Bailey v. Selden

112 Ala. 593
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedNovember 15, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 112 Ala. 593 (Bailey v. Selden) 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
Bailey v. Selden, 112 Ala. 593 (Ala. 1896).

Opinion

HEAD, J.

George W. H. Minge, who died in 1880, a resident citizen of Marengo county, in this State, left his last will, which was duly established. Its disposition touching the property now in controversy, to-wit, the “Fair Hope” plantation in Perry county, Alabama, ‘ ‘together with all the personal property contained thereon, which is now occupied by my son-in-law, Capt. Joseph Selden,” were, that said plantation and personal property were devised and bequeathed to the testator’s widow, Mary H. Minge, for life, with vested remainder in fee to the testator’s grand-daughters, Mary M. Selden and Maria L. Selden; with the provision, however, that a “reasonable and economical maintenance and support out of the property” be devised and bequeathed to the said Joseph Selden, and that “the said plantation shall be his home during his natural life ;” and with the further provision, that, during the lifetime of the widow, the testator’s grand-children, G. Minge Selden, John A. Selden and Bettie Selden, should receive, from the proceeds of the property, “their education, maintenance and support; ’ ’ and the property was expressly charged therewith .

The dispositions appear to be simple and easily understood. The widow was invested with the legal and beneficial estate, in possession, clothed with adequate legal remedies for reduction to, and maintenance of, her actual possession during her life; subject, however, to the trust that she should permit Joseph Selden to make the plantation his home, during his life, and award to him out of the property, real and personal, a reasonable and economical maintenance and support; and to the further trust, that she should award to the three named grand-children, from the proceeds of 'the property, their education, maintenance and support. In its legal sense, the possession of the property did not belong to Joseph Selden. It belonged to Mrs. Minge, the life tenant, whose duty it was to permit him to have his home upon the place. He could not disseize her, without subjecting himself to a ixossessory action at law, at her suit. The primary source of fxxlfillxnexxt of tbesé trusts for maintexxan.ce woxxld, ixx equity, be the rents, incomes and profits of the property; axxd these provixxg ixxadequate, the corpus, or a part thereof, might, ixx a judicious manner, be so appropriated. The widow, acting in good faith [599]*599and with just and reasonable judgment and discretion in the observance and execution of the beneficial interests secured to herself and in her cesttds que trusts by the will, and with just regard to the ultimate rights of the remaindermen, was absolute in her right to the possession, management and control of the property, and the discharge of the trusts impossd upon her. If she should abuse the- trust declared for Joseph Selden, he was clothed with ample remedies for redress, in a court of equity. So also, was that forum open to the three grandchildren, named, for redress of any abuse of the trust declared for them. The remaindermen were invested with the usual equitable remedies which pertain to estates of that character, for the preservation and protection of their ultimate interests. The estate of Mrs. Minge, the widow, being legal and in possession, her remedies, in whatever form her rights of possession and enjoyment, growing out of the dispositions of the will, might be invaded, were necessarily legal. We do not say that conditions may not arise which would entitle her to the aid of a court of equity in the administration of her trusts ; as, for instance, it might be, if she should need the aid of that court in the application of the corpus of the property to the purposes of the trusts.

These several rights and remedies of the several classes of persons, referred to, are independent and distinct. The remedies of Joseph Selden do not concern the three grand-children nor the remaindermen. He and the remaindermen have nothing in common with the grandchildren ; nor has he and the latter any interest, in common, with the remaindermen. In the enforcement of their respective beneficial or ultimate interests, in equity, Mrs. Minge — the trustee and tenant of the particular estate — must needs be the prime adversary party, for it is upon her dereliction alone that a resort to equity, by them, could be justified. So long as she remains faithful to her duties, exercising, in the administration and protection of the property, the powers with which the law clothes her, there could be no resort by them, to a court of equity.

Mrs. Minge was, by the will, named, and she qualified, as executrix; but there are no rights of creditors involved in the litigation, and the rights of the parties litigant do not pertain to the executorial office or func[600]*600tions. That character may, therefore, be left out of view.

It was in view of this property, and these interests therein, that the bill in this cause was filed, on the 29th day of July, 1885. The complainants in the original . bill, were, first, the widow, Mary H. Minge; then the remaindermen and their husbands, they having intermarried since the death of the testator, and next the three grand-children, for whose education, maintenance and support, the will provided. The other cestui que trust, Joseph Selden, was the sole party defendant. With the necessary formal allegations as to the will, the relations of the parties and their interests, exhibiting a copy, of the will, the bill averred, that the testator left other large property besides “Fair Hope” and the personal property thereon, which was also devised to the widow for life, and that having plenty to supply her wants she did not insist upon subjecting for her own use and benefit a portion of the income, rents and profits from the Fair Hope place and property thereon, which at the time of testator’s death was in the possession of her son-in-law, Joseph Selden, but that 'she permitted him to collect and retain all of the same, and to remain in possession of the property, and that he is still in possession, appropriating to his own use the rents, &c., and has not accounted to her for any of the annual returns thereof, but has totally neglected to appropriate any of such rents, &c., to the other purposes named in the will; that she, the widow, being the grandmother of the three children, for whose support, &c., the will provided, and their mother having died, and herself, having plenty with which to support them, took the three children to her own home, and did not, for some time, require or demand of her son-in-law, Joseph Selden, any of the annual returns for their education, maintenance and support, but educated, maintained and supported them out of her own income. And the bill avers that the defendant, said Joseph Selden, being in possession and appropriating the rents, &e., to his own use, has set up some claim to the property other than conveyed by the will, and refuses to let the widow as executrix, and as owner of the life estate, share in the management and control of the plantation and the incomes and profits thereof; and is seeking by some pre[601]*601tended claim to defeat the estates of tlie remaindermen, ■who are ignorant of said pretended claim to the fee simple, and know of no claim of his to the lands other than that contained in the will; that the rental value of the property is, to-wit, $1,400 per annum, and that there is danger of the property being wasted and the rents being appropriated by him. The prayer was for an.

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Bluebook (online)
112 Ala. 593, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bailey-v-selden-ala-1896.