Spivey v. Roadman

6 Tenn. App. 442, 1927 Tenn. App. LEXIS 167
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedApril 30, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 6 Tenn. App. 442 (Spivey v. Roadman) 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
Spivey v. Roadman, 6 Tenn. App. 442, 1927 Tenn. App. LEXIS 167 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

SNODGRASS, J.

The bill in this cause was in effect to rescind an exchange of real estate. The complainant owned certain lots in Kingsport, Tenn., which he had purchased and partially paid for, and for which he held title bond as an evidence of his right thereto. There was $90 yet to be paid precedent to the right to a deed. He approached the defendant in Roane county, Tennessee and proposed to trade him these lots, being 8, 9 and 10 in Block 7, Westview Addition to the City of Kingsport, Tennessee, for the seventy acres in Roane county, Tennessee. This seventy acres more or less was constituted of two tracts, one of which contained fifty-six acres, and there was to be run’ off fifteen acres from another tract adjoining. Complainant was .to pay $150 difference, which he did in two notes, one for $50 and the other for $100, the first due one year after date and the other two years after date. Title bond was transferred to the defendant and a warranty deed for what was supposed to be *444 seventy acres given to the complainant. Defendant afterwards paid the balance dire on the lots, obtained deed therefor and sold the same for $800, which he thought was about what the property was worth.

Sometime after the execution of the deed complainant discovered that there was a shortage of something like three acres in the fifteen acres that had been run oft according to agreement from the other tract mentioned as adjoining the fifty-six acres. This mistake was made by the county surveyor, who had been agreed upon at the time to run oft the fifteen acres, and his plat at the time of the execution of the deed was thought to contain 15 acres. However, on defendant’s attention being called to the mistake he readily consented to rectify it by having the county surveyor run off the required number of acres, which had been agreed upon between him and the complainant should be done. But before this was done, however, complainant filed this bill to rescind the transaction, upon the ground that the defendant had fraudulently represented the land to be timbered land, and had taken him upon some timbered land adjacent and had pointed the same out as part of the land to be conveyed, when as a matter of fact it was not thereafter found to be included in the deed, and that upon his attempt to cut the timber he found out the fraud that had been practiced upon him, which was averred to have been knowingly and premeditatedly done, and that defendant did knowingly and on purpose represent and point out to him land which was covered with valuable timber, which land it was averred did not then and never did belong to defendant, for the sole and exclusive purpose of defrauding him and of swindling him out of his land in Kingsport, Tennessee; that defendant did not transfer to complainant the lands which he represented to be his, but on the contrary deeded to complainant lands which were valueless, and lands which complainant did not agree to accept in exchange of property. The bill was amended so as to allege the insolvency of defendant, and also to aver that defendant had no title to the land conveyed to the complainant. It sought to enjoin the transfer of the Kingsport property or the negotiation of the notes executed.

The answer, while admitting the mistake as to the fifteen acres to be run off, tendered a new deed correcting the same, denied all allegations of fraud and every other material allegation upon which any basis of recovery could be claimed. A jury was demanded, but the demand was withdrawn and the case was heard principally upon the proof offered by the defendant. Complainant did not take the stand. The Chancellor heard the case upon the proof and, finding that there was no fraud, dismissed complainant’s bill and taxed him with the costs. Complainant has perfected an appeal to this court and has made the following assignments of error :

*445 “I. The Chancellor erred in holding that by reason of Road-man having delivered to Spivey a deed for a portion of said lands, that same acted as an extinguishment of their written contract of exchange, entered into by the parties on November 15, 1922. The Chancellor should have held that the delivery of said deed for a portion of said lands did not act as an extinguishment of said written contract, and that said contract was in force as an executory contract on the date of filing the original bill in this cause, and by reason thereof the burden of proof was on defendant Roadman to show that he had a valid title to the lands he agreed to convey to complainant.”
“II. Because the Chancellor erred in finding in favor of the defendant and dismissing complainant’s bill. The Chancellor should have sustained complainant’s bill and decreed a rescission and cancellation of said agreement of November 15, 1922 and placed the parties in statute quo.”
“III. Because the Chancellor erred in holding that complainant be required to accept the deed tendered by defendant with his answer, and thereby extinguish said written agreement. The Chancellor should have held that by reason of said contract not having been extinguished by said Roadman, it was incumbent on defendant to show that he had a good title to said lands. ’ ’

The Chancellor’s findings were in exact accordance with the facts, and are as follows:

“That on November 16, 1922, the complainant and defendant entered into a contract for the exchange of property as set out in the bill. That J. W. Spivey assigned to the said Road-man a title bond to Lots Number 8, 9 and 10 in Block No. 7 in Kingsport, Tennessee, and executed him his notes aggregating-one hundred and fifty dollars ($150) one fifty dollars ($50) note due one year from the date of the deed and one note for one hundred dollars ($100) due two years after the date of the deed, and that in exchange therefor R. R. Roadman and his wife Mattie Me. Roadman executed and delivered to J. W. Spivey a deed for fifty-six acres known as the Brakeville land and purported to convey fifteen acres off the W. R. Ollis tract. Spivey accepted the deed and went into possession under the deed, claiming the property as his own, but a short time after taking possession thereof he discovered that of the fifteen-acre tract that the surveyor who surveyed the land left out three acres in his survey and by inadvertanee this was left out of the deed and arrangements were made by the said Spivey and Roadman whereby they were to g*et the surveyor, W. E. Ellis to correct his survey accordingly. The surveyor, W. E. Ellis, became ill and was unable to go upon the property and survey it for some time *446 and. when he went upon the property to survey the same it was learned by Roadman that Spivey had filed his original bill in this cause alleging fraud misrepresentations in the exchange of the property and asking the court to revoke the purported trade by exchange of property and to decree the land at Kingsport, Tennessee back into the possession of the complainant and require the defendant to take back the property in Roane county and to cancel the deeds. Nothing whatever was said in the bill about the failure to convey the three acres but the answer of the defendant tendered to the complainant Spivey the three acres of land. The said Spivey was in the possession of the property at the time of the filing of the bill and has remained in the possession of the property. No fraud has been committed by R. R. Roadman or Mattie Me.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
6 Tenn. App. 442, 1927 Tenn. App. LEXIS 167, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spivey-v-roadman-tennctapp-1927.