49 Tenn. 484 | Tenn. | 1871
delivered the opinion of the Court.
Elizabeth Snelling, an idiot, departed this life, leaving as her heirs at law, one brother, a sister, the daughter of a deceased sister, and the children of a deceased brother, Lemuel; and this petition was filed in the County Court of Bedford, by the said children, and the heirs of Lemuel, against the proper parties, for a partition or sale of the
Lemuel Snelling died previously to his sister Elizabeth, and it may be inferred that her brother John died subsequently. The defendants, who are the heirs of John, insist that complainants are not entitled to partition, because they say that Lemuel Snelling, the father of petitioners, conveyed his prospective interest in the land to their father, John Snelling, by a deed executed in the lifetime of Elizabeth Snelling, bearing date 28th November, 1846, and duly registered 2nd January, 1847, in the Register’s Office of Bedford County; and because they say further, that the County Court of Bedford had no jurisdiction of the petition for partition. The case stands on petition and answer, from which it appears that Harriet Arnold, the daughter of the deceased sister of Elizabeth Snelling, whose name, together with that of her husband, James H. Arnold, was signed to said deed, of 28th November, 1846, filed, a bill in the Chancery Court at Shelbyville, and caused the deed to be annulled, as to her, for want of a privy examination, and had one-fourth part of the land assigned to her as her share. No copy of said proceedings in the'Chancery Court is exhibited; but it is not a little remarkable that all the questions between the tenants in common were not adjusted and full partition made between them in that suit.
Under section 3266 of the Code, the County, Circuit and Chancery Courts of this State have concurrent jurisdiction of partition cases, by bill or petition; and by section 4201, sub-section ft, it is provided that the County Courts shall have original jurisdiction of “the partition
The section last cited is embraced in pt. 3, chapter 2, title 10, of the Code, and is, of course, not referred to or embraced in the provisions of section 2949. It does not authorize a waiver of the jurisdiction of the County Court, but is confined to the Chancery Courts alone. Nor can the jurisdiction of the County Court be conferred by consent, or by the filing an answer, under section 4204; for that section refers alone to incidental provision and not to the express power conferring jurisdiction in Chancery by filing an answer. Before the adoption of the Code, it was held, in Young v. Shumate, 3 Sneed, 371, under the law
We are content to follow these cases, and hold that the County Court has jurisdiction in cases of partition and sale, but not to any greater extent than is specified in the cases cited. We are not, any more than our predecessors, disposed to extend the jurisdiction by construe-’ tion, knowing as we do that great litigation has existed throughout the State in consequence of the hasty, imperfect and inartificial manner in which this jurisdiction has been exercised in the division, or sale, of large estates belonging
Here, there is a direct conflict of title. The complainants claim as heirs of Elizabeth Snelling through their father. The defendants claim that the father divested himself of title before his death, and produce his deed. The complainants urge in argument, that the deed did not pass the title, for the want of words inheritance. The defendants insist that, upon a true construction of the deed, those words may be supplied, and that the deed, at any rate, operates as an estoppel. The complainants, by their counsel, deny this, and maintain further, that the deed under which defendants claim, was executed before
The decree of the County Court will be reversed for this reason, and the costs in both Courts be adjudged against complainants.
See Code, 3277, where this power is expressly conferred, in accordance with the views of the learned Judge.