Case ID: tenn_110/html/0035-01.html
Source: Caselaw Access Project
Author: {"author": "Mr. Justice Shields", "license": "Public Domain", "url": "https://static.case.law/"}
Date Created: 2024-08-24T03:29:51.129683

Green v. Cumberland Coal & Coke Co.
    
      (Nashville.
    
    December Term, 1902.)
    1. CHAMPERTY. Sale of land adversely held is champertous though vendor have perfect title.
    A sale of lands held by the vendor under a perfect title but in the adverse possession of another at the time is a sale of a pretended title within the statute making such sales null and void as champertous without regard to the duration of such possession. (Post, p. 38-.)
    Code cited and construed: Sections 3171, 3172 (S.); 2445, 2446 (M. & V.); 1776-1777 (T. & S. and 1858).
    Cases cited: "Whiteside v. Martin, 7 Yerg., 397; Kincaid v. Meadows, 3 Head, 189, 192; Fain v. Headrick, 4 Cold., 334.
    2. CHAMPERTOUS DEED. EFFECT OF. Vendor may disregard- and sue in his own name.
    A conveyance of land adversely held is a nullity and a vendor of such land may disregard his deed and in his own name sue in ejeotment to recover the lands, without specially pleading the invalidity of such conveyance. (Post, pp. 38-39.)
    Cases cited: Key v. Snow, 90 Tenn., 663; Wilson v. Nance, 11 Humph., 190; Fowler v. Nixon, 7 Heisk., 729; Saylor v. Stewart’s heirs, 2 Heisk., 510.
    
      •3. CHAMPERTY. Hot limited to actual possession, where possessor claims under color oí title purporting to convey a fee.
    Where there is an actual adverse possession of part of a tract of land under deed purporting to convey the entire tract in fee, the possessor has such constructive possession of the remainder, superior and adverse to that which results merely from the ownership of the legal title, as renders a conveyance of land so held ehampertous and void not merely to the extent of the actual possession hut to all the lands inclosed within the boundaries of the assurance of title, under which such actual possession is held. (.Post, pp. 39-41).
    Cases cited: Dyche v. Gass’s Lessee, 3 Yerg., 397; West v. La-nier, 9 Humph., 771; Rutherford v. Franklin, 1 Swan, 324; Brown v. Johnson, 1 Humph., 264; Pickens v. Delozier, 2 Humph., 400; Mitchell v. Churchman’s Lessee, 4 Humph., 218.
    FROM CUMBERLAND.
    Appeal from the Chancery Court of Cumberland County. — T. J. Fisher, Chancellor.
    Wright & Wright, for Green.
    McNutt & Fisher, for Cumberland Coal & Coke Company.
   Mr. Justice Shields

delivered the opinion of the

Court.

This is an ejectment bill, brought to recover a tract of land lying in Cumberland county. The chancellor granted the complainant a decree, which was affirmed by the court of chancery appeals, and the defendant has appealed to this court, and assigned errors.

The pleadings are very brief. The complainant charges that he is the owner and entitled to the possession of the land covered by grant 14,369 from the State of Tennessee to Richard Burk, describing it by metes and bounds, and that the defendant unlawfully ejected him therefrom, and withholds possession from him. The ansAver admits possession of respondent, denies all other allegations of the bill, and avers the defendant has the better title.

On the hearing it appeared that the grant to Richard Burk, No. 14,369, was superior to the one under which the defendant claimed, and the complainant connected himself therewith by a perfect chain of title. But it also appeared that in 1896, preA'ions to the institution of this suit, complainant conveyed the lands in controversy to Joseph S. Ricker. The defendant, however, was at the time the conveyance was made in possession of the premises, having a few acres inclosed under fence, and claiming to certain boundaries covering the entire tract, defined in an assurance of title purporting to convey the fee, under which it claimed and was asserting title. All the land other than the few acres referred to was nninclosed and wild.

The court of chancery appeals found these facts, and held that the possession of the land Avas held adversely to the complainant at the time of his conveyance to Joseph S. Ricker, and that this conveyance, which was relied upon by the defendant to shoAV that complainant had parted Avith his title to the premises sued for, was champertous, and wholly void, and the complainant, having deraigned the superior title from the State, Avas entitled to recover the entire tract.

