Sipes v. Sanders

66 S.W.2d 261, 17 Tenn. App. 162, 1933 Tenn. App. LEXIS 52
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMarch 24, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 66 S.W.2d 261 (Sipes v. Sanders) 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
Sipes v. Sanders, 66 S.W.2d 261, 17 Tenn. App. 162, 1933 Tenn. App. LEXIS 52 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

SENTER, J.

The complainants, appellees, as the heirs at law of W. J. Sipes, deceased, filed the original bill in this cause to have a certain tract of land situated in McNairy county, Tennessee, sold for division among the heirs at law of W. J. Sipes, as the alleged owners of an interest in the said land, and the heirs of R. W. Luttrell, deceased. The defendants filed a demurrer to the bill alleging that the sheriff’s deed conveying the interest or share of Luttrell to W. J. Sipes in the land was void and did not vest title, and other grounds of demurrer. The demurrer was overruled and. an appeal was granted to the Supreme Court by the chancellor, and the Supreme Court in the reported case of Sipes v. Sanders, 162 Tenn., 594, 39 S. W. (2d), 739, affirmed the action of the chancellor in overruling and disallowing the demurrer. Upon the remand of the cause the defendants answered the bill denying that complainants had any interest of title to any interest in the 'tract of land involved, and made an attack upon the sheriff’s deed under which complainants claimed title; and also pleaded the statutes of limitation of seven *164 and ten years, and also adverse possession of more than twenty years. Upon the hearing of the cause, the chancellor sustained the original bill to the extent of decreeing that AY. J.' Sipes at his death was the owner of the undivided interest in the tract of land in question, and that complainants, as the heirs at law of AY. J. Sipes, deceased, were entitled to said interest or share in the said land, and entitled to have the land sold for division among the heirs at law of AY. J. Sipes, deceased, and R. AY. Luttrell, deceased.

The original bill also prayed for an accounting and a recovery for the pro rata share of rents and profits, and for timber cut and removed from the land, but the chancellor denied to complainants that relief. From so much of the decree of the chancellor as held and decreed that complainants were entitled to any interest in the land, and entitled to have the land sold for partition or division, the defendants prayed an appeal to this court and have assigned errors.

By the first assignment of error it is said that the chancellor erred in holding and decreeing that complainants were entitled to recover a one-third, or any, undivided, interest in the land under the judgment, levy, sale, and sheriff’s deed to AY. J. Sipes, and in decreeing a sale of the land for partition. By the second assignment of error it is contended that the chancellor erred in holding and decreeing that by virtue of the judgment, execution, levy, sale, and conveyance by the sheriff to AY. J. Sipes, he wa,s vested with title to an undivided interest in said land, for the reasons set forth under this assignment of error. By the third and fifth assignments it is contended that complainants were barred by the statute of limitations of seven years and ten years, respectively; and by the sixth assignment it is urged that complainants were barred because of laches, and because of the laches of AY. J. Sipes. These assignments of error present the questions to be determined on this appeal.

The undisputed facts may be summarized as follows: Lindsey Sanders died in the year 1865, the owner of a tract of 252 acres, of which the tract involved in this litigation was a part. Lindsey Sanders left surviving his widow, Ann Sanders, and several children. The widow, Ann Sanders, died in 1870. About 1869, and prior to the death of Ann Sanders, the children of Lindsey Sanders, by mutual agreement, partitioned the real estate of Lindsey Sanders, and, executed to each other partition deeds. The tract containing 252 acres was allotted to his daughter, Kate Sanders,- who afterwards married R. AY. Luttrell, and her brother, J. J. Sanders, each taking a one-half undivided interest. On the 24th day of February, 1877, J. J. Sanders conveyed to his brother, T. L. Sanders, his one-half undivided interest in the tract of 252- acres. On June 1, 1882, T. L. Sanders conveyed to Mary Jane Sanders out of the body of the 252 *165 acres, two parcels, one containing 25 acres, and ilie other 45 acres, thus leaving about 182 acres out of the 252 acres now involved in this suit. By stipulation filed with the record it appears that, it was agreed that the two small tracts of 25 acres and 45 acres, respectively, equalled in value one-fourth of the entire 252 acres, and that the tract of 182 acres was owned by T. L. Sanders one-third, and Mrs. Luttrell two-thirds. On January 3, 1883, T. L. Sanders conveyed his interest in the tract of 182 acres to R. W. Luttrell. By this conveyance R. W. Luttrell became the owner of one-third and his wife two-thirds undivided interest in the 182 acres, which was a part of the 252-acre tract which Lindsey Sanders occupied as a home place to the date of his death. At the time T. L. Sanders conveyed to R. W. Luttrell, Luttrell and his wife were then occupying the land as the old Sanders home place, and continued to occupy the same as a home until the death of Mrs. Luttrell in 1927, and R. W. Luttrell continued to occupy it until his death in February, 1928.

It appears from the averments in the original bill, but not by evidence, that the records of the circuit court of McNairy county show that at the regular term of the circuit court in March, 1887, that the matter of W. J. Sipes v. J. F. Luttrell and R. "W. Luttrell was presented to and heard by said court. The original bill then proceeds to recite in substance that the record entry in the record books of said court show that John W. Stumph, a justice of the peace in said county, had duly delivered certain papers and reports which were fully and completely copied and set forth in the record books of said court, and that said papers showed that said John W. Stumph, justice of the peace as aforesaid, had issued a warrant commanding J. F. Luttrell and R. "W. Luttrell to appear and answer W. J. Sipes in a plea of debt due by note under $500; said-warrant contains the return of the officer and which return appears in the record as having been executed by serving R. W. Luttrell, and reciting that J. F. Luttrell was not to be found in the county, and citing R. W. Luttrell to appear before said magistrate for trial on the date stated in the return; that the records show that immediately following the above, there was a judgment for plaintiff “and against the defendant for $130.97 and costs of suit and interest at the rate of 6% for which let execution issue.” Bated December 10, 3881. That immediately following said entry of said judgmeut on said record is the copy of an execution issued by said justice of the peace, which recites in part: “You are hereby commanded that of the goods and chattels, lands and tenements of J. F. Luttrell and R. W. Luttrell you cause to be made the sum of . . * That following the above entry-appears another entry purporting to be copy of the return made by the officer of said execution, and which recites in part: “There being no *166 personal property of defendants J. F. Luttrell and R. W. Luttrell to be found in my county, I levied the same upon all the right, title, claim and interest of R. "W. Luttrell in and to the following described tract of land, it being a one-fourth undivided interest in the tract of land . . . (The description follows.) This land is levied on as the property of defendant R. W. Luttrell (it being the interest of said R. W. Luttrell bought from T. L. Sanders) to satisfy an execution in my hands in favor of W. J.

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Bluebook (online)
66 S.W.2d 261, 17 Tenn. App. 162, 1933 Tenn. App. LEXIS 52, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sipes-v-sanders-tennctapp-1933.