B. F. Goodrich Silvertown Stores, Inc. v. Brown

46 So. 2d 204, 253 Ala. 576, 1950 Ala. LEXIS 314
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedMay 4, 1950
Docket8 Div. 389
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 46 So. 2d 204 (B. F. Goodrich Silvertown Stores, Inc. v. Brown) 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
B. F. Goodrich Silvertown Stores, Inc. v. Brown, 46 So. 2d 204, 253 Ala. 576, 1950 Ala. LEXIS 314 (Ala. 1950).

Opinion

FOSTER, Justice.

This case comes here on appeal by the respondents from an interlocutory decree [578]*578of the circuit court, in equity, overruling a demurrer to certain aspects of an original bill filed by appellee wherein the demurrer to certain other aspects was sustained. The latter feature of said decree is not directly involved on this appeal, since the appellee, who was a complainant in the lower court, has not cross assigned errors.

The bill was filed by the appellee against the appellant and others praying that it be treated as a bill in the nature of a bill of review for the purpose of setting aside and vacating a decree of the same court dated June 20, 1946, and also seeking to have the court decree that the property embraced in said former proceeding, sought to be reviewed, be set aside as a homestead to the complainant, who is the widow of one Harvey Brown, and to his children who were minors at the time of his death and who are also made parties respondent to this bill.

The decree of June 20, 1946, sought to be reviewed by the present bill, was rendered on a bill filed by appellant B. F. Goodrich Silvertown Stores, Inc., by its attorney, Russell W. Lynne, for the purpose of vacating and setting aside a certain deed executed by Harvey Brown to the complainant in the instant case, who was his wife at the time the deed was executed on the 14th day of May, 1945. The original bill in that case made the present complainant a party respondent together with the said Russell W. Lynne as administrator ad colligendum of the estate of Harvey Brown who was then deceased.

In the third paragraph of the bill in the instant case it is alleged that in the former suit, above referred to, there appears to have been filed an answer to the original bill signed by this complainant who was the respondent in that case in her own proper person, in which she admits all the allegations of the original bill and consents that the cause be submitted without further notice and that the property be advertised and sold by the register and the proceeds of the sale paid first to the complainant B. F. Goodrich Silvertown Stores, Inc., in the sum of $550.35, together with interest thereon, and court costs, and the sum of $150.00 be paid to said Russell W. Lynne as solicitor for complainant.

It is further alleged in said third paragraph of the bill in the instant case that complainant (appellee) “does, not and did not at that time admit that the conveyance from Harvey Brown to herself was fraudulent; that she did not confess, or attempt to confess said judgment; that the matters and other things set up in paragraph six of said answer were not explained to complainant and she did not consent to the matters and things set forth therein; that she did not read said answer; that subsequent to the rendering of the decree in this cause she has learned that said answer was a confession of judgment in favor of B. F. Goodrich Silvertown Stores, Inc., and an agreement to pay to the said Russell W. Lynne as solicitor for complainant $150.00 attorney’s fee; complainant further states that the admission in paragraphs one to five of said answer were not explained to her and she did not intend to sign an answer admitting all of said allegations; that in addition thereto the said Russell W. Lynne as administrator ad colligendum answered his own bill filed as an attorney or as solicitor for and on behalf of B. F. Goodrich Silver-town Stores, Inc., a corporation, by assenting to the answer of the complainant in this cause who was a defendant in the former suit.”

The bill in that case alleged that the amount of the indebtedness was by open account and did not set up a claim on the part of the debtor to pay an attorney’s fee for the collection of the debt. The bill was also answered by Russell W. Lynne as administrator ad colligendum, concurring in said answer of this complainant. The cause was submitted on note of testimony for the complainant signed by Russell W. Lynne as solicitor for complainant with no note of testimony on behalf of respondent. The decree of the court responded to said answer of this complainant and the said Russell W. Lynne as such administrator, vacated the deed executed by said Harvey Brown to this complainant and divested out of her all the right, title and interest which she acquired under and by virtue of said [579]*579deed and condemned said property to be sold to satisfy the claim of the B. F. Goodrich Silvertown Stores, Inc. Said deed recited that it was given by the grantor, Harvey Brown, to his wife for money she loaned him on March 26, 1945, for which he had given her a mortgage on said land, which was duly recorded.

The bill in the instant case alleges that the decree in the former suit appointed a special register to make a sale of said property at public outcry at the courthouse at Decatur on July 19, 1946, and directed the manner in which the proceeds should be applied. Before said sale took place and on July 5, 1946, Charles Calvin Brown, a son of said Harvey Brown, but who was not one of his minor children at the time of his death, made an affidavit on behalf of this complainant as the wife and said four minor children, declaring that the property involved in said litigation, ordered to be sold, was the homestead of said Harvey Brown at the time of his death, that he had no other real estate and that it was worth at the time of his death over and above the amount of the mortgage debt which he had executed to his wife in the sum of $1500.00, not exceeding $2,000.00 nor in area one hundred and sixty acres, and filed it in the office of the judge of probate of Morgan County and in the office of the register of the circuit court, in equity, in which said cause had been pending.

Complainant in the instant case also alleged in her bill that on July 19, 1946, according to the order of the court in that cause, said special register proceeded to sell said land so described and at said sale Mrs. Earline Lynne, the wife of Russell W. Lynne, became the purchaser for the sum of $750.00, which sum of money the register reported had been paid in cash. She further alleged that on July 22, 1946, she filed her objections and exceptions to the above described sale and that on July 29, 1946, the said Earline Lynne as purchaser of said property by Russell W. Lynne, as her attorney, gave notice that they would move to submit the cause for a decree confirming the sale on August 10, 1946. The bill in the instant case was filed on August 7, 1946, and said motion for confirmation has not been determined.

The court made an order on said August 7, 1946, suspending all proceedings in said former cause until the further orders of the court upon the execution of a bond by this complainant, which bond appears by the record to have been executed. The respondents, presumably referring to the B. F. Goodrich Silvertown Stores, Inc., Russell W. Lynne as administrator ad colligendum and Earline Lynne, filed demurrer to the bill of complaint as a whole, and to the several parts thereof separately and severally, and especially to that aspect of it contained in the third paragraph set out above.

The demurrer was also addressed to that aspect of the bill which sets up the claim that the property, the subject matter of the suit, was the homestead of Harvey Brown at the time of his death, and that the same was exempt to the widow and minor heirs of said Harvey Brown. It was the demurrer to that phase of the bill which was overruled by the court and which is made the basis of some of the assignments of error by the respondents.

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Bluebook (online)
46 So. 2d 204, 253 Ala. 576, 1950 Ala. LEXIS 314, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/b-f-goodrich-silvertown-stores-inc-v-brown-ala-1950.