Wilburn v. Kingsley

3 Tenn. App. 88, 1926 Tenn. App. LEXIS 74
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMarch 13, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 3 Tenn. App. 88 (Wilburn v. Kingsley) 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
Wilburn v. Kingsley, 3 Tenn. App. 88, 1926 Tenn. App. LEXIS 74 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

THOMPSON, J.

Mr. C. C. Wilburn and wife, Ellen Wilburn, for a great many years lived on a farm in the 19th Civil District of Greene county, Tennessee, which farm was supposed to contain about seventy-five acres, but in fact only contains about fifty-two. They had seven children, i. e., E. U. Wilburn, J. C. Wilburn, Pearl Wilburn, Tonie Wilburn, Sam Wilburn, Edith Wilburn and Edgar Wilburn.

Pearl Wilburn married R. M. Kingsley, and there were born of this marriage five children, i. e., George Kingsley, Ellen Kingsley, Sam Kingsley, Lucile Kingsley and Pearl Kingsley, all of whom are still minors. Then Mrs. Kingsley died, and Mr. Kingsley married her younger sister, Edith Wilburn, but no children were born of this marriage.

*90 All of these people are living except the first Mrs. R. M. Kingsley, and her father, Mr.. C. C. Wilburn, both of whom died prior to the institution of this suit.

On January 10, 1922, Mr. J. 0. Wilburn, his wife joining with him, filed this bill against Edith Wilburn Kingsley and her husband, R. M. Kingsley, Mr. Kingsley’s above-named five minor children by his first wife, Walter McCoy, Trustee, Mechanic’s Bank & Trust Company, and Lavina M. Jonei.'.

The bill alleged that on February 9, 1901, complainant’s father and mother, C. C. Wilburn and wife, Ellen Wilburn, had conveyed their farm, which as stated vras in the 19th Civil District of Greene county, to their seven children. A description by metes and bounds of the farm was set out. It then alleged that four of the children (complainant’s brothers) had conveyed their interests to complainant and that he, therefore, was the owner of an undivided five-sevenths interest in the farm. That complainant’s sister, Mrs. Edith Wilburn Kingsley, wife of R. M. Kingsley, was the owner of an undivided one-seventh interest, and that the five minor children of Mi\ R. M. Kingsley by his first wife Pearl Wilburn Kingsley, were the owners of the other undivided one-seventh interest, each owning an undivided one-thirty-fifth interest.

The bill then alleged that in 1916, complainant executed to Walter McCoy, Trustee, a deed of trust upon the farm conveying complainant’s interest therein to secure the payment of a $3,000 note, and that there is now due upon said note to the Mechanic’s Bank & Trust Company, the true and lawful holder and owner thereof, a balance of $2,390, with interest from September 1, 1921. That on March 23, 1920, complainant executed to J. R. Jones, Trustee-, a second trust deed upon the farm conveying complainant’s interest therein to secure to said J. R. Jones the payment of a $3,000 note, which with interest is entirely unpaid. That Mr. Jones had died leaving a will devising and bequeathing all of his property, including the note, to his widow, Mrs. Lavina M. Jones, who is now the true and lawful holder and owner of said note.

The bill further alleges that in 1914 complainant, at a cost of $2,000, built a house upon said farm for his father and mother, C. C. Wilburn and Mrs. Ellen Wilburn, to live in. That he built said house, which he otherwise would not have done, under an agreement with his brothers and sisters that they would convey their interests in the farm to him. That his four brothers had lived up to their agreement and had conveyed their interests to him, but that his two sisters, Pearl Wilburn Kingsley, deceased, and Edith Wilburn Kings-ley, had failed, declined and refused to live up to their agreements and convey their interests to him. That in addition to his five-sevenths interest in the farm, complainant is, therefore, entitled out *91 of said, farm to the sum of $2,000, with interest from 1914, or to the present value of said house which is more than $2,000.

Finally it was alleged that said farm is worth approximately $5,000, but is so situated that it cannot be equitably partitioned in kind, and that it would be manifestly to the advantage of the parties that it be sold for partition instead of partitioned in kind.'

The prayer of the bill was that the rights, titles and interests of the parties be decreed; that the farm be sold; that sufficient of the proceeds of the sale belonging to complainant after the payment of the costs adjudged against him be applied to the payment of the notes in favor of the Mechanic’s Bank & Trust Company and Mrs. Lavina M. Jones; that the proceeds of the sale be applied in payment of the other costs of the cause, including a reasonable fee to complainant’s attorney; and that the balance of the proceeds of the sale be divided among the parties in accordance with their respective rights and in-, terests.

The defendants all answered the bill, the Mechanic’s Bank &-Trust Company and Mrs. Lavina M. Jones filing their answers as cross-bills to foreclose the mortgages, etc., and Mrs. Kingsley and her husband denying that she or her sister had agreed to convey their interests to complainant and that he was entitled to anything on account of having built the house. Mr,, and Mrs. Kingsley also denied that the farm could not be partitioned in kind, or that it would be manifestly to the advantage of all parties that the farm be sold for partition, etc. They asserted that the two-sevenths interest of Mrs. Kingsley and the minor children of Mr. Kingsley by his first wife could be set apart to them in onp tract and that it would be to the best interests of Mrs. Kingsley and the said children to have this done.

Proof ivas taken on an order of reference, and such proceedings were had that on October 9, 1922, a final decree ivas entered as follows :

That complainant, J. C. Wilburn ivas the owner of a five-sevenths interest; that Mrs. Edith Wilburn Kingsley was the owner of a one-seventh interest, and that the five minor children of Mr. Kingsley by his first wife, Pearl Wilburn Kingsley, deceased, were the owners of a one-seventh interest, or one-thirty-fifth interest each. That the farm was worth $5,000; that it could not be equitably partitioned in kind; and that it would be manifestly to the advantage of all parties to have it sold for partition or division. That the five-sevenths interest of J. C. Wilburn was incumbered by the two deeds of trust, one in favor of the Mechanic’s Bank & Trust Company securing a balance of $2,390, and interest, and the other in favor of Mrs. Lavina M. Jones securing an indebtedness of $3,000, and interest. The decree then reserved the question of complainant’s rights growing out of the building of the house, and ordered the clerk and master to sell *92 th.e farm (for division of the proceeds) free from all mortgages, in bar of the equity, of redemption, upon a credit of six and twelve months, taking from the purchaser notes with good personal sureties, etc., and retaining a lien, etc. All other questions were reserved.

The clerk and master sold the property and reported his action to the court, hut before the sale could be confirmed, Mrs. Ellen Wilburn, widow of C. C. Wilburn, deceased, and mother of the complainant, J. O'. Wilburn, filed a bill (in the same court) against complainant J. 0. Wilburn, and also against Edith Wilburn Kingsley, the five minor children of Mr. R. M. Kingsley by his first wife, and W... A. Stephens, purchaser at the court sale, to enjoin all of them from taking any other or further steps looking to a confirmation of said sale, etc.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
3 Tenn. App. 88, 1926 Tenn. App. LEXIS 74, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilburn-v-kingsley-tennctapp-1926.