Sharpe v. Allen

79 Tenn. 518
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1883
StatusPublished

This text of 79 Tenn. 518 (Sharpe v. Allen) 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
Sharpe v. Allen, 79 Tenn. 518 (Tenn. 1883).

Opinion

Cooper, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

About the month of January, 1876, G. W. Allen [519]*519died in Cocke county without wife or child, leaving as his heirs and distributees at law one brother, four sisters, and the children of one deceased brother and of two deceased sisters. G. W. Allen left a last will which was duly proved and recorded after his death, and of which his surviving brother was appointed and qualified as executor. The only devises and bequests of the will were made to ¿this brother and two of the sisters. Nancy Sharpe, the original complainant in this case, was one of the sisters of the testator not provided for by the will. She filed her bill against the executor and devisees claiming that the will only disposed of a part of the testattor’s erty, and seeking to hold them liable for the residue of the property which they had taken possession of under the will. The other heirs and distributees were made defendants to the bill, the children of the deceased brother and sisters by describing them as the children of the brother or sister named, whose names and residences were unknown. The devisees of the will demurred to the bill upon the ground, in substance, that the will devised to them all the property of which the testator died siezed and possessed. The chancellor overruled the demurrer, and this court, upon appeal, affirmed his decree, and remanded the cause for further proceedings. The decision was put upon the ground that the will of G. W. Allen only disposed of the property which the testator owned at the date of its execution, and that the deceased died intestate as to after acquired property. The opinion of this court is reported in Sharpe v. Allen, 5 Lea, 81.

[520]*520Shortly after the remand, and on January 28, 1881, the complainant, Nancy Sharpe, entered into a compromise agreement with the devisees under the will of G. W. Allen, of all the matters of litigation between them growing out of the provisions of the will and relating to the testator’s estate. And, in accordance with the terms of compromise, she gave to - the devisees a written instrument of that date stating the facts, and reciting that, in consideration of the compromise, she dismissed her pending suit, and released the devisees from all right of action against them in reference to the will or the estate of G. W. Allen. On February 28, 1881, which was the first day of the next term of the chancery court in which her suit was pending, the devisees presented this writing to the court and moved to dismiss the suit. On the same day, the children of Margaret Nichols, deceased, who was a sister of G. W. Allen, entered their appearance in the suit, and filed an answer and cross-bill, in which they admitted the facts alleged in the original bill, and asked for the same relief. On the next day, the devisees introduced proof of the execution by the complainant of the instrument of dismissal and release. On the second day, O. C. King, the counsel of the complainant, in the filing and prosecution of her bill, filed his petition in the cause, claiming a lien on the property in litigation for his professional services, and resisting the dismissal of the bill upon this ground. On the next day, March 3, 1881, the cause was heard upon the motion of the devisees to dismiss the bill by virtue of the compromise and written order [521]*521of the complainant, which motion was opposed by. O. C. King and the children of Margaret Nichols. The cause was also heard at the same time upon the motion of the devisees to dismiss the petition of O. C. King because it did not show that he had the lien claimed. The chancellor overruled both motions. The devisees then entered their appearance to the petition and cross-bill, and were allowed time to make defense. They afterwards demurred to the petition and cross-bill, and their demurrers were overruled. They then' filed a plea to the cross-bill, which was set for hearing on its sufficiency, and held by the chancellor to be insufficient. The action of the chancellor upon the demurrers and the plea is embodied in one entry, which recites the filing of the plea after the demurrer to the cross-bill had been overruled. From which decree,” says the entry, the devisees pray an appeal, which is granted upon their giving bond with security, and the same was accordingly executed. The bond in the record recites the filing of the demurrers and the plea in bar, and the action of the court thereon, and appeal as above. The Referees have reported in favor of the affirmance of the chancellor’s decree.

It was held at an early day, in this State, that the consent of the court was necessary to the dismissal of a suit in equity, and therefore no- dismissal could be had in vacation: Stewart v. Hall, 2 Tenn., 179. Afterwards, by the act of 1826, ch. 28, brought forward into the Code, sec. 3199, suits were authorized to be dismissed in writing out of term time- as Avell as in term. By virtue of this statute, a dismissal of [522]*522a suit in vacation puts an end to tbe suit, and terminates tbe control of tbe court over it as fully as if made in term time. Tbe jurisdiction of tbe court over the cause ceases except to render judgment for costs, or to make such orders as may be necessary to give effect to the dismissal: Thompson v. Thompson, 3 Head, 527. The validity of tbe order may, of course, be contested and determined: Stanton v. Houston, 12 Heis., 265. But if genuine and fair, neither the attorney of tbe party nor third person, although parties to the suit, can resist a dismissal: Yoakley v. Hawley, 5 Lea, 670; Stephens v. Railroad, 10 Lea, 448; Johnson v. Story, 1 Lea, 114; Clement v. State, 1 Leg. Rep., 261. If the attorney or third person has previously acquired an interest tin the subject-matter of the litigation, that interest cannot be affected by the dismissal, and may be asserted by proper judicial proceedings. This is the .principle upon which the decision of Pleasants v. Kortrecht, 5 Heis., 694, is rested, although it is very doubtful whether the principle was properly applied to the facts of that case.

The compromise and consequent dismissal in writing by the complainant, of her suit in the case before us were made on January 28, 1881, and took effect from that date. It was of no consequence to the rights of the parties to this contest whether the proof of its execution was' made on the first or second day of the ensuing term of court, or before or after the filing of the lawyer’s petition and the cross-bill of the defendants. When established by proof, with or without contest, the dismissal in writing would relate back to, [523]*523and be operative from the day of its execution. It was tbe duty of the court, as soon as the proof was made, to make the necessary orders to carry the dismissal into effect so far as the complainant was concerned. If other persons had rights in the subject-matter of litigation or in the suit, which the law would recognize, they might be enforced, and would not be affected by the dismissal.

The children of Margaret Nichols do claim that by virtue of the decision of this court construing the will of G. W. Allen, they have acquired an interest in the property in controversy as to which the deceased' died intestate, and that they are entitled to prosecute the suit for their benefit.

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Bluebook (online)
79 Tenn. 518, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sharpe-v-allen-tenn-1883.