Smalling v. Cox

13 Tenn. App. 425, 1931 Tenn. App. LEXIS 79
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJune 15, 1931
StatusPublished

This text of 13 Tenn. App. 425 (Smalling v. Cox) 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
Smalling v. Cox, 13 Tenn. App. 425, 1931 Tenn. App. LEXIS 79 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

SENTER, J.

The complainants filed the original bill in this cause to compel the defendant, John I. Cox, to make and execute a dfeed to Henry Ford' for an undivided one-half interest in about 10,000 acres of land in Bryan County, Georgia, and sought an interlocutory mandatory injunction to compel the execution of said deed by said defendant.

The original bill alleged in substance that Henry Ford had made an offer of $65,000 cash for the one-half undivided interest in the land, and that said price was an exceptionally high price for the property, and largely more than could be obtained from any other purchaser; and it further alleged that the defendant, John I. Cox, who held the legal title to said property, but who was in fact but a trustee, had refused to execute the deed, and unless compelled to do so that they feared Ford would withdraw his oiler, and that this, would result in great damage to complainants, who were the heirs at law of IT. E. Smalling, deceased, and the true owners of the property, subject to certain encumbrances thereon.

The defendant, John I. Cox, filed a plea in abatement to the jurisdicion of the court, setting forth several grounds. First, that the land in controversy lies in Bryan County, Georgia; and second, that a prior suit was 'pending in the Superior Court of Bryan County, Georgia, and that, he, as a defendant in that suit, had sub *427 mitted his rights in the matter to that court; and third, that he was the receiver duly appointed under the orders of the Superior Court of Bryan County, Georgia, and then held the land as receiver of that court, and had given bond and had qualified and been acting as such receiver for more than six months; and fourth, that the suit in Georgia involves the questions as to the title to the land and dower rights of the widow; and that a former suit in Tennessee had been carried as far as it could under the position taken by the attorneys for the estate of A. P. Smalling, and that the rights of all the parties had been determined; and fifth, that the Tennessee court had previously refused to take jurisdiction of the present subject at the request of solicitors for complainants and that they should not now be allowed to come into the Chancery Court again in another suit; that this matter is res adjudicata so far as the Tennessee courts are concerned; and sixth, that complainant’s bill charged that defendant, John I. Cox, has nothing but a mortgage on the property and a lien for the sum of $13,821.61 with interest, and that no tender had been made of the amount due him; and seventh, that under the laws of the State of Georgia, a mandatory injunction will not lie and that the Chancery Court of Sullivan County, at Bristol, Tennessee, could not by mandatory injunction divest and vest title to land in the State of Georgia.

The complainants gave notice of a motion, or application for an interlocutory mandatory injunction and the matter was heard by the Chancellor on said motion and application, and the pleas in abatement filed by the defendants. The court overruled the pleas in abatement and ordered the issuance of an interlocutory mandatory injunction requiring defendant, John I. Cox, to execute a deed to Henry Ford to the property involved, and provided that the money be paid into the hands of the Clerk and Master of the Chancery Court at Bristol.

To this action of the court defendant John I. Cox, excepted and prayed an appeal to this court but the appeal was denied, pending the execution of the deed.

It appears that while these matters were pending the claims or debts of certain of the complainants in the Georgia suit were bought by the complainants in the present suit; and while the case was still pending at Bristol, and soon after the Chancellor had rendered his opinion, the Superior Court of Bryan County, Georgia, entered an order in the cause pending there, appointing one W. C. Lanier, of Pembroke, Georgia, a co-receiver with John I. Cox, and ordered a sale of the Georgia land by the receivers. Upon this action having been taken by the Georgia court the defendant John I. Cox filed a petition to rehear in the Bristol Chancery Court, and in which the fact that this order of sale'and the appointment of a co- *428 receiver by the court in Georgia had been made by the Georgia court, that said defendant was by reason of his being the receiver in the Georgia court for the same property, and acting under the orders of the Georgia court, could not comply with the interlocutory mandatory injunction order in the Tennessee case, and prayed that the Chancellor re-consider the decree granting the interlocutory mandatory injunction. The Chancellor declined to grant the prayer of this petition and denied a rehearing. Following this action the defendant, John I. Cox, executed a deed to this property to Henry Ford, but because of certain recitals contained in the deed Ford refused to accept it. Whereupon, the Chancellor directed Cox to execute another deed meeting the approval of Ford, and in compliance with this direction, the defendant John I. Cox executed another deed and delivered the same to the Clerk and Master, where the deed is still held, and the court allowéd the defendant Cox to appeal, and the deed held by the Clerk and Master pending the appeal, because the attorneys for Ford refused to accept the same pending a settlement of the suit in the State of Georgia or a dismissal of that suit.

The defendant John I. Cox has perfected his appeal to this court, and has assigned numerous errors to the action of the Chancellor in requiring him by the interlocutory mandatory injunction to execute the deed. The assignments of error will be later referred to.

It appears that after the appeal was perfected to the Eastern Division of this court, and after the case was heard, the property was sold under the orders of the Superior Court of Georgia to Henry Ford for the purchase price of $65,000 under a consent decree, agreed to by all the parties to the litigation, and the funds by the terms of the decree deposited by the receivers in the designated bank, and after the payment of approximately $13,000 in satisfaction of the claim of John I. Cox in the form of a former judgment decreed to him in a former suit in Sullivan County, Tennessee, and certain other items specified, the court directed that certaiñ of the parties be permitted to borrow out of said funds certain sums, and the funds to remain subject to the further order of the court and to stand in lieu of the land which had been sold by the consent decree. It therefore results that the questions made on this appeal become practically moot questions, except as the same will affect the adjudication of the costs of this cause.

By the first assignment of error it is said that the court erred in granting an injunction against a suit pending in another state wherein the same parties were involved. This assignment is based upon the fact that the complainants in the Georgia suit, and in which suit the defendant, John I. Cox, was a defendant, were en *429 joined from further prosecution of the Georgia case. We do not deem it important to consider this assignment, because the complainants in the Georgia suit who are made defendants in the present suit have not complained and have not appealed. However, in a proper case, and for sufficient reasons and grounds, a suit in another state may be enjoined. (Express Co. v.

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Bluebook (online)
13 Tenn. App. 425, 1931 Tenn. App. LEXIS 79, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smalling-v-cox-tennctapp-1931.