Vick v. Vick

398 S.W.2d 74, 55 Tenn. App. 211, 1964 Tenn. App. LEXIS 167
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedApril 27, 1964
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 398 S.W.2d 74 (Vick v. Vick) 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
Vick v. Vick, 398 S.W.2d 74, 55 Tenn. App. 211, 1964 Tenn. App. LEXIS 167 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1964).

Opinion

AVERY, P.J.(W.S.).

This is a case in which the Chancellor decreed the foreclosure of a deed of trust executed on April 24, 1946, by T. L. Vick and E. Gr. Vick to one Poe Maddox, as Trustee, securing the payment of their promissory note executed on the same date, and due April 24, 1949, which was three years after date.

The original bill was filed on September 18, 1958, for the purpose of selling the real estate described therein, which is not necessary to describe in this opinion. We simply state that it was described as a tract of land containing 252 acres iocated in the 16th Civil District’ of Carroll .County, Tennessee, with a very minute description and reference to the deed by which said land was conveyed to the makers of said deed of trust. There was considerable litigation with respect to several issues created by the original bill and the pleadings filed therein, [213]*213including the final answers, but not all tbe issues determined by the Chancellor are before us on this appeal.

The case was heard on depositions and the pleas averred that the right of action on the trust deed was barred by statute of 10 years and that the note secured by the deed of trust was barred by the statute of limitations of six years, and the Chancellor so held as to the note. He decreed that the original note being barred by the statute of limitation that the lien provided by the deed of trust, which he ordered foreclosed, and which part of his decree is not now contested in this Court, did not include any interest on said note nor the attorney fees as provided in the note, and disallowed both attorney fees and interest.

The only question is whether or not the decree of the Chancellor to the effect that complainant could not recover as a part of his expense incident to this foreclosure proceedings, any interest on the debt secured by the deed of trust or attorney fees for legal services rendered complainant.

The debt evidenced by the note is the original consideration for the purchase of said land and is in the amount of $8600.00, and with the record showing how and why the deed of trust and the note were executed and dhted as they show, is fully explained by the proof. Said note is as follows:

“DUE APRIL 24, 1949 NAME-NO-
$8600.00 Huntingdon, Tenn., April 24, 1946
‘ ‘ On or before April 24,1949, after date, I, we or either of us promise to pay to the order of G-. T. VICK
Eighty-Six Hundred and no/100-DOLLARS
For value received, Negotiable and payable at
[214]*214Bank of Huntingdon, Huntingdon, Tennessee.
‘ ‘ Tke makers, sureties and endorsers of this note hereby waive demand, notice and protest, AND, if the same be placed in the hands of An Officer or Attorney for Collection, I, We* or Either of us Agree to Pay 10 Percent of the face Hereof, IN ADDITION TO PRINCIPAL, to cover Fees, We Agree to Extensions and Partial Payments without notice.
“T. L. Vick
E. G. Vick
“This note secured by trust deed on real estate in 16th Civil District Carroll County, Tennessee. P.O. Camden R.F.D. #2.”

The deed of trust securing the debt evidenced by said note is shown in full as Exhibit 1 to the deposition of Poe Maddox on pages 29, 30 and 31 of the transcript of the record. However, we think it unnecessary to copy all of said trust deed in this opinion. This document is headed “DEED OF TRUST” and then the first paragraph thereof is as follows:

“KNOW ALL MEN BY THESE PRESENTS, That We, T. L. Vick and E. G. Vick of the County of Carroll, State of Tennessee, have this day bargained and sold and do hereby transfer and convey unto W. Poe Maddox, Trustee of said County and State, for the sum of One Dollar to us in hand paid, and the other consideration hereinafter mentioned, the following described property to wit:”

Thereafter the land is fully described as lying and being in the 16th Civil District of Carroll County, Tennessee, [215]*215and by metes and dimension description and said to contain 252 acres more or less. It shows it was the same land that was deeded to the makers of the trust deed as shown by deed recorded in Deed Book 87, page 468 in the Register’s office of Carroll County, Tennessee, and it was executed by complainant to his two sons.

The description of the debt secured by said deed of trust as set out in said deed of trust is as follows:

“But this deed is made for the following purposes and no other: That is to say: we are indebted to Gr. T. Vick by note of this date in the sum of Eighty Six Hundred ($8600.00) Dollars with interest from date at Six (6%) percent and due April 24, 1949 and we are desirous to secure and make certain the payment of the same. Now, if we should pay the said debt on or before the 24th day of April, 1949, then this deed of conveyance is to be null and void; but if we should not, then the said W. Poe Maddox Trustee after advertising as required by law shall expose the said property to public sale at any point designated by the Trustee, and sell to the highest bidder for cash, free from homestead, curtsey, life estate, and equity of redemption and appropriate the proceeds; first to the payment of all necessary expenses and costs; secondly, to the satisfaction of said debt and interest thereon; and lastly, to pay the balance, if any there be, to us.”

It is properly signed and acknowledged by T. L. Vick and E. G. Vick.

The holder of said note was the father of the two persons who executed the deed of trust and the note, and the record shows that this money was furnished by him to' his two sons to purchase from him, as executor, said [216]*216land, and that he did not file it in the Register’s office until August 8, 1958.

E. G. Vick, one of the two brothers executing said note to their father and executing said deed' of trust.to the trustee as shown above, was married to Yaughn Vick on May 4, 1946, and he died August 15, 1956. E. G. Yick is the same person as Edwin G. Vick and two of the defendants, Larry Dale Vick and Brent Allen Vick are minor residents of Carroll County and children of the deceased E. G. Vick, and Vaughn Vick. Vaughn Vick is adminis-tratrix of her husband’s estate. The other défendant, Hardy Sand Company and T. H. Hardy have nothing to do with this appeal. They were involved in the suit involving gravel rights in the land but neither appealed and they are not pertinent parties to this controversy in this Court.

Appeal was properly prayed, granted and perfected to this Court from that part of the decree disallowing any attorney fees for the filing of the bill to foreclose the deed of trust and from that part of the decree which disallowed any interest on the original debt, and from that part of the decree “holding that the .note is barred by the statute of limitations.”

Assignments of error are duly filed and they are simply that it was error for the Chancellor'to disallow attorney fees necessary in the foreclosure proceeding and that the Court was in error in holding that the original complainant was not entitled to any interest on the debt secured by the deed of trust in the foreclosure of the lien.

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557 B.R. 597 (E.D. Tennessee, 2016)
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667 S.W.2d 479 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1983)

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Bluebook (online)
398 S.W.2d 74, 55 Tenn. App. 211, 1964 Tenn. App. LEXIS 167, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vick-v-vick-tennctapp-1964.