62 Tenn. 12 | Tenn. | 1873
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The bill in this case was filed in the Chancery Court at Cookville, on the 26th of December, 1865.
It is unnecessary to notice the allegations as to other property, as the controversy seems to be confined to the question of title to the grocery-house and lot, purchased of Dillard, and conveyed by him by deed to Jos. Shaw, and conveyed by Jos. Shaw to his father, T. J. Shaw, by deed dated 18th of September, 1861.
Jos. Shaw died in 1864, and the bill seeks to set aside the conveyance to T. J. Shaw, and subject the house and lot to the payment of the amount complainant was compelled to pay as surety of Jos. Shaw.
Mahala Shaw, wife of T. J. Shaw, in July, 1865, filed a bill against her husband for divorce and almony, in which case the house and lot was attached, and a decree rendered in her favor, granting a divorce, and divesting title to the house and lot out of T. J. Shaw and vesting it in her. She and her husband, and the administrator, widow and heirs of Jos. Shaw are made parties. T. J. and Mahala Shaw answer the bill seperately, and deny the allegations in the bill, and insist that the grocery-house and lot, and stock of
Mahala Shaw’s answer is the same substantially, except that she claims to have paid the first payment of $300 on the house and lot, of her own means. The evidence is very voluminous, and establishes numerous contradictory statements by both T. J. and Joseph Shaw as to the ownership of the property, and as to the way in which it was paid for. These statements seemed to have been made mostly anterior to the conveyance of Joseph to his father, but some by Joseph afterwards, and some by T. J. after he filed his answer, but these were afterwards contradicted by himself under oath, and the truth of the statement in his answer re-affirmed.
"We are of opinion that the conveyance was made in pursuance of the understanding and agreement of the parties at the time the property was purchased.
The Chancellor dismissed the bill, and we affirm his decree. The costs of this Court will be paid by complainant, and the costs of the Court below as adjudged by the Chancellor.