Tanksley v. Tanksley

145 Tenn. 468
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 145 Tenn. 468 (Tanksley v. Tanksley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tanksley v. Tanksley, 145 Tenn. 468 (Tenn. 1921).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Green,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Mrs. Ursula C. Tanksley in 1893 executed a deed to certain real estate in Nashville to her son, Wheeler I. Tanksley, and later delivered the instrument to him. The son died in 1919 and by his will left all his property to his wife, Rosa Y. Tanksley. He had never recorded the deed above mentioned. It was recorded by his widow after his death.

This suit was brought by Mrs. Ursula C. Tanksley, to have the aforesaid deed declared testamentary with a power of revocation remaining in her, and to have the same set aside and the title to the real estate vested in her. The defendant, Mrs. Rosa V. Tanksley, answered, and de-, nied that complainant was entitled to the relief sought. Proof ay as taken, and the chancellor decreed in favor of the complainant. The court of civil appeals affirmed this decree.

The loAver courts have concurrently found upon the proof that the complainant made a conditional delivery of this deed to her son; that she thought it Avas a will and gave it to him for safe-keeping, to take effect at her death.

There is evidence to sustain this concurrent finding, and we cannot go behind it.

It is insisted, hoAveAer, for the defendant, that there can be no such a thing in the law as the conditional delivery of a deed to the grantee thereof; that, if delivered to the grantee, a deed becomes operative and freed from any condition not expressed therein, though the parties meant an escrow.

Such was the rule at common laAV and is the rule in many jurisdictions. It has been recognized in two of our earlier [470]*470cases. Johnson v. Branch, 11 Hump. (30 Tenn.), 521; Brown v. Reynolds, 5 Sneed (37 Tenn.), 639.

These cases together with Majors v. McNeilly, 7 Heisk. (54 Tenn.), 294, and Breeden v. Grigg, 8 Baxt. (67 Tenn.), 163, were reviewed by the conrt in Alexander v. Wilkes, 11 Lea (79 Tenn.), 221. Judge Cooper in the last case said: “From this review of our decisions, it will be seen that the rigid rule of the common law has been modified in this State, so as to give relief both at law and in equity, although the delivery may have been directly to the payee or obligee.” Alexander v. Wilkes, supra.

The court was dealing with the delivery of a promissory note to the payee in Alexander v. Wilkes, supra, but the law of escrows is substantially the same whether applied to a deed or note or bond. 10 R. C. L., 622.

The statement in Keenan v. Trenton, 130 Tenn., 71, 168 S. W., 1053, Ann. Cas., 1916B, 519, that a deed could not be delivered to the grantee thereof as an escrow was not at all necessary to the decision of that case. The court had found that there was no intent manifested on the part of the grantor in that case to deliver the deed as an escrow. What follows was obiter, and in conflict with Alexander v. Wilkes, supra, cited to sustain it.

The rule seems very well settled in Tennessee that it is the intention of the grantor of a deed or the maker of a note that determines whether a delivery of the instrument is absolute or conditional, even though such delivery be made to the grantee of the deed or the payee of the note.

It was not intended in Keenan v. Trenton to recede from this progression in the law.

The petition for certiorari is denied.

McKinney, J., dissents.

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145 Tenn. 468, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tanksley-v-tanksley-tenn-1921.