Thurmond v. Whittaker

1 Tenn. App. 111, 1925 Tenn. App. LEXIS 17
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJuly 11, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 1 Tenn. App. 111 (Thurmond v. Whittaker) 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
Thurmond v. Whittaker, 1 Tenn. App. 111, 1925 Tenn. App. LEXIS 17 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

CLARK, J.

The bill in this case was filed by P. J. Thurmond against C. S. Whittaker and T. L. Garrett. The effort of complainant was to recover of the defendants on an alleged compromise settlement of certain claims that had existed between them, or, in the alternative, to recover of the defendant Garrett for the value of a one-twelfth interest in a tract of land of 39% acres, which tract of land had been purchased by complainant from said defendant, and by said defendant deeded to complainant, the deed containing covenants of seizin and against incumbrances and also warranties of title, and also to recover for rents on said one-twelfth interest and for permanent improvements made; the complainant charging that a one-twelfth interest in said land had been recovered from him in an ejectment suit brought against him by certain persons after the deed was made and delivered to him by the said Garrett.

Defendant Garrett did not answer the bill within the time required by law, -and a decree was taken by default against him.

Thereafter, by consent, the Recree against Garrett was set aside, and he was permitted to make defense and take proof, but upon condition that he give a good and solvent bond conditioned to pay any judgment or decree that might be rendered against him on the final hearing of said cause.

Garrett filed the bond as required, with D. J. Garrett and Q. W. Fowler as his sureties.

*113 The defendant Whittaker had answered the bill admitting practically all of the charges therein contained. A decree was taken against him „at the same time the judgment by default was taken against Garrett, and the decree against Whittaker was not set aside.

Additional proof was 'taken on the issues made by the bill and Garrett’s answer thereto, the case was tried by the chancellor, and he was of opinion and decreed that complainant was entitled to recover of Garrett and the sureties on his said bond the sum of $184.90, together with interest thereon, making a total of $195,38, and a decree was entered accordingly.

From said decree, Garrett and the sureties on his said bond prayed and were granted an appeal to this court. Not having complied with the orders of the trial court with reference to filing a proper appeal bond, the appeal was, upon motion of complainant, dismissed, or rather the ease was stricken from the docket. Thereupon the said Garrett and his said sureties filed the record for error, and they presented three assignments of error. They are as follows:

“(1) The court erred in granting a decree against the defendant Garrett in the sum of $184.90, contrary to the weight of the evidence.
“(2) The cpurt erred in granting a.decree against the defendant Garrett -in the sum _ of $184.90, contrary to the law applicable to the case.
“(3) The court erred in taxing defendant Garrett with the entire costs of the cause.”

If the question had been made as to the sufficiency of these assignments, it would have been a rather serious one. The rules of this court and of the Supreme Court provide that assignments of error shall state wherein it is alleged the trial court erred. In other words, assignments should state why it is insisted that the matter complained of is erroneous, and the rules also require that the authorities relied on to support each assignment be stated in or under the assignments, and that the pages of the record be cited, so that the court may more easily discover the facts which the appellant insists supports the assignments. See rules of this court in 'pamphlet form, adopted May 19, 1925, section 11, and 148 Tenn. 712-714. However, since the appellee has not made the question, we will, in the instant case consider the assignments.

The decree of the chancellor does not disclose whether he based the relief granted on the prayer for an enforcement of the alleged compromise or on the alternative prayer for relief on the covenants against incumbrances and on the warranties of title.

The solicitors for appellants seem to be of the opinion that the chancellor by his decree intended to enforce the compromise settle *114 ment, and they most earnestly insist that the alleged compromise settlement was not proven, or, if the agreement as alleged was proven, there was no consideration for same, and it was not binding on Garrett.

After a very careful reading of the record, we are of the opinion that the material facts as established by a preponderance of the testimony are these: On July 20, 1903, the defendant Whittaker sold and . conveyed by regular warranty deed to the defendant T. L. Garrett, (hereafter when we refer to Garrett, unless otherwise made to appear, the reference is to T. L. Garrett) a tract of land in Lauderdale county containing 39% acres. The deed was delivered by Whittaker, and, as stated, contained covenants of seizin and warranties of title. The consideration for said conveyance was $1,-500, which amount Garrett paid to Whittaker.

On August 11, 1906, the defendant Garrett sold and conveyed said tract of land to complainant, Thurmond. The deed from Garrett to Thurmond was delivered and was in regular form, and contained covenants of seizin and warranties of title. The consideration for said conveyance was $2,250, and this amount was paid by Thurmond to Garrett.

In November, 1919, W. F. Hafford, Mattie Jackson, and Mary Cherry filed a bill in ejectment in the chancery court of Lauder-dale county against the complainant herein, F. J. Thurmond, and defendant C. S. Whittaker and' others. They charged that they each owned an undivided one twenty-fourth interest in said 39%-acre tract of land, that they derived title through their grandmother, Mrs. Mitchell, whom, it was charged, owned a tract of 197% acres in said county of which the 39%-acre tract was a part, and that their mother, Nannie E. Hafford, inherited an undivided one-sixth interest of said land from her mother, and that she (their mother) owned same at the time of her-death; that their father’, C. Hafford, took a curtesy interest in said undivided one-sixth interest at the time of the death of their mother, and that said C. Hafford died in September, 1919, and that upon his death complainants were entitled to the interest in said land which they charged' they owned. They prayed also for rents on the interest claimed in said land which had accrued after the death of their father. C. Hafford deeded the land to Whittaker.

The complainant herein,- being defendant in that ease, filed his answer to the bill and averred that he owned said tract of land and had derived title to same from T. L. Garrett, that same was conveyed to Garrett by Whittaker and wife, and to Whittaker by C. Hafford, father of complainants. He also pleaded estoppel, statute of limitations, and made general denial of all the charges in the bill.

*115 The defendant Whittaker did not answer the bill, but suffered pro eonfesso to go against him.

Proof was taken in said cause, the style of same being W. F. Hafford et al. v. F. J. Thurmond et al., and the same was tried by the chancellor at the November term, 1922, of the chancery court of Lauderdale county, and he was of opinion and decreed that the complainants W. F.

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Bluebook (online)
1 Tenn. App. 111, 1925 Tenn. App. LEXIS 17, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thurmond-v-whittaker-tennctapp-1925.