The errors assigned raised these questions:

1. That the champertous character of the conveyance by complainant to Joseph S. Ricker cannot be looked to or considered by the court in order to avoid it, because there is no pleading attacking it upon this ground; and also because the complainant cannot rely upon his own unlaAvful act to invalidate his deed.

The law is otherwise. The statute prohibiting the sale of pretended titles to lands makes the sale of land utterly void Avliere the seller has not by himself, agent, tenant, or ancestor, been in actual possession, or taken the rents and profits, for one whole year next before the sale. Code (Shannon’s Ed.), secs. 8171, 3172.

A sale of lands held under a perfect title, but in the adverse possession of another at the time, is a sale of a pretended title, within this statute, and no particular length of possession is necessary to make the sale void. Whiteside v. Martin, 7 Yerg., 397; Kincaid v. Meadows, 3 Head, 189-192; Fain v. Headrick, 4 Cold., 334.

A conveyance of lands adversely held is a nullity, and may be so treated by both parties and strangers. The title to the lands conveyed remains in the conveyor, and the vendee can not maintain an action for breach of the covenants in the conveyance. The vendor may disregard his deed, and sue in his own name for the lands; and, if the defendant proves a conveyance for the purpose of showing that he has parted with his title, as he may do in the chancery court under a general denial of title in the complainant, or under the general issue in ejectment at law, he may show its champertous character, and consequent invalidity in avoidance. This may he done without any pleading specially raising the question. Key v. Snow, 90 Tenn., 663, 18 S. W., 251; Wilson v. Nance, 11 Humph., 190; Fowler v. Nixon, 7 Heisk., 729; Saylor v. Stewart’s Heirs, 2 Heisk., 510.

2. That the deed to Joseph S. Ricker was only void to the extent of the few acres held by defendant under inclosure at the time of its execution, that being the extent of the actual possession, which was necessary to render the deed void under the statute invoked; constructive possession being ineffectual for this purpose.

Actual possession, when the premises are susceptible of it, must, as a general rule, be by inclosure of the land by fences or like improvements, so as to make the occupation visible, notorious, continuous, and adverse, and thus constitute notice of the claim and possession of the occupant to the public; but there are exceptions to the rule where the land is not suitable for cultivation, and the occupant exercises dominion over it, which is possession, when accompanied with the necessary requisites and asserted in an equally positive manner for other purposes, such as digging ore, mining coal, quarrying stone, and other similar purposes for which the land is alone or most adapted and valuable. Pullen v. Hopkins, 1 Lea, 741; West v. Lanier, 9 Humph., 762; Copeland v. Murphey, 2 Cold., 64; Cooper v. Great Falls Co., 94 Tenn., 588, 30 S. W., 353. Neither residence on nor cultivation of the land is necessary to constitute actual possession. Creech v. Jones, 5 Sneed, 633.

Constructive possession exists where the land is in a wild state, and wholly unoccupied, or where one is in actual possession under some character of assurance or claim of title defining boundaries of a portion of the land, claiming to the extent of the boundaries defined'in the written instrument. Where there is no part of the land in actual possession, the constructive possession is with the party holding the superior legal title; but where a portion of the land is in actual adverse possession, the party so holding has constructive possession of all the premises outside of his inclosure to the limits of his claim or assurance of title, and such constructive possession is superior to that which results merely from the ownership of the legal title, and is sufficient to put in operation the statutes of limitation to the entire tract. West v. Lanier, 9 Humph., 771, 772; Rutherford v. Franklin’s Lessee, 1 Swan, 324; Brown v. Johnson, 1 Humph., 264.

It is therefore evident that the actual possession of the defendant was confined to his inclosure, and his possession of the remainder of the tract was only constructive. The character of constructive possession, connected as it always is closely with actual possession, and generally actual occupation of some part of the land, is clearly within the policy of the statute against cham-pertous sales, and will render a conveyance of land so held null and void. Pickens v. Delozier, 2 Humph., 400; Mitchell v. Churchman’s Lessee, 4 Humph., 218.

If the defendant had been a mere trespasser, the conveyance would have been void only to the .extent of his actual possession; but he was in possession under an assurance of title of part, claiming to defined boundaries covering the whole tract. Dyche v. Gass’ Lessee, 3 Yerg., 397.

We are therefore of opinion that the deed to J. S. Ricker was wholly void, and presents no obstacle to a recovery by complainant. The decree of the court of chancery appeals is affirmed, with costs.