Bell v. Ellis' Heirs
This text of 1 Stew. & P. 294 (Bell v. Ellis' Heirs) 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.
Opinion
The heirs of John Ellis brought this action of assumpsit in tire Court below, against the plaintiff in error, to recover rent for the use and occupation of a certain quarter section of land, in 1825, of which their said ancestor, died, possessed.
[295]*295The bill of exceptions shews, that Samuel Gragg, and the widow of said EHir, having administered on his estate, had, for some years previous to 1824, rented said land, and applied the proceeds to the support of the widow and family---die never having had her dower assigned. Prior to 1824, one John S. White married said widow, and as administrator in right of his wife, together with Gragg the other administrator, rented said land for that year to Bell, the plaintiff in error. By an act of tho Legislature, the personal representatives of Ellis were authorised, upon certain conditions therein specified, to sell this land. It was proved that Bell was in possession for the year 1825, and that some time early in that year he contracted, with snid EJliile for tho purchase thereof, bnt not in the i jaaoer sanctioned by tho act of Assembly. After the 3reur 1825, the land was sojd according to the provisions of the act, to one Turner, for about fo^r thousand dollars. The plaintiffs in the Circuit Court offered said John S. White as a witness. The defendant objected to his competency on the ground of interest; but the Court overruled the objection, and White being examined, testified essentially different from the other witness as to the sale to Bell. In this state of facts the Court charged the jury, that they should consider the sale made by White as void, he having no interest or power to sell in any other manner than that prescribed by the statute, and that such sale formed no bar to the recovery of rent from the defendant as tenant. Bell then moved the Court to charge, as in case of non-suit, for the non-joinder of White, as plaintiff in the action, who, it was insisted, was entitled to his wife’s dower. But the Court refused, and charged, that White had no interest in the [296]*296suit, as the dower of his wife had not been set apart.
B y the assignment of errors, the correctness of these several opinions are brought to our view, together with the^further question,' whether, under the state of facts presented by the record, the action of assumpsit, for use and occupation on an implied promise will lie. As the last is a question which may be decisive of the case, I shall notice it first. The action of as-sumpsit for rent will not lie at Common Law except upon' an express promise, made at the time of the demise. The action, such as the one we are now considering, is given by our act of December, 1812,
[297]*297The cases cited from 13 Johns. 240 and 297 do not seem to conflict with those already referred to. They only determine that assumpsit for use and occupation, will lie upon an implied promise when a tenant holds over after the expiration of a lease by deed. In the first case the Court say “ that the holding over is characterised by the previous lease, and must be deemed a holding by implied permission of the original lessor; and in the other, they expressly distinguish it from the one of Smith vs. Stewart.”
The judgment of the Circuit Court must be reversed.
Aik. Dig. 701.
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1 Stew. & P. 294, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bell-v-ellis-heirs-ala-1832.