Zuccarello v. Erwin

2 Tenn. App. 491, 1926 Tenn. App. LEXIS 48
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMay 1, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 2 Tenn. App. 491 (Zuccarello v. Erwin) 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
Zuccarello v. Erwin, 2 Tenn. App. 491, 1926 Tenn. App. LEXIS 48 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

CROWNOVER, J.

In this cause it appearing that the appeal bond was not marked filed, and the appellants having suggested a diminution of the record supported by an affidavit and certified copy of the appeal bond, which show that said appeal bond was filed within the thirty days as required by the decree, but by oversight the clerk and master failed to mark same filed and failed to show in the transcript of the record that the said appeal bond was filed within said time, it is, therefore, ordered that said affidavit and certified copy of said appeal bond be filed and made a part of the record in this cause, and said bond will be treated as filed in said cause on May 22, 1924, thus perfecting the appeal within the time required by the decree.

This was a suit to recover complainants ’ interest in a house and lot in the town of Columbia, used as hotel property and known as the Guest House, for an accounting of rents and for a sale of said property for partition or distribution.

The bill alleged that Mrs. Jemima A. Guest died intestate on July 15, 1900, seized and possessed of said property and left surviving her children and grand-children as her only heirs at law; that said Mrs. Guest had been married twice and had five children (four of whom were dead) who owned said property, as follows:

(1) A son, E. E. Erwin, who died on July 3, 1919, leaving a widow, Mrs. Lura L. Erwin, who was appointed Ms administra-trix, and one son, W. P. Erwin.
(2) A daughter, Mrs. Dollie Bennett, who died in the year 1878, leaving surviving her three daughters, the complainants,
*493 (a) Mrs. Eba Bennett Zuccarello. (b) Mrs. Angie Bennett Ad-kinson, and (c) Mrs. Annie Bennett Muir.
(3) A son, Tom Erwin, who died several years ago, leaving only one son, Prank Erwin.
(4) A son, Hiram Erwin.
(6) A son, J. Hough Guest, who died in 1908, leaving a widow, Mrs. Maia Guest, but no children.

The bill was filed by the above named three daughters of Mrs. Dollie Bennett, deceased, as complainants, and all the other parties above named were made defendants, and they allege that said children and grandchildren of Mrs. Jemima A. Guest own said property as tenants in common,- the original heirs each owned a one-fifth undivided interest in said hotel property, and that J. Hough Guest having since died, the other four original heirs each own an one-fourth of his share subject to his wife’s right of dower;.

The bill further alleged that on the death of Mrs. Jemima A. Guest, in July, 1900 her son, E. E. Erwin, took possession of said hotel property and rented it out until his death in July, 1919, and that his son, >W. P. Erwin, the defendant, then went into possession and has rented out said property ever since, up to the filing of the bill in this cause in October, 1921, and that they have not accounted to complainants for said rents, and that the defendant, W. P. Erwin, is now claiming to own said property, therefore, complainants ask that the rights of the parties in said property be decreed, that the same be sold for partition and also for an accounting of the rents.

The defendant, Mrs. Lura L. Erwin, answered individually and admitted that Mrs. Jamima A. Guest died in July, 1900, but denied that the parties named in the bill were the owners as tenants in common of said property, that she did not know what rents her husband had collected; but alleged that she had conveyed all her interest in said property to W. P. Erwin and disclaimed any further interest. She specifically denied all other allegations of the bill;

And, as administratrix of E. B. Erwin’s estate, she filed a plea that E. E. Erwin’s estate had been declared insolvent and was being administered as an insolvent estate in the Chancery Court at Columbia in a case styled City of Columbia v. Mrs. Lura L. Erwin, admrx., wherein all creditors were required to file their claims and all other suits against his estate were enjoined; hence, she prayed that the. suit as against her as administratrix be abated.

Thereafter, on November 13,1922, the said plea in abatement was sustained and the bill was dismissed as to the administratrix. No proof of said former suit pending or the orders made in said case was introduced, and there is nothing in the record showing that there was such a suit, other than a copy of the agreement of settle *494 ment between Mrs. Lura L. Erwin and W. P. Erwin, wherein W. P. Erwin, in consideration of the settlement, agreed to pay all outstanding just debts against the estate of his father, E; E. Erwin.

pefendant, W. P. Erwin, filed an answer as a cross-bill, and insisted that the complainants and the other heirs owned no interest in said property, because:

First, his father, E. E. Erwin, had purchased and paid for said property at a chancery court sale in 1871, but that the legal title was taken in the name of his mother, Mrs. Jemima A. Guest, and that she had recognized in her lifetime that he was the equitable owner of said property:

Second, because E. E. Erwin went into possession of said property on the death of his mother in July, 1900, and remained in possession until his death in July, 1919, and after his death, this defendant remained in possession until the bill in this cause was filed on October 18, 1921, and that these defendants were in the open, notorious, continuous adverse possession of said property for more than twenty years and had rented it out and collected the rents, and that therefore, they had perfected their title by prescription, from which a deed will be presumed;

Third, he pleaded laches and lapse of time, in that the complainants knew all of the facts in the case and waited for more than twenty years without demanding possession or any rents from the property.

Fourth, that E. E. Erwin had advanced considerable money to the complainants and each of the other heirs, amounting to much more than their respective interests in said property, and therefore, it would be inequitable to hold him liable for rents and not make them account for money advanced and paid to them by E. E. Erwin. He also pleaded that E. E. Erwin had paid the taxes and insurance each year on said property.

Fifth, that Hiram and Tom Erwin had conveyed their interests in said property to E. E. Erwin, and that J. Hough Guest had devised his interest to E. E. Erwin. Hence, it was insisted that complainants were not entitled to any interest in said property or to any relief.

Said answer was filed as a cross-bill “for the purpose of clearing upi any cloud that exists on this property and that he have a decree divesting all title out of the parties.”'

None of the other parties made any defense and pro confessos were taken against them.

• Several depositions were taken and read to the Chancellor, who decreed that the allegations were fully met and denied by the answer and not sustained by the proof, and that complainants claims were barred by lapse of time and laches, and therefore, the bill *495 was dismissed.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Timmins v. Lindsey
310 S.W.3d 834 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 2009)
In re: Estate of M.L. Wakefield
Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 2001
Boatman v. Morrison
746 S.W.2d 706 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1987)
Miller v. Proctor
145 S.W.2d 807 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1940)
Howell v. Moore
14 Tenn. App. 594 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1930)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2 Tenn. App. 491, 1926 Tenn. App. LEXIS 48, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zuccarello-v-erwin-tennctapp-1926.