locative call. If tbe Alexander Hilliard entry bad no subsequent restrictive calls and it had been surveyed in accordance with its calls, we would not insist that the Alexander Hilliard entry was not a special entry. But we insist, first, that the Alexander Hilliard entry No. 1383, because of its restrictive call, is rendered vague, and, second, that the entry was not surveyed so as to cover the land described in the entry. The survey departs from the calls of the entry and includes complainants’ land, which the entry does not include.”

In view of the concession that the call in the Alexander Hilliard entry No. 1383, to begin at the northwest comer of the Joel Hilliard entry, is a locative call, it is unnecessary to r.ecite in detail the calls of the Joel Hilliard and Joel Marshall entries (both having been made long prior to the Alexander Hilliard entry); for not only does the Alexander Hilliard entry call to begin at the Northwest corner of the Joel Hilliard entry, but also the Joel Hilliard entry calls to adjoin “a fifty acre survey made in the name of Joel Marshall, being the same heretofore improved and occupied by said Marshall, beginning on the northeast comer of said fifty acre survey.” The Joel Marshall entry, dated August 3, 1824, is conceded a special entry. It is shown to have been a well-known place in the neighborhood at the date of the Alexander Hilliard entry. The beginning corner of the Alexander Hilliard entry is definitely fixed and determined by the Joel Marshall and Joel Hilliard tracts. It afforded notice to subsequent enterers. As an initial entry,’it imparted the definiteness of a locative call to the other entries connecting back and communicating with it. Smith v. Hutchinson, 104 Tenn., 394, 8 S. W., 226; McEwen v. Coal & Land Co., 125 Tenn., 694, 148 S. W., 222; Dunlap v. Sawvel, 142 Tenn., 696, 223 S. W., 142.

But it is insisted that the calls of the Alexander Hilliard entry were so vague that they did not give to the surveyor and subse-' quent enterers notice where the land was intended to be entered so that the surveyor might know where to find the land to survey, and enable subsequent enterers to know how to steer clear of the neighborhood of it. This requirement was adopted in the early ease of Kendrick v. Dallum, 1 Tenn., 489, 498, in which it was also said:

“An entry should carry on the face of it reasonable notice to the common understanding of men acquainted in the neighborhood of it, of some call therein, so that other enterers might know when they were without its sphere. If otherwise, it would be undefined, so vague that it might as well be surveyed at one place as at another, until it be rendered certain by grant or registration. Equity would always relieve sub *213 sequent enterers against such a claim, as well as against an entry surveyed obviously contrary to its meaning.”

In Wallen v. Campbell, 2 Tenn., 321, it was said:

“The calls of an entry, or some of them, should be such as to be ascertainable by reasonable industry by those acquainted in its neighborhood at the time of its date, or perhaps at the time ¡of the institution of the adversary claim.”

As to indifferent entries, it was said in Southern Coal & Iron Co. v. Schwoon, 145 Tenn., 257, 239 S. W., 398:

“The third class of entries are those'which may be available or not as the proof in the case shall mate them special or vague. If the places called for are located upon the ground and are sufficiently well known to be ascertainable by reasonable industry by those acquainted in its neighborhood, then such entries are special when such proof is made, but are to be treated as vague unless these facts are made to appear.”

Calls in entries are, first, prominent, second, 'subordinate. Calls for natural objects, such as rivers, creeks, branches, springs, are generally prominent calls when compared with artificial ones, such as letters on trees, lines of others, etc. Weakley v. Wilson, 1 Tenn., 377. In other words, as stated in Napier’s Lessee v. Simpson, 1 Tenn., 451:

“Calls in an entry are either directory or locative: the first are assistant, the latter bring the mind to the particular spot. If locative calls are not consistent with directory they should greatly preponderate as to notoriety, so that subsequent locators could be in no danger of being misled.”

It is insisted that the calls in the Alexander Hilliard entry, “In Marion county, on top of Walden’s Ridge, on the waters of Mullins Creek, adjoining a three hundred acre entry of Joel Hilliard, and fifty acre survey in the name of Joel Marshall,” are directory calls. Assuming that this is true, the beginning point, “the northwest corner 6f said three hundred acres,” is fixed and definite. The call from this beginning point, “running north to the top of the ridge,” imports an extension to the top of the nearest ridge north.

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Bluebook (online)
12 Tenn. App. 210, 1930 Tenn. App. LEXIS 55, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rounds-v-grandview-coal-timber-co-tennctapp-1930.