Andrews v. Hobson's Adm'r

23 Ala. 219
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJune 15, 1853
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 23 Ala. 219 (Andrews v. Hobson's Adm'r) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Andrews v. Hobson's Adm'r, 23 Ala. 219 (Ala. 1853).

Opinion

LIGON, J.

1. No question can arise on the action of the Chancellor in overruling the demurrer to the original bill in this case, for the obvious reason that the defendant has assigned no cross errors on the record, and we can only decide on such as are assigned and insisted upon in this court.—Van Eppes v. Smith, 21 A. R. 317.

2. It is urged by the defendant in error, that tho bill is so fatally defective, in setting out the cause of action, that no case for relief is made out, and on this ground alone the decree of the Chancellor should be sustained. If this be true, this court will certainly dismiss the bill, regardless of any demurrer, or motion to dismiss for want of equity in the court below.

The complainants set out in their bill, that at the time it was filed they were the only surviving children of Nelson Andrews, one of the defendants, and as such beneficiaries under a certain deed of trust made by him to the defendant Hobson, bearing date the 28th day of March, 1839, a copy of which deed is exhibited with the bill.

This deed conveys to Hobson an absolute title to the land and slaves named in it, and then proceeds, “ Now this deed is upon trust, that the said Matthew Hobson shall take possession of all and singular the several parcels of land herein conveyed, and of the negroes herein mentioned, and shall by himself, or by his [230]*230agents or attorneys to be chosen by him, and at his discretion, proceed to work the said slaves, and cultivate the said lands, and in all things manage the same in a husband-like manner, and shall have the disposition and management of the crops and products of the same, and from the products and proceeds thereof shall allow to the said Nelson Andrews a reasonable allowance for the comfortable support and maintenance of his family and the education of his children ; and shall proceed to pay off and discharge the debts now contracted of the said Nelson Andrews, with such interest as has or may accrue thereon, and costs, and charges; he, the said Matthew Hobson, having the authority to compromise, get day of payment, or otherwise arrange and settle the same, to borrow money for the purpose of settling the same, and other things to do as if the same were his own ; and upon this further trust also, that, if the said Matthew Hobson, his executors or administrators, should find the crops insufficient to satisfy said debts, within a reasonable time, either from a failure of the crops, from the multiplicity of the debts, or other cause, or should, in his or their discretion, think it most advisable to make sale of all or part of said land or negroes, or either of them, for the purpose of paying the same, or paying off such liabilities as he may incur in extending or getting time upon any of them, then it shall be lawful, and the said Matthew Hobson is hereby empowered, to proceed and sell any and such portion as he shall deem proper, upon giving thirty days notice in three or more public places in Greene County, at auction in the town of Greensboro, to the highest bidder, either for cash, or on a credit, as shall seem to him most proper ; and, upon such sale or sales, (should more than one take place,) shall make the purchaser or purchasers good and sufficient deed or deeds to such of said lands as may be sold, convoying them in fee simple, and shall also make sufficient conveyances of such of said negroes as shall be sold, and shall apply the proceeds of such sale or sales as hereinbefore specified. And this deed is upon the further trust also, that so soon as the said Matthew Hobson, his executors and administrators, shall have paid off all the debts now existing of the said Nelson Andrews, and discharged all the liabilities of the said Andrews, or of himself, or of themselves, contracted under or by virtue of the trust now taken upon him, the said Hobson, he, the said Hobson, his executors and admin[231]*231istrators, shall convey to the children, then living, of the said Nelson Andrews, all the lands herein conveyed, then remaining unsold, and all the negroes herein mentioned, and then alive and unsold, and their increase, to be held by them as their sole and absolute property, subject only to the following condition and trust : that the said negroes and land so conveyed to them, shall, during the lives of the said Nelson Andrews and his wife, Polly Andrews, and the life of the survivor of them, be subject to the maintenance of the said Nelson Andrews and the said Polly Andrews, or the survivor of them, and the proceeds thereof, so far as the same shall be necessary, shall be so appropriated, and the said Matthew Hobson, his executors or administrators, is and are hereby directed to convey the same in trust accordingly. And the said Matthew Hobson doth assent to the trust hereby created, and accept of the same, and bind himself to the faithful execution of the same.”

This deed is executed by Nelson Andrews and Hobson; it was acknowledged by them before a notary public, and duly recorded in the office of the clerk of the County Court of Greene County.

By its terms, the property, both real and personal, is “granted, bargained, sold and conveyed” by Nelson Andrews to Matthew Hobson, upon the trusts above mentioned, and it is alleged in the bill that Hobson went into immediate possession of the property, and continued to possess and manage it by himself and his agents, until the sales in the year 1843.

It is clear that Nelson Andrews, by the terms of this deed, and the delivery of the possession of the property to Hobson, divested himself of all legal estate in it, and could not have revoked it, had he desired to do so. The title vested in Hobson, on the delivery of the deed, so that the trust in favor of the creditors and children of Andrews is vested, and it could not be afterwards divested by any act of Nelson Andrews alone, nor by any concurrent act of Andrews and Hobson, for the reason that the-former had parted with all control over it whatever, and the latter had received it subject to the specific trusts of the deed under which he holds it. To allow either, or both of them, to use the property for any other purpose than those set forth in the deed itself would be-a fraud upon the rights of the beneficiaries; and although the deed, so far as it relates to the complainants, is to a certain -extent voluntary, yet, after it was delivered, it [232]*232could not be revoked by the grantor, nor mil it be tolerated that the trustee, who.covenants to hold for them, shall cast off his trust, and set up this fact against their title. — 2 Story’s Eq. § 973 and notes 3 and 4.

It is insisted, however, that, although ^the deed vests Hobson with the legal estate, and defines the trusts in subjection to which he holds it, ye.t, as no valuable consideration passed from the complainants to the grantor, the trust in their favor will not, at their instance, be enforced by a court of equity ; that persons standing in this relation are mere volunteers, and will not be allowed to set up their claims against the voluntary donor, or a purchaser for value.

That a cestui que trust, who has paid no valuable consideration to the grantor, can enforce the execution of the trust in a court of equity against the trustee, has already been decided by this court, on very full consideration, in the case of Sledge’s Adm’rs v. Clopton, 6 A. R. 598; and that he will be allowed to do so against the grantor, and a’purchaser for valuable consideration with notice of the trust, has also been decided in the case of Eldridge et al. v. Turner et al., 11 A. R. 1049.

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Bluebook (online)
23 Ala. 219, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/andrews-v-hobsons-admr-ala-1853.