Bernstein v. Humes

78 Ala. 134
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedDecember 15, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 78 Ala. 134 (Bernstein v. Humes) 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
Bernstein v. Humes, 78 Ala. 134 (Ala. 1884).

Opinion

STONE, C. J.

When this case was last before us, 75 Ala. 241, we considered the admissibility of the documentary evi[139]*139deuce, constituting the chain of paper title, and ruled that the Circuit Court did not err in its admission. We adhere to that opinion.

It is contended for appellant, that in the deed of Caldwell to Yeatman, bearing date February 22d, 1839, only an undefined, partial interest is conveyed, of what is known as the “Isaac Jamison lot.” That lot is described in the Aciden (sheriff) deed, as “part of lot seventeen, fronting on Gallatin street fifty feet, extending eastwardly seventy-three feet, as the property of Isaac Jamison.” This property passed through several intermediate conveyances, with substantially the same description, until the title was vested in Caldwell, by deed fi-orn Horton, bearing date August, 1838. The description in the deed from Caldwell to Yeatman is, “part of lot No. 17 in the original plan of said town, fronting Gallatin street fifty feet, extending eastwardly seventy-three feet, known as the property formerly owned by Isaac Jamison.” We are at a loss to perceive on what principle this description is less comprehensive than that found in the other deeds. All bear evidence that they do not convey all of lot seventeen, but only a part of it. All convey a lot, part of lot seventeen, fronting on Gallatin street fifty feet, and running back seventy-three feet. The lot was sold, and first conveyed as the property of Isaac Jamison, and it is uniformly described as the “Isaac Jamison lot,” or the lot formerly owned by Isaac Jamison. We hold the deed from Caldwell to Yeatman conveyed all the interest the former had acquired from Horton, or Horton and Bobinson.

In the deed from Yeatman to Turner, trustee, bearing date February 23d, 1839, we find introduced other lots, which are conveyed to said Turner in connection with the “Bell Tavern property.” The lots introduced are the following: “One, the lot purchased of Wm. McKay, Jr., by the said Phillips, on which is situated the new brick building; the other, the lot bought by said Phillips of D. B. Turner, in the rear of the same, on which is erected a frame stable.” Turner conveyed to Wood the “Bell tavern property,” and with it, and as part of it, the two lots last above described, and the part of lot 17 conveyed by Aciden, sheriff. It also conveyed another piece or parcel of lot, apparently in lot 18. The lot described as having the new brick house on it, is also apparently in lot 18. It is said in this deed that the property conveyed “embraces, and is intended to embrace, the establishment in the town of Huntsville known as the Bell Tavern.” Now, the Bell Tavern was situated on a square, 295 feet on each side, bounded on all sides bystreets: Glinton street on the north, Jefferson street on the east, Bandolph street on the south, and Gallatin street on the west. This square was divided into four lots, each 147^-[140]*140feet square. The N. E. corner is lot 18, the N. W. corner lot 17, the S. E. corner lot 26, and S. W. corner lot 25. Turner’s deed to Wood conveys the entire lots 25 and 26, and in addition four other parcels, three of which are the Jamison lot, the lot with the new brick house on it, and the lot with the frame stable on it. These three parcels can not reasonably be supposed to be on either of the lots 25 and 26, for the latter were described and conveyed in solido, in a previous part of the deed. If accurately described, the lot with the frame stable on it is in the rear of the lot with the new brick house on it, sometimes described as part of the Bell Tavern. The deeds do not inform us on which lot or lots these two parcels, last above referred to, are situate, nor are their dimensions or boundaries given. The deeds from Wood down to the Huntsville Hotel Company pursue the descriptions given above, and keep up the designation, “the Bell Tavern property.” At Walker’s purchase, when the property was sold by the marshal, the entire four lots, 17, 18, 25 and 26, were sold and conveyed as the property of the Huntsville Hotel Company; and he conveyed the same quantity to the present plaintiff's. So, the plaintiffs show paper title to the property sued for, if that be the property conveyed by any of the various tributary deeds, which go to make up the Bell Tavern property, as described in Turner’s deed to Wood.

The deeds, however, do not fix and define the land sued for as being the premises conveyed, without the aid of extrinsic proof; and it would'seem that the proof, by which the Jamison lot is sought to be located, is entirely different from that which it is claimed identifies the small lot in its rear. Eirst, as to the Jamison lot — fifty feet front on Gallatin street, running back seventy-three feet. The deeds describe this, as in lot 17. There is satisfactory, documentary proof that the northern sixty-seven feet of lot 17, extending from the north-west corner south, was sold and conveyed by Jamison before Sheriff Acklen made his sale; and the title to that property has come down by regular conveyance to Bernstein, the defendant. There is, next, a lot of twenty-five feet front on Gallatin street, to which Jamison never had' any title or claim. On this lot the little brick house stood, and the deed to Jamison, which conveyed lot 17, excepted this twenty-five feet from its operation. Plaintiffs can assert no claim to either of these parcels. Next to the little brick house lot is the seven feet alley, mentioned in the conveyances. These several parcels cover about ninety-nine feet of the front of lot 17 on Gallatin street, and leave only forty-eight or forty-nine feet of the lot’s front on Gallatin street. These facts being shown by documentary evidence, it is demonstrated, by a process of exclusion, that this is the property [141]*141which was sold and conveyed by Sheriff Acklen. This lot is particularly described and counted on in the complaint, and the defendant pleaded not guilty, and thus admitted himself in possession of the premises sued for. It is thus shown that, as to the lot, part of lot 17, fronting on Gallatin street, and running back seventy-three feet, the plaintiffs have shown a complete documentary title, and a, right to recover, unless the defendant has made good some line of his defense.

The location of the rear part — some forty feet — of the lot sued for, is not defined nor ascertained by the documentary evidence. It requires extrinsic proof, oral or otherwise, to show that it comes within the descriptive clauses of some one of the deeds, in a chain of title which ultimately merged in the Bell Tavern property. For illustration, we may mention, that it would be sufficient' identification to prove that it is the lot on which the frame stable stood ; or that it is embraced within the McKay, Connally or Phillips sales. Or it would be sufficient to raise a prima facie case of right against one without title, to show the premises were once occupied as part of the “Bell Tavern property,” either as part of the stable, or as cow-lot, or in any other way, connected with the hotel, accompanied with such acts as indicate claim of ownership. The sufficiency of such testimony, however, would present an issue of fact, upon which the jury would have to pronounce. It can not be affirmed, as matter of'law, nor predicated of the mere documentary evidence, that plaintiffs have shown title to the rear forty feet of the lot in controversy. A charge, as to this part of the premises, can not be legally given, without hypothesis.

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Bluebook (online)
78 Ala. 134, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bernstein-v-humes-ala-1884.