Batson v. Etheridge

195 So. 873, 239 Ala. 535, 1940 Ala. LEXIS 366
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedMarch 28, 1940
Docket6 Div. 573.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 195 So. 873 (Batson v. Etheridge) 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
Batson v. Etheridge, 195 So. 873, 239 Ala. 535, 1940 Ala. LEXIS 366 (Ala. 1940).

Opinions

FOSTER, Justice.

The questions here involved primarily depend upon the claim by the administrator of the insolvent estate of a decedent of an equitable right to declare a trust in land purchased by one who was executrix of such estate and widow of decedent. The purchase was made by her of the land of said estate at a time when she was such executrix, and the sale was for taxes due upon said land. Her purchase was with .her own funds and was in the nature of a redemption by her. The bill indicates that the purchase at the tax sale was on her account by her son-in-law who after-wards deeded the land to her. It was not a sale made by the executrix herself in which she purchased having an interest, as we will show.

There are subsidiary questions involved which we will develop. The appeal is by respondents from a' decree overruling demurrer to the bill.

Appellee as administrator of the insolvent estate filed the bill. As amended, it prays for the right to assert a beneficial interest in the land for said estate, upon a reimbursement of such amounts as may be chargeable upon granting such relief. (We are not seeking to quote, but give our interpretation of the amended bill as framed.)

The bill alleges that Nancy E. Batson was executrix of the estate, and that during the pendency of her administration the land in question was sold for taxes, in the year 1932, and purchased by her son-in-law, and that she while still executrix redeemed or purchased the land from him taking a quitclaim deed to her individually: that for the years 1933, 1934, 1935, 1936 and 1937, which embraced the balance of her administration, she assessed the land as that of the estate, and made no individual claim of it: that when complainant was appointed administrator he assumed dominion of the land and held it for 1938 and 1939, and assessed it as that of the estate: that when said executrix filed her petition to have the estate declared insolvent she listed this land as belonging to the estate, but claimed a lien on - it for the money advanced on redemption. She has conveyed by quitclaim deed the land in question to her son, one of the appellants, M. C. Batson, who is claiming it adversely to the rights here asserted. This was done between the 16th and 19th of August 1938.

Estoppel.

M. C. Batson claims that complainant is estopped to assert this claim for his estate, because the bill alleges that complainant prepared the quitclaim deed, and knew that he expected to buy it from his mother. But there are several reasons why the doctrine of estoppel in pais does not here apply.

The bill also alleges that M. C. Batson had full knowledge of all the circumstances on which the right of complainant is based: that although complainant did prepare the deed it was because of an agreement he had with Nancy Batson that she would deed to whomsoever complainant designated: that M. C. Batson agreed to get his mother to execute the quitclaim deed to him, and then return to complainant and pay complainant, getting a deed from him also, by leave of the court: ’that he had his mother to sign the deed, and did not return nor pay him as he had agreed. Upon principles too well known to discuss, there was no element of estoppel in pais shown by such allegations.

Moreover, the administrator of an insolvent estate cannot sell land or personalty of said estate, without an order of the court. Section 6029, Code; section 5832, Code; Rule 113 Chancery Practice; Howell v. Randle, 171 Ala. 451, 54 So. 563; Anderson v. Steiner, 217 Ala. 85,

*539 115 So. 4. Such administrator is unable by his contract to bind the estate, and therefore the estate cannot be estopped by his conduct on that equitable doctrine. Merchants’ National Bank v. Hubbard, 222 Ala. 518 (7), 133 So. 723, 74 A.L.R. 646; 19 Amer.Jur. 644, section 45.

Equity of the Bill.

The equitable right of appellee is not based upon the theory that an executor has become the purchaser at his own sale; for with a personal interest in the property 'sold, this is permitted under proper safeguards, as appellant has argued. Section 5868, Code; Bank of Wetumpka v. Walkley, 169 Ala. 648, 53 So. 830; Schloss & Kahn v. Brightman, 195 Ala. 540, 70 So. 670; 10 Alabama Digest, 182, Executors and Administrators,()=> 365; McCraw v. Cooper, 218 Ala. 186, 118 So. 333.

But the equity of the bill is well sustained on the principle that when an executor or the trustee, with his own funds, deals in claims or property rights in which the beneficial estate is interested, the beneficiaries have the equitable right to have him declared to be a constructive trustee for them of such rights upon reimbursing him for his personal outlay in that connection. Powell v. Powell, 80 Ala. 11; Tallassee Oil & Fertilizer Co. v. Royal, 209 Ala. 439, 96 So. 620; Profile Cotton Mills v. Calhoun Water Co., 189 Ala. 181, 66 So. 50; 19 Alabama Digest 41, Trusts, 102 (1); 65 Corpus Juris 476, section 226, note 28, and Alabama cases there cited.

This principle embraces a- redemption of land from tax sale by one who has a share in it. Such redemption inures to the benefit of the other shareholders upon their election within a reasonable time. Bailey v. Bond, 237 Ala. 59, 185 So. 411.

While Nancy Batson acquired those rights in 1932, the bill alleges facts which show that she fully recognized the fact that she held the land as trustee until she made the deed here in question. After she made her final settlement in which she listed this land, as the bill alleges, as an asset of the estate, she thereafter expressly agreed, though verbally, with the administrator of the insolvent estate that she would execute deeds to his purchasers upon payment to her of her charges on it. This she did in several instances. Here she sold by quitclaim to her son without recognizing the rights of the estate. This bill was filed soon afterwards.

The equitable right of complainant was not thereby created as appellee claims by a verbal agreement. But it was kept from growing old by such arrangement. The equity of the bill is well supported, and not barred by limitations or laches.

It is also insisted that Nancy Bat-son is a necessary party. But the bill alleges that she has conveyed to M. C. Batson who is- a party all her right, title and interest in the land (a quitclaim). She is therefore not a necessary party. Gravlee v. Lamkin, 120 Ala. 210, 24 So. 756; Wilkinson v. May, 69 Ala. 33; Batre v. Auze’s Heirs, 5 Ala. 173; Boutwell v. Steiner, 84 Ala. 307, 4 So. 184, 5 Am.St. Rep. 375; Hester v. First National Bank, 237 Ala. 307, 186 So. 717.

Claim against Stringfellow Lumber Company, a Respondent.

The bill alleges that complainant learned on August 19, 1938, that M. C. Batson was negotiating for a sale of the timber on the land, but did not learn the name of the prospective purchaser. So that, on August 20, 1938, he filed a bill in equity, not that in the instant suit, seeking a redemption of all the lands including that here involved and against Nancy Batson and M. C. Batson and their assigns whose names were unknown, and also filed a lis pendens on that day, as he had on the day before, of the pendency of his suit to redeem said land. The present status of that suit is not alleged.

This bill then alleges that he learned that Stringfellow Lumber Company claimed to have purchased said timber on August 25, 1938, not directly from M. C.

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Bluebook (online)
195 So. 873, 239 Ala. 535, 1940 Ala. LEXIS 366, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/batson-v-etheridge-ala-1940.