96 Tenn. 532 | Tenn. | 1896
This bill was filed in the Chancery court of Obion County by Susie Verhine and other complainants against Cicero Ragsdale, defendant, in an action of ejectment to recover possession of a tract of land in Obion County, containing seventy-seven and seven-eighths acres, described in the bill, which the complainants allege they inherited 'from their mother, Margaret M. Ragsdale, deceased, who was the wife of the defendant, Cicero Ragsdale. The said Cicero Ragsdale admits that he is .in possession of said land, and insists that he is entitled to a life estate in said land, as tenant, by the curtesy, and that he is rightfully in possession of the same.
The facts are as follows, to wit: That, in 1854, Mrs. Louisa M. Wilson purchased of Wm. L. Golden
All five of the said children of Louisa M. Wilson and Robert Wilson, deceased, mentioned in said deed, are now dead, and died without issue, except the said Margaret M. Yerhine and Elizabeth J. White, who left issue surviving. After said deed was made, the said Margaret M. Yerhine married defendant, Cicero Ragsdale, by whom she had several children, viz.: Frank Ragsdale, Yiclcey Ragsdale, Jay Ragsdale, and Sarah McCloud, wife of John Mc-Cloud, and she died June, 1879, leaving all of said children and her husband, Cicero Ragsdale, and also Susie Verhine, her child by a former marriage, surviving. The said Elizabeth J. White, deceased, left her surviving the following children, viz.: Mrs. Harriet Lackey, Sarah E. Bird, and Robert W. White. The said Mrs. Louisa M. Wilson outlived all of her children. She died August, 1889, ten. years after the death of her daughter, Margaret M. Rags-
The rights of the parties depend upon a construction of the deed from Golden to Mrs. Wilson and her children. Complainants insist that said deed con veyed the fee in the whole of said land to Mrs.
In any case involving only questions of fact, the defendant is bound by the defenses or statements made in his answer, and he cannot make .any defense that is not set up in his answer. Furman v. North, 4 Bax., 296. And if this case involved only a question of fact, defendant would be precluded from making a different defense from that made in his answer. But this case involving only a legal construction of. said deed, the answer cannot change the effect of such construction, and the defendant is not precluded by his answer from raising any question on the construction of said deed that
Eobert Wilson made and executed his last will, in writing, January 24, 1843, which will was probated in the County Court of Sumner County, at its March term, 1843, and the second item of said will is as follows: “I bequeath unto by beloved wife, Louisa Wilson, the tract or parcel of land on which I now live, containing about thirty-seven acres, to have and to hold the same as a home and possession for herself and our children, in order to make provisions and sustenance for herself and them during her natural life, provided she does not marry again, then, in that event, my will and desire is, that there be allowed her, and that she have, a distributive, or, in other words, a child’s part of said land or a distributive part of its value. Also a distributive portion of my personal property that may be, at the time, here allowed to and in such a contingency as here contemplated. Now, in the event that my wife remain a widow, and should desire to remove with her family to her relatives, or elsewhere, and circumstances should, in the estimation of my executors, hereinafter to be named, seem to justify or make expedient such a course, then, and in that case, my executors are authorized to sell and convey to any person the said tract of land, and any other such property as they may deem ad-
Louisa M. Wilson and Addison Wilson were nominated as executrix and executor of said will. The said Addison Wilson moved to Texas, and, thereafter, the said Louisa M. Wilson filed a bill in the Circuit Court of Sumner County for the sale of said land. Her minor children were made defendants to said bill, and they were represented by guardian ad litem, who answered said bill for the minors. And a decree was made and entered at the June term of said Court, 1851, to sell said land to one Thompkins, at the price of forty dollars per acre, and, that upon the payment of the purchase money by said Thompkins, that title to said land be divested out of the parties and vested in the purchaser. And said decree directed the said Louisa M. Wilson to apply the proceeds of said sale to the purchase of another place for herself and the heirs and devisees of Robert Wilson, deceased, as directed by the will of Robert Wilson, deceased, and that she was required to give bond for the faithful discharge of said trust, which was, that she would purchase a place for herself and family, to be held by her in the same way that the said thirty-seven acres of land in Sumner County had been held by her under the will of Robert Wilson, deceased.
The sale to Thompkins of said thirty-seven acres
When the deed referred to, from Golden to Louisa M. Wilson and others, to the Obion County land, is considered in connection with the will of Robert Wilson, deceased, and the decree of the Circuit Court of Sumner County referred to, it is obvious that the Louisa M. Wilson and children named in said will, decree, and deed from Golden, were the same persons, and that the money paid for the Obion County land was manifestly the net fund Louisa M. Wilson realized from the Sumner County land.
The Court, considering said deed in connection with the will of Robert Wilson, deceased, and the decree of the Circuit Court of Sumner County referred to, construe said deed from Wm. L. Golden and wife to “Louisa M. Wilson, widow and relict of Robert Wilson, deceased, late of Sumner County, Tennessee, in her own right of dowry,” and the ‘ ‘ children and heirs at law of Robert Wilson, deceased,” named in said deed, to have vested in Mrs. Louisa M.i Wilson a life estate in the whole of said land, with remainder in her said children by Robert Wilson, and that her said children, though vested remaindermen, were not seized of any interest as tenants in common in said land during the life of their mother, Louisa M. Wilson, she having remained the widow of Robert Wilson, deceased,' until
The defendant, Cicero Ragsdale, having no interest in said land, it was not necessary to make him a party to the petition filed by Lackey and others in the County Court for a .division of said land.
Complainants are entitled to the possession of said lot No. 1, of '¡"if acres, set apart to them by the County Court of Obion County, in the division of said lands as described in complainant’s bill.
The decree will be affirmed.