West v. Moore

246 S.W.2d 74, 193 Tenn. 431, 1952 Tenn. LEXIS 309
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 9, 1952
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 246 S.W.2d 74 (West v. Moore) 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
West v. Moore, 246 S.W.2d 74, 193 Tenn. 431, 1952 Tenn. LEXIS 309 (Tenn. 1952).

Opinion

Mr. Justice TomliNSON

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Thomas ITagey died testate in 1939. His will, probated in common form at that time, devised certain land to his widow, Mrs. Nora Hagey, for life, with remainder to his five children, three of these being children of his first wife, two being children of Mrs. Nora Hagey. All five of the children have known since 1939 of this will and of its devise to the widow of a life estate in this land. Because of this will her asserted right of possession was never questioned until the filing of this bill eleven years later by two children of the first wife. The widow and her two children are made defendants. One of the three children of Thomas Hagey by his first wife died in 1950. His two children are minors, and defendants to the bill. They are represented by guardian ad litem, who joins in the insistences made by complainants. The purpose of the bill is to sell for partition this real estate free of the life estate supposed to have been given to this widow by Thomas Hagey’s will, and distribute the proceeds among the four children and two grand[434]*434children of Thomas Hagey. The two children of Mrs. Nora Hagey oppose the sale on the ground that their mother owns a life estate in this land.

The basis of the claim of the complainants is that their father only owned a life estate in the realty and that upon his death his children became the owners in fee. This claim is based upon the deed of one Fox and wife recorded in the Register’s Office in 1890. That deed conveyed Thomas Hagey, the aforementioned testator, a life estate in this realty with remainder to all his children. It is a fact, therefore, that the will of Thomas Plagey did not have the legal effect of giving his wife, Nora, the life estate which it purported to give, since the five children of the testator by reason of the Fox deed became the absolute owners of the property, with right of immediate possession, upon the death of their father.

None of the children were actually aware of the existence of the Fox deed until very shortly prior to the filing of the aforementioned bill eleven years after the death of their father. The evidence is not satisfactory as to whether the widow, Mrs. Nora Hagey, actually knew and understood the contents of the aforementioned Fox deed until about the time this bill was filed. At any rate, the evidence does not establish any fraud upon her part.

The widow, in answer to the bill, asserted that she was the owner of a life estate in the aforementioned realty by adverse possession of more than seven years. As a defense to the bill, she expressly plead the seven years adverse possession statutes carried in Code Sections 8582, 8583 and 8584. The insistence of complainants is that these code sections are not available to the widow, their statement in support of this insistence being that the [435]*435“possession of a life tenant is not adverse to the re-maindermen”.

The Chancellor sustained the widow’s plea of adverse possession under the aforementioned code sections. The Court of Appeals reversed the Chancellor holding that: “Where the same instrument creates a life estate in land in one person and a remainder interest in other persons, such life tenant does not hold the land adversely to the remaindermen; and, therefore, a life estate, under such conditions, cannot be created by the statute of limitations, because there can be no adverse holding by the life tenant against the remaindermen.”

This court granted the widow’s petition for certiorari. The issues have been further presented by oral argument and supplemental briefs.

It is properly conceded that a life estate may be acquired by adverse possession. Mimms v. Ewing, 83 Tenn. 667, 671; Joy et al. v. Outlaw, 28 Tenn. App. 565, 568, 192 S. W. (2d) 81. It is pointed out in those cases that the extent of the estate is fixed by the claim of the possessor. The widow here only claims a life estate.

The widow went into possession under this will of her husband in 1939. She has continuously since openly exercised, as a matter of right, exclusive control, dominion and possession as owner of an estate therein for her life. This right was not questioned for a period of eleven years because it was thought that the will effectively gave her such an estate. During all this time she rented out portions of the property, collected and retained the rents as her own, erected improvements at very substantial expense, and paid for them. Therefore, every element within the definition of adverse possession is present in the possession of the widow, Mrs. Nora [436]*436Hagey, during those eleven years. Compare Wallace v. McPherson, 187 Tenn. 333, 342-343, 214 S. W. (2d) 50.

Code Section 8584 provides that no person shall have an action for lands unless such cause of action is instituted within seven years after it accrued. The father of these complainants had only a life estate in the realty involved here. Tie died in 1939. Therefore, these complainants became the owners of this land and entitled to its possession eleven years before they commenced this suit. Their neglect and consequent failure to discover the existence of the cause of action within the statutory limitation does not prevent the running of the statute, there being no fraudulent concealment from them. Hudson v. Shoulders, 164 Tenn. 70, 72, 45 S. W. (2d) 1072.

Moreover, the Fox deed had been recorded in the Register’s Office since 1890-. These complainants were, therefore, continuously during this period charged with notice that upon the death of their father they became entitled to the right of immediate possession. Code Section 7666.

Mrs. Hagey does not assert title to a life estate in this realty by virtue of the will, though she took possession because of the will, and was allowed to retain possession only because it was thought that the will gave her that right. She asserts title to a life estate by virtue of an adverse holding under a claim of right for the period required by the statute. “The heirs (children) of the deceased, notwithstanding the probate of the will in common form, might have sued at law for the land, and in that suit contested the validity (intended effect) of the will: Weatherhead v. Sewell, 28 Tenn. 272, 280; Smith v. Neilson, 81 Tenn. 461. Having the right to sue, and having failed to do so for more than seven years, during [437]*437winch, time the defendants (Mrs. Hagey) were in the continuous adverse possession of the land, the right of action would ordinarily be barred, * * Brown v. Brown, 82 Tenn. 253, 254.

The rule stated in the quotation immediately above was reaffirmed in Wallace v. McPherson, supra, 187 Tenn. at page 340, 214 S. W. (2d) at page 53, in the following language: "In Trafford v. Young, 3 Tenn. Ch. 496, it was held that possession under a duly executed will, although never admitted to probate, is effective to confer title; that ‘possession under an instrument probated as a will in common form, although. subsequently the probate was set aside and the instrument found to be no will, for the length of time necessary to .form the bar, gives, a good title.’ * * *”

It must be concluded, therefore, that the Chancellor was correct in sustaining the plea of the widow, Mrs. Hagey, under Code Section 8584, unless this code section is not available to Mrs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
246 S.W.2d 74, 193 Tenn. 431, 1952 Tenn. LEXIS 309, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/west-v-moore-tenn-1952.