United States v. 654.8 ACRES OF LAND, ETC.

102 F. Supp. 937, 1952 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4824
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Tennessee
DecidedFebruary 12, 1952
Docket1282
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 102 F. Supp. 937 (United States v. 654.8 ACRES OF LAND, ETC.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. 654.8 ACRES OF LAND, ETC., 102 F. Supp. 937, 1952 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4824 (E.D. Tenn. 1952).

Opinion

ROBERT L. TAYLOR, District Judge.

This action began as a condemnation proceeding for the acquisition by petitioner of lands of Mattie Brooks et ah, and other lands in Roane County, State of Tennessee. The acquisition has been completed and a jury, as to the tract of land here in question, has made its award of compensation. The problem presently before the Court relates to division of the proceeds and calls for the construction o-f two' deeds, one made by S.M. Brooks in 1909, the other by Alice Brooks, his wife, in 1938.

Respondents as to Tract No. 0-1420, the land affected by the mentioned deeds,' are Mattie Brooks, S. F. Brooks, Mary Ruth Edmonds, Ruby Edmonds and the children of Vida Brooks Wyatt, deceased.

First of the two deeds under examination was executed by S. M. Brooks, May 25, 1909. Its consideration and granting clauses are as follows: “For and in consideration o-f the love and affection I have for Alice Brooks and the sum of one dollars paid in hand the receipt whereof is hereby acknowledged, I, S. M. Brooks doth convey and transfer unto Alice Brooks her heirs, the children o-f S. M. Brooks and the said Alice Brooks forever *. *

.. The habendum is as follows: “To have and to hold the said tract or parcel of land with the appurtenances Estate, title and interest thereto belonging to the said Alice Brooks her heirs, the children by the said S. M. Brooks,” - ' ,

The rest of the deed c-ontains only a description of the land therein conveyed. The instrument was duly acknowledged and recorded. It has been stipulated by the parties that at the time this deed was executed S. M. Brooks and his wife, Alice Brooks, had the following living children: Mattie, Fred (S.F.), Mary Ruth, Willis, and Vida. It has been stipulated, also, that Ruby, another child, was born in 1911, two years' after the execution of the deed; that Willis died intestate and unmarried on May 4, 194.1; that Alice Brooks died intestate July 13, 1940; and that S. M. Brooks died intestate October 11, 1942. On the foregoing facts the question is, what estates and in whom were the estates created by the S. M. Brooks deed of 1909?

The deed of Alice Brooks on November 28, 1938, contained the following recitations :

“For and in consideration, of the sum ■of One ($1.00) Dollar cash in hand paid *939 to me, the receipt of which is hereby acknowledged and other good and valuable considerations not herein necessary to mention, I Mrs. Alice Brooks (wife of S. M. Brooks) of Roane -County, Tennessee, have this day bargained and sold, and do by these presents hereby sell, transfer and convey unto Mattie Brooks, Mary Ruth Brooks, and Ruby Brooks of Roane County, Tennessee, and their heirs and assigns the following described tracts * * *. •
“To have and to hold the property above conveyed and described together with the hereditaments and appurtenances thereunto appertaining, and every right and interest therein both legal and equitable unto said Mattie Brooks, Mary Ruth Brooks and Ruby Brooks and to their heirs and assigns in fee simple forever. * * *
“The within property is conveyed in equal share, but the ones or one that is single at the time of the death of party of first part shall have the place where the house is in addition to equal number of acres, and the land if ever divided shall be divided for partition and not sold for partition.”

Parts of this deed, not above quoted, relate to description and covenants of warranty, the quoted words being all that have any bearing on the nature of the conveyance.

It was because of this second deed that the titleholders could not agree as to division of the money paid into- Court by the condemn-or, Mattie Brooks being the unmarried one of the three sisters and, by reason of the last quoted paragraph, claiming a larger share of the condemnation proceeds than she is willing to concede to the two married sisters.

Some years ago the Tennessee Valley Authority by a condemnation proceeding in this Court, acquired lands, or an interest in lands, of the S. M. Brooks family. A special master, whose report was confirmed by a former judge, construed the S. M. Brooks deed of 1909 as creating estates in common in Alice Brooks and the then living children of S. M. Brooks and Alice Brooks. The children listed in the report included Ruby but omitted Willis, whereas the proof now available sh-ows that Willis was living in 1909 but that Ruby was not born until two years afterwards. The 1938 deed of Alice Brooks was construed as conveying to the three daughters, Mattie, Ruth and Ruby, only the undivided interest of Alice, a result -of the master’s construction of the two deeds being that Mattie, Ruth and Ruby claimed a larger interest in the land than the interest conceded to Willis, S. F. (Fred) and Vida, or Vida’s children. No objection was urged to the interpretation thus placed on the two deeds in connection with the Tennessee Valley Authority acquisition.

It is not insisted that the former construction of the deeds is res judicata, but it is urged that the former construction is at least persuasive of the construction that should now be given. This Court naturally would follow in the footsteps of the able judge who- heard the Tennessee Valley Authority proceedings, if no question had been raised here as to their correctness. The doctrine of former adjudication, however, even if applicable otherwise, could hardly be applied as to matters where the present record discloses error in the former.

Construction of the S. M. Brooks deed of 1909 presents a problem in real property law that is not new. The law in Tennessee with respect to a conveyance of this kind stems from an old English decision, commonly referred to by text writers as the rule in Wild’s Case. The rule deals with a number of situations, but the^one relevant here may be stated as follows: A devise to W and her children, W then having living children, vests the title in W and her then living children jointly, to the exclusion of afterborn children. Wild’s Case, 6 Rep. 17 (Eng.). This would state the general rule in Tennessee, except that joint tenancies have been converted into tenancies in common by statute. Williams’ 1934 Code, sec. 7604. In this State a will and a deed are on an equal footing with respect to applicability of the rule. Beecher v. Hicks, 75 Tenn. 207, 209. The reason for the rule apparently stems from the feudalistic aversion to having the fee in abeyance. Under the rule, accordingly, the *940 vesting of title is in praesenti, that is, taking place at once by vesting in persons in being.

An example of unqualified application of the rule is found in Livingston v. Livingston, 1886, 84 Tenn. 448, where the grantor conveyed land to his wife, Mary, and his children. At the date of the deed, the grantor and his wife Mary had two children. It was held that Mary and the two children took as tenants in common, to the exclusion of afterborn children.

Such is the rule, but its votaries have been none too ardent. Where the conveyance creates a life estate in the parent with remainder to the children, the rule does not apply. Accordingly the remainder estate opens to let in afterborn children. Blackburn v. Blackburn, 1902, 109 Tenn. 674, 73 S.W. 109. The same result is reached where the conveyance is in trust for the wife and her children.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
102 F. Supp. 937, 1952 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4824, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-6548-acres-of-land-etc-tned-1952.