Stockton v. Murray

157 S.W.2d 859, 25 Tenn. App. 371, 1941 Tenn. App. LEXIS 119
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedAugust 2, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 157 S.W.2d 859 (Stockton v. Murray) 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
Stockton v. Murray, 157 S.W.2d 859, 25 Tenn. App. 371, 1941 Tenn. App. LEXIS 119 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinion

CROWNOVER, P. J.

This is an ejectment suit instituted by Stockton and others against Murray and others to recover 1,500 acres of land in Fentress and Morgan Counties and damages for timber cut and removed by the defendants.

The defendants denied that the complainants were the owners of said land or had title to it, and they denied that they had cut or removed any timber from lands owned by the complainants. De-fenant Charlie Murray denied that he had executed any deed for the land in controversy to S. W. Winningham, complainants’ predecessor in title, and alleged that if there was such deed it was obtained by fraud.

Complainants filed an amended bill alleging that Defendant Charlie Murray and wife had executed a deed conveying said land to their (the Murrays’) daughter, Virginia Hull, and her husband, Houston Hull, after the original bill was filed in this case, and prayed that they be made defendants and asked for the same relief against them as prayed in the original bill against the other defendants.

Defendants Hull and wife filed an answer, and denied that complainants were the owners of said land, and denied that they had cut any timber on lands owned by complainants. They also denied that Charlie Murray had executed a valid deed to S. W. Winningham and stated that if there was such an instrument it was obtained by fraud.

None of the defendants pleaded non est factum or innocent purchaser.

The ease was tried on oral evidence before the Chancellor, without a jury, under a written agreement as provided in Code, see. 10564, and the Chancellor was of the opinion that complainants’ evidence sustained the allegations of their bill, and rendered a decree for the complainants, and ordered a reference as to damages. The defendants excepted and appeal to this Court on the pauper’s oath, which was allowed, and have assigned errors which are in substance as follows:

1. The Court erred in holding that complainants’ title papers covered the land in controversy, and that they owned the legal title.

2. The Court erred in holding that the deed from Charlie Murray and others to S. W. Winningham in 1919 was valid, and in admitting it in evidence over defendants’ objection.

3. The Court erred in holding the deeds from S- W. Winningham to *374 George Stockton and Joe X. Stockton were valid, and in admitting them in evidence.

4. The Court erred in holding that the deeds from S. W. Winning-ham to Dora Winningham, and from Dora and Lynn Winningham to George Stockton and defendants’ objections thereto are immaterial to the issues in this case.

5. The Court erred in holding that the deed from George L. Stockton to the Union Bank in 1934 covered the land in controversy, and that said deed was not champertous.

6. The Court erred in holding that Lynn Winningham had held seven years ’ adverse possession of this land.

7. The Court erred in holding that Hull and wife had actual knowledge of complainants’ title before and at the time the deed from Murray to them was executed in 1938, and that they were not innocent purchasers.

8. The Court erred in excluding the copies of the decrees in the case of Edwin B. Jennings v. S. W. Winningham.

9. The Court erred in excluding the evidence of A.'R. Hogue as to the grants issued for lands in Fentress County.

1. We are of the opinion that the first assignment of error is not well made. Complainants’ title papers cover the land in controversy and they have the valid legal title. Complainants and defendants deraign their title back to a common source, Charlie Murray.

The tract in controversy was known as the Arthur Edwards Entry No. 522 for 2,600 acres, which tract was afterwards granted to him by the State of Tennessee, Grant No. 5494; and was conveyed by Edwards and others through a series of conveyances to different grantees, not necessary to be here set out, until the title finally rested in the defendant Charlie Murray during the years from 1913 to 1919. In 1919 Charlie Murray and his wife conveyed said tract to S. W. Winningham, who conveyed the same to complainants, George L. Stockton and J. K. Stockton, and George L. Stockton conveyed an interest in the same to complainant Union Bank of Jamestown. There is no doubt about the foregoing conveyances having been actually executed, and they are valid conveyances. There is absolutely no evidence of fraud in the execution of the deed from Murray to Winn-ingham.

The defendants Houston Hull and wife Virginia Hull are claiming the land under a conveyance made by Charlie Murray to them in 1938, and are relying upon certain alleged defects in complainants’ deeds, which they insist render said deeds invalid as to them, and therefore they have the legal title to said land.

We think said alleged defects are not fatal for the reasons hereinafter pointed out; hence the first assignment of error is overruled.

2. It is insisted that the Court erred in holding that the deed from Charlie Murray and others to S. W. Winningham, dated August *375 29, 1919, was valid, and in admitting it in evidence over defendants’ objection.

The defendants objected to the admission of this deed in evidence for the reasons (1) that the description was not sufficient, and (2) that the deed purports to have been acknowledged before J. K. Stockton, a deputy County Court Clerk, when in fact Stockton was not a deputy Clerk at the time; therefore it was insisted that there was no valid acknowledgment and that the registration of said deed is not constructive notice to the subsequent purchasers Hull and wife.

The first objection is not well made as the deed conveys the Arthur Edwards 2,600 acre Entry tract partly in the 12th civil district of Fentress County and partly in Morgan County which was conveyed to them by W. E. Taylor. It was shown that Taylor conveyed this Edwards entry to the Murrays, and that it covered the land in controversy; hence, the description in the deed was sufficient. Evidently the defendants were also of this opinion, as they abandoned this objection and did not assign it as error.

The second objection, that the Court erred in admitting said deed in evidence because the deputy County Court Clerk was not a deputy Clerk duly qualified as such, is not well made.

It was further insisted that the deed, being registered on September 6, 1919, was not registered 20 years before the deed from Murrays to Hulls was executed and registered on April 1, 1938, and that it was not constructive notice of said conveyance to the defendants Hull, and therefore the Chancellor erred in admitting said deed in evidence.

We think these contentions are not well made for the reasons: (1) The deed was registered more than twenty years before it was offered in evidence, therefore it was admissible without proof of its execution. Code, sec. 7672. This section of the Code dispenses with the necessity of proof of the execution, and the deed, having been registered twenty years, is admissible without such proof. (2) “We think the acknowledgment taken by the deputy Clerk is valid..

It has been held that a deputy clerk must have been appointed for his acts to be valid. Atkinson v. Micheaux, 1 Humph., 312.

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Bluebook (online)
157 S.W.2d 859, 25 Tenn. App. 371, 1941 Tenn. App. LEXIS 119, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stockton-v-murray-tennctapp-1941.