OPINION
The Chancery Court of Coffee County granted summary judgment to the City of Tullahoma, its Industrial Development Board, and its Board of Public Utilities declaring void the appеllant’s “allodium title” laying claim to the Tullahoma Industrial Park. In addition the court enjoined the appellant from asserting any further claim to the property and assessed fees and costs against the appellant under Rule 11, Tennessee Rules of Civil Procedure. We affirm the judgment of the Chancery Court and remand thе cause to that court for the entry of a judgment for damages resulting from a frivolous appeal.
I.
In 1991 the appellant prepared and signed a dоcument called an “Allodium Title”
In 1993 Mr. Hancock contacted a prospective purchaser of land in the Tullahoma Industrial Park and asserted that he owned the property and could make the purchaser a better deal. The plaintiffs then brought this
II.
Mr. Hancock raises fifty eight issues on appeаl. We will not deal with them individually but we will address all that are necessary to establish the legality of the action taken. The first broad category we will address pertаins to the legal existence of the plaintiffs and the existence and jurisdiction of the Coffee County Chancery court.
The Legal Existence of the Plaintiffs
In his answer, Mr. Hancock attackеd the legal existence of the three plaintiffs. Supporting their motion for summary judgment on these issues the plaintiffs filed certified copies of the city charter, the charter of the Industrial Development Board, and the City of Tullahoma ordinance creating the Board of Public Utilities. It is difficult to focus on what Mr. Hancock filed in response to the motion. Scattered throughout the 1185 page technical record are various documents to which he refers as рroof of some defect in the legal authority of the plaintiffs. But we cannot find any admissible proof of the facts easting doubt on their legal existence. We, therefore, hold that there are no contested facts on this issue. Summary judgment on this issue was proper. Byrd v. Hall,
The Legal Existence of the Chancery Court
Mr. Hancock also attacks the existenсe of the Chancery Court of Coffee County itself, alleging that the plaintiffs did not prove its lawful existence. While we are not aware of any rule of law thаt places a burden on a plaintiff to prove the legal existence of the court in which suit is brought, we take judicial notice of Art. 6 § 1 of the Tennesseе Constitution authorizing the creating of chancery courts and Tenn.Code Ann. § 16-2-506(14)(A) designating Coffee County as the fourteenth judicial district and providing for the electiоn of a judge or chancellor in 1990. Beyond that, absent some proof of a defect in the organization of the court, we presume that its existencе meets the requirements of the law in all respects.
The Subject Matter Jurisdiction of the Chancery Court
The main thrust of Mr. Hancock’s argument concerning the court’s subject matter jurisdiction centers on the сourt’s award of damages to the plaintiffs. It is Mr. Hancock’s contention that the chancery court does not have jurisdiction to award unliqui-dated damagеs in a tort action.
He would be correct if that had been the sole remedy sought by the plaintiffs. The statute giving chancery courts concurrent jurisdiction with the сircuit courts exempts actions for unliquidated damages to property, not arising out of a breach of contract. Tenn.Code Ann. § 16-11-102.
The complaint, hоwever, also sought to remove a cloud on the plaintiffs’ title and to enjoin the defendant from asserting any claim to the property in the industrial park. These remedies are inherently equitable. See Bouldin v. Taylor,
We are satisfied that the Chancery Court of Coffee County had jurisdiction of the subject matter of this action.
The Sovereign Man Defense
Mr. Hancock disputes the authority of the courts over him because he is a “sovereign man” and can be sued only insofar as he consents to the jurisdiction of the courts. He
We do not know of any authority for such a proposition. None of the authorities cited by Mr. Hancock bear out his contention. It is our opinion that there are no “super citizens” under our form of government and that it is beyond the power of the legislature to create such a class. The Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution prohibits the states from denying еqual protection of the laws to any person within the state’s jurisdiction. Creating a class whose members were not subject to the jurisdiction of the ordinary сourts would deny the rest of us equal protection. This same argument was made and rejected in a criminal case, State v. Keller,
III.
With respect to Mr. Hanсock’s arguments on the merits of the case — the defects in the title to Camp Forrest and the authority, or lack thereof, of the various title holders to convey the property — we find that he lacks the standing to raise them. He has no interest in the property that is affected one way or the other. His “allodium title” is no more than a naked claim to property which he has never had an interest in and has never possessed. Without an interest in the property Mr. Hаncock has no standing to raise any question concerning its true ownership. Rainey v. Rainey,
Since Mr. Hancock has no standing to litigate questions of title to the propеrty, the court was competent to render its judgment, and as there are no disputed facts in the record on the other issues raised, we affirm the chancеllor’s order.
IY.
Under Tenn.Code Ann. § 27-1-122 this court may award damages for prosecuting a frivolous appeal. The appellees assert that Mr. Hancoсk’s appeal is frivolous and we agree.
A frivolous appeal is one that is “devoid of merit,” Combustion Engineering, Inc. v. Kennedy,
The judgment of the trial court is affirmed and the cause is remanded to the Chancery Court of Coffee County for the entry of a judgment for damages, including reasonable attorneys’ fees, resulting from the fiivolous appeal. Tax the costs on appeal to the appellant.
Notes
. "Allodium” means land held absolutely in one's own right and not subject to feudal duties or burdens. Black's Law Dictionary, Fourth Edition.
