Springfield v. Stamper

214 S.W.2d 345, 31 Tenn. App. 252, 1948 Tenn. App. LEXIS 89
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJuly 14, 1948
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 214 S.W.2d 345 (Springfield v. Stamper) 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
Springfield v. Stamper, 214 S.W.2d 345, 31 Tenn. App. 252, 1948 Tenn. App. LEXIS 89 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1948).

Opinion

GOODMAN, J.

This suit was commenced by forcible detainer warrant issuing from tbe Court of General Sessions of Hamilton County, Tennessee, tbe plaintiff (defendant-in-error) seeking possession of a tract of land situated in or near tbe town of Daisy, in tbe Third Civil District of Hamilton County. There was a judgment for tbe defendant (plaintiff-in-error) in tbe General Sessions Court and the plaintiff appealed to tbe Circuit Court, where tbe case was beard before tbe trial judge, without tbe intervention of a jury, and judgment was there entered in favor of tbe plaintiff and for the possession of the property described. Defendant’s motion for a new trial having been overruled an appeal in tbe nature of a writ of error was prayed, granted and perfected to this Court.

Tbe proof shows that title to tbe subject property devolves from one Mack Windham, tbe son of a slave, who died in December 1930. As was frequently tbe case in *254 the early days of the South, Mack received his surname from the "Windham family who had owned his mother and father, and down through the years he remained in the same community in which he was horn, acquired property and maintained a good relationship with his neighbors, both white and colored. He had no children but left his widow, Lizzie Windham, surviving. The latter died December 21, 1946. It is shown, without contradiction, that Mack had two brothers, John and Wilson, who predeceased him, leaving no children surviving; but the evidence is in conflict as to other relationships. Proof was adduced on behalf of the plaintiff to show that he also had two sisters, Sophia and Mamie Windham; that the former married a Condrey, and had three children born to her, neither of whom left issue surviving, and that they all predeceased Mack Windham; that Mamie married Starling Patterson, and had two children, one, a girl, who died before Mack, and the other a son, by the name of Floyd, the father of the plaintiff. • The claim that Mack Windham had a sister, the grandmother of the plaintiff, or any sister for that matter, is disputed by the defendant. Several residents of the community in which Windham lived, long time acquaintances of the family, testified that they had never known or heard of the sisters or either of them.

The defendant, as one of the heirs of his mother, Frances Springfield, asserts the right of possession in approximately three acres of the premises here involved by virtue of a deed executed to the latter on the 2nd day of September, 1933, by Elizabeth (Lizzie) Windham, and by virtue of continuous possession thereof by the said Frances Springfield and her heirs since the date of said conveyance. Said defendant further asserts the right of possession to the entire tract here involved under *255 a written instrument of conveyance to Mm dated October 1, 1946, signed by the said Lizzie Windham and in form and context as follows:

‘ ‘ Oct. 1, 1946
“I Lizzie Windham Wife of Mack Windham, do hereby make my Will under no restraint or force. I Lizzie Wind-ham do hereby sell cash in hand $1.00 do transfer & convey unto Charlie S. Springfield and the following ieal estate, Beginning on pine stump at the South East corner, McRee’s fraction of land now occupied by A. C. Corner, and H. D. Winter’s West line running thence South with said Winter’s West line (14) rods to Mack Windham North East corner, thence said Windham North line (36) poles to a stake in' the Igon ferry road, in the McRee fraction thence in a Easterly direction with said McRee South line (12) poles to beginning. For being loyal faithful & kind to me Taken care of me in my feeble condition, my old age pension being $13.20 not enough to support me, and. having to be supported & clothing me. Taken the obligations of my doctor bills and medicine, His Wife nursing and waiting on me. He also agrees to take care of my Burial at death, I Lizzie Windham do willingly agree for Charlie S. Springfield & Wife to have and to hold my real estate at my death. To repay him and Wife, for their kindness, and financial support until death.
Lizzie Windham. X Her mark Thelma Springfield Jed 'Stewart C. E. Shattuck J. H. Henderson W. R. Miller”

*256 Our consideration is first directed to those assignments of error which relate to the form of action pnrsned by the plaintiff and the basis therefor as reflected by the pleadings and proof, it being insisted on behalf of the defendant that- unlawful detainer does not lie under the facts of the case.

Section 9253 of the Code of Tennessee, pertaining to forcible entry and detainer actions, provides, “The warrant need not set forth the particular species of entry or detainer, and any defect therein, or in any of the proceedings, may be amended as other process and pleadings in court.” In Westmoreland v. Farmer, 7 Tenn. App. 385, the Court said, “. . . We think that any of the species of the actions of entry of detainer may be prosecuted under the one form of the warrant set out by statute, Shannon’s Code, 5098, but if the party does not follow the form prescribed, which is comprehensive, but brings one of the particular actions of entry or detainer defined by the statute, then by all the rules of pleading he is confined to that particular action and must make out his case.” Code Section 9247 provides “Unlawful detainer. — Unlawful detainer is where the defendant enters by contract, either as tenant or as assignee of a tenant, or as personal representative of a tenant, or as subtenant, or by collusion with a tenant, and, in either case, willfully and without force, holds over the possession from the landlord, or the assignee of the remainder or reversion.” The warrant issued in this case fails to charge, unlawful entry but does include the word “forcible”. On the other hand, the proof is confined to the theory of entry by contract and unlawful detainer without force. We think it manifest that the plaintiff below proceeded under and is confined to an action of *257 unlawful detainer; hence, entry under contract is of the gravamen of the action.

The case of Shepperson v. Burnette, 116 Tenn. 117, 92 S. W. 762, was an unlawful detainer action brought by the children of Jane and Alfred Sutton against the widow of Alfred Sutton’s grantee. The land involved had been conveyed to Jane Sutton by Silas Pratt and wife and, upon the former’s death, her husband, Alfred Sutton, became a tenant by the curtesy. The court in holding that such an action would not lie, referring to the definition thereof as aforequoted (Code Sec. 9247), said, “It is perceived that one essential element of the definition is that the defendant or the one under whom he claims must have entered by contract. In the present case it appears, as already stated, that Alfred Sutton was tenant by the curtesy. Flem Burnette took such rights as he had, and no more. The same is true of the widow of Burnette, the present defendant. Tenancy by the curtesy is an estate for life created by the act of the law. The law vests the estate in the husband immediately upon the death of the wife without entry. 4 Kent, Comm., Marg. pp. 27, 29. So it appears that neither the estate was created nor was possession secured by contract.

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Bluebook (online)
214 S.W.2d 345, 31 Tenn. App. 252, 1948 Tenn. App. LEXIS 89, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/springfield-v-stamper-tennctapp-1948.