Teeples v. Key

500 S.W.2d 452, 1973 Tenn. App. LEXIS 284
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedFebruary 23, 1973
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 500 S.W.2d 452 (Teeples v. Key) 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
Teeples v. Key, 500 S.W.2d 452, 1973 Tenn. App. LEXIS 284 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1973).

Opinions

OPINION

PURYEAR, Judge.

This case involves an unfortunate dispute among members of a family over a tract or parcel of land on Pea Ridge in the Third Civil District of Clay County, Tennessee, consisting of twelve acres more or less.

The land in controversy here is part of an original tract of forty-five acres, more or less, which forty-five acre tract was conveyed by J. H. Reneau, Jr., Clerk of the County Court of Clay County, Tennessee, to Mrs. Beatrice Key on July 19, 1943, by deed of record in Deed Book 5, page 414 in the Register’s Office of Clay County.

At the time Mrs. Beatrice Key purchased this property she was married to James A. Key and they had four children, of whom three were, Fayne Key Teeples, one of the plaintiffs herein, and Jimmy F. Key and Silvia Key Ridge, the defendants herein.

[454]*454From November, 1945, until the date of his death, in 1969, James A. Key was in very poor health and unable to work.

In 1945, the owner of said land, Mrs. Beatrice Key, went to Indiana, where she obtained employment and continued to reside until James A. Key died on November 13, 1969. Mrs. Key obtained a divorce from Mr. Key in the State of Indiana in 1952 and subsequently married one Albert Duke. James A. Key continued to reside on the tract of land in question until the date of his death.

On the 24th day of December, 1956, Mrs. Duke, formerly Beatrice Key, conveyed the twelve acre tract in controversy here to the plaintiffs, Walter Teeples and wife, Fayne Teeples.

Also by deed dated January 31, 1959, the twelve acre tract was again conveyed by Mrs. Duke and her husband, Albert Duke, to the plaintiffs.

The two aforementioned deeds were acknowledged in Kentucky and both of them contain acknowledgments which do not comply with the laws of Tennessee.

Then on October 9, 1961, Mrs. Duke executed another deed conveying the same twelve acres in controversy here to the plaintiffs. This latter mentioned deed was duly acknowledged before a notary public in Clay County, Tennessee, and was recorded on October 9, 1961, in the Register’s Office of Clay County.

Mrs. Teeples testified that this latter mentioned deed was executed for the purpose of correcting the defect which occurred by reason of acknowledgments on the two preceding deeds acknowledged in Kentucky.

On the 16th day of August, 1960, James A. Key executed a deed conveying the twelve acre tract of land in controversy here to the defendants, Jimmy F. Key and Silvia Key Ridge, reserving therein for himself a life estate in said land. This deed was duly recorded in the Register’s Office of Clay County on August 18, 1960.

On the 2nd day of February, 1961, the plaintiffs, Teeples and wife, filed a bill in the Chancery Court of Clay County, Tennessee, against the said James A. Key and one Charley Daniel, in which they alleged they were owners of a forty-five acre tract of land in the Third Civil District of Clay County, which includes the twelve acre tract in controversy here.

In that bill of complaint, the Teeples also alleged that James A. Key and the said Charley Daniel had been cutting timber on said land and otherwise committing waste thereon, praying in said bill that a writ of injunction issue restraining the cutting or removing of timber therefrom or committing waste upon said land and for general relief.

James A. Key filed an answer to said bill, in which answer he denied that the Teeples had any right, title or claim to said land, averred that he was claiming it as his own and had possession thereof; that he had held the exclusive, actual, visible, open, notorious and adverse possession of said land for more than seven years before the filing of said bill.

After introducing a part of their proof in that case, the Teeples voluntarily dismissed said bill and it was ordered by the Court that the sum of $60.00 which had theretofore been deposited in Court for certain timber cut from the land be paid to the said James A. Key after deducting a ten percent commission for the receiver appointed in said cause.

James A. Key died on November 13, 1969, and shortly thereafter Jimmy F. Key and Silvia Key Ridge rented a house on said land to two successive tenants.

On June 11, 1970, Mrs. Duke, formerly Mrs. Beatrice Key, died. At some time after Mr. Key died and before Mrs. Duke died, the Teeples, on the one hand, and Jimmy F. Key and Silvia Key Ridge, on the other, began to assert conflicting claims to the land. The Teeples placed a mobile home thereon and shortly thereaf[455]*455ter, Jimmy F. Key and Silvia Key Ridge also placed a mobile home thereon. The Teeples then removed the mobile home placed thereon by Jimmy F. Key and Silvia Key Ridge, whereupon Jimmy F. Key placed the mobile home back on the premises and removed a pump from a well which was supplying water to the mobile home of the Teeples.

This tug of war between the parties continued up until the Teeples filed their complaint in the instant suit on July 6, 1971, and this was the first suit filed after the injunction suit filed against James A. Key was voluntarily dismissed on October 9, 1961.

In their complaint the plaintiffs, Teeples, aver that they are the lawful owners of said land, having acquired title thereto from Mrs. Teeples’ mother, Mrs. Beatrice Duke.

In said complaint they further aver that the defendant, Jimmy F. Key, has wilfully, deliberately and unlawfully committed acts of trespass on said land and stated his intention of continuing to do so.

Plaintiffs prayed for a restraining order, recovery of damages and further prayed that the purported deed from James A. Key to the defendants be declared null and void as a cloud upon the plaintiffs’ title and that the same be cancelled and that the defendants be enjoined from asserting or attempting to assert any right, title or interest in said land by virtue of their deed.

The defendants filed an answer to said complaint denying that the plaintiffs are the owners of said land but averring, that on the contrary, defendants are the owners thereof and expressly relying upon the seven year statute of limitations (T.C.A. § 28-203) as a bar to said action.

In addition to said answer, the defendants also filed a cross-complaint averring that they are the owners of said land by virtue of the seven year statute of limitations and also averring that they and the said James A. Key, under whom they claim, had the open, notorious, and adverse possession of same for a period of over twenty years.

In said cross-complaint, the defendants pray that they be awarded judgment against the plaintiffs for $2,000.00 damages, that the plaintiffs be restrained from trespassing upon the land, that the purported deeds to them from Beatrice Duke be declared null and void and cancelled.

The case was tried before the Chancellor upon oral testimony and documentary evidence on the 16th day of August, 1971, as a result of which trial the Chancellor found the issues in favor of plaintiffs, sustained their complaint and dismissed the cross-complaint.

Also in said decree the Chancellor ordered a reference to the Clerk and Master to take proof and report the amount of damages inflicted upon the premises by the defendants.

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Bluebook (online)
500 S.W.2d 452, 1973 Tenn. App. LEXIS 284, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/teeples-v-key-tennctapp-1973.