Sheffield v. Franklin

222 S.W.2d 974, 32 Tenn. App. 532, 1947 Tenn. App. LEXIS 124
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedOctober 10, 1947
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 222 S.W.2d 974 (Sheffield v. Franklin) 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
Sheffield v. Franklin, 222 S.W.2d 974, 32 Tenn. App. 532, 1947 Tenn. App. LEXIS 124 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1947).

Opinion

ANDERSON, P. J.

The bill was filed on November 23, 1942, to sell the land therein described for partifion. *534 The Chancellor granted the relief sought and the defendants appealed.

The sole question presented is whether the complainants have the requisite title to the land which they ask to be sold for partition. The defendants’ contention that they have not, rests upon the single proposition that the conveyance under which complainants claim title was void for uncertainty in the description of the land; or, otherwise stated, that by reason of the insufficiency of the description of the land the conveyance was inadequate to vest the legal title in the grantee under whom the complainants claim.

For present purposes we may take the premise of the defendants’ position to be sound. This is, that it was a prerequisite to the relief sought that the complainants show that they were the joint owners with the defendants in a legal right to the land sought to be sold. Hopkins v. Toel’s Heirs, 23 Tenn. 46; see also, Glascock v. Tate, 107 Tenn. 486, 64 S. W. 715.

The bill charges that J. E. Ford died intestate about 30 years prior to the filing of the bill; that the complainants are his children; that the intestate had eleven other children; that all of them except the three complainants had conveyed their interest in the land in question to the defendants; that at the time of his death the said J. E. Ford was seized and possessed of certain land situated in the 9th Civil District of Hardin County, Tennessee, which tract of land was conveyed to him by W. J. Bird in the year 1897 and said land was bounded and described as follows: “On the waters of Whites Creek Eange 12, Section 15, beginning on a leaning white oak and Spanish oak pointers thence south 193 poles to a post oak and hickory pointers thence west 190 poles to *535 a stake thence north 125 more or less poles to a red oak and pine pointers thence eastward with the conditional line to the old line thence northward with the conditional line to a white oak and whiteoak and blackgum pointers thence east 2 poles to a maple and poplar and maple pointers, thence south with the creek to the line, thence east with the line to the beginning containing 250 acres, more or less.”

There is filed as an exhibit “A” to the bill a copy of a deed purporting to have been executed by W. J. Bird and Martha Bird, dated February 22, 1897, conveying to J. R. Ford “a certain tract of land,” the description of which is the same as that above quoted, with the exception that there is no reference to the Civil District of Hardin County in which the land lies.

The defendants, Oscar Franklin and wife, filed an answer in which they deny that J. R. Ford was the owner of the lands described in the bill at the time of his death and aver that the same was .owned by George Ford, father of the defendant, Alma Franklin, and that the defendant, Oscar Franklin, had purchased the interest of the heirs of George Ford and thus became the owner of the entire property. This position is not bottomed upon any alleged insufficiency of the description of the land in the conveyance under which the complainants claimed, but solely upon the following averment: “That although J. R. Ford, known as John Ford, actually purchased the land in question, that his son G. W., known as George Ford, actually paid for said land individually,- and while he lived assumed complete control of the land, paid the taxes assessed against the same and was in truth and fact the actual owner thereof, which was well known by all concerned and no questions as to his ownership was ever made by any persons”.

*536 The cause was heard at the October Term, 1943, and the result was a decree “that the title to said land is vested in the heirs of J. E. Ford and their successors in title by descent and transfer, and that the following be decreed to be the lawful owners: that each of the three complainants own a one-seventh undivided interest in said land, that Grace Ford Cummings is the owner of a one-seventh undivided interest in said land, that John Fowler, Mary Fowler and George Fowler together own a one-seventh undivided interest, they taking the share of their deceased mother, and that Oscar Franklin and Alma Franklin are the owners of a two-seventh undivided interest, they taking the share of G. A. Ford, both by descent and purchase, and the share of J. L. Ford by conveyance of J. L. Ford to them.”

The Chancellor further decreed that the land could not be partitioned in kind and was to the manifest interest of all the parties that it should be sold for partition, but that no sale of the same should be had until after the reference therein ordered had been executed: The reference was for the purpose of determining the value of improvements placed on the property by the defendants, taxes paid by them, the value of the timber they had taken from the land, and the value of the rents and profits “that have accrued to said Oscar Franklin and Alma Franklin since they had been occupying the land and receiving the rents and profits.”

The trial which resulted in the foregoing decree was on oral evidence, none of which was preserved by bill of exceptions so far as the transcript before us discloses.

The cause stood upon the order of reference until the master’s report was filed on May 29, 1945. On May *537 1, 1947, the defendants filed a written motion to dismiss the bill upon the following grounds:

“1. Because the Court has no jurisdiction to grant the relief sought by complainant’s bill, the bill shows that the Court is without jurisdiction, there being no land described in complainant’s bill with which the Court could deal or against which any decree in this cause would be effective.
“2. Because the Court is without jurisdiction in this cause, the deed to J. B. Ford, through whom complainants claim and filed as ‘Exhibit A’ to complainant’s bill, is void for want of a description of the lands intended to be conveyed.
“3. Because the Court is without jurisdiction under the facts alleged in the bill, there being no land or rem; the complainants and defendants could not be tenants in common in property not in existence, and no decree would be effective in this cause. The Court is without jurisdiction to grant the relief sought because no decree rendered in this cause could be enforced.”

The questions presented by this motion had not theretofore been raised in the case by demurrer or otherwise. In this connection it is perhaps proper to say that the solicitor who filed the motion on behalf of the defendants and who is representing them on the present appeal seems to have just entered the case at the time the motion was filed.

The foregoing motion was duly presented and overruled by the Chancellor, who held that the land in controversy could be surveyed and located by the description contained in the deed filed as Exhibit A to the bill. Whereupon the cause was further heard upon the entire record when the Chancellor, after sustaining certain *538

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222 S.W.2d 974, 32 Tenn. App. 532, 1947 Tenn. App. LEXIS 124, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sheffield-v-franklin-tennctapp-1947.