Gibbs v. Patten
Gibbs v. Patten
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the Court.
On the 19th of February, 1873, A. H. Patten, for the nominal consideration of five dollars, conveyed to his wife, Mary H. Patten, all his property, consisting of four parcels of land, separately described, lying in and adjoining Union City. One of these was the lot on which he was then residing with his family, known as the McBride place. Another was a lot in the city, which was a store house. Another was an improved lot of seven or eight acres bought from R. M. Patten, •and the fourth consisted of twelve acres bought from Evans, adjoining the other and fenced in with it. Afterwards, during the year 1873, Patten sold the first two of these lots, and moved with his family on to the third lot, about the first of January, 1874. On the 10th of February, 1874, Patten and wife joined in a deed conveying the twelve acre lot to T. J. Edwards, for the recited consideration of $1,000. On the 2d of February, 1875, Edwards, reciting the same consideration, made a quit claim deed of this land back to Patten and wife. No consideration in fact passed between the parties on either occasion, and the conveyance to Edwards seems to have been made without consulting him. About the first of the year 1875, Patten removed with his family to a rented farm, returning to the Patten place in July or August of the same year.
Patten and wife took a special appeal from so much of the decree as ordered a sale of the remainder interest in the homestead land, and as directed the sale to be free from the equity of redemption.
The complainant has brought the case up by writ of error. No effort has been made to sustain the conveyance of Patten to his wife, or the deeds between P-.tten and wife and Edwards, conveying and re-con-'•'■ying the twelve acre lot. Their invalidity, as against ; i * complainant as a creditor of Patten, is conceded. The contest has been narrowed down to the extent of
"Whether the homestead right is lost by a fraudulent conveyance by the husband to the wife, is one of the innumerable vexed questions to which the homestead law has given rise. The authorities, pro and eon, are collected, with his usual discriminating industry, by Mr. Thompson, in his valuable work on Homestead and Exemptions, section 408, note. This State, it will be seen, has ranged itself with those States which hold that such a conveyance estops the husband and wife from claiming a homestead in the premises conveyed. McClung v. Johnson, 2 Law and Equity R., 78. And, notwithstanding the larger array of authority on the other side, I am not prepared to say that the decision is not founded in purer ethics, in that it visits fraud with severer penalties. Be that as it may, the most satisfactory reason for the opposite conclusion is, that the homestead being exempt from creditors, the latter cannot be injured by any disposition which may be made of it, and cannot, therefore, predicate fraud of any conveyance of the property. It is upon this ground that the English doctrine rests, that in order to make a voluntary conveyance void as to creditors, ' it is indispensable that it should transfer property
The previous occupancy of those premises, while it might sustain the homestead right therein, notwithstanding a temporary absence, would not extend to the twelve acres of which he was not then the owner. It is not a case for the extension of the doctrine of occupancy by relation. Wade v. Wade, 2 Tenn. Leg. R., 10.
A decree will be entered in accordance with this opinion, and the defendants will pay the costs of this case.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.