Brooks v. City of Birmingham

27 So. 2d 249, 248 Ala. 227, 1946 Ala. LEXIS 224
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedAugust 2, 1946
Docket6 Div. 403.
StatusPublished

This text of 27 So. 2d 249 (Brooks v. City of Birmingham) 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
Brooks v. City of Birmingham, 27 So. 2d 249, 248 Ala. 227, 1946 Ala. LEXIS 224 (Ala. 1946).

Opinion

*229 LAWSON, Justice.

The bill in this case was filed by appellants, Dovie Smith Brooks et al., as trustees of Greenwood Cemetery Company, a corporation, against the City of Birmingham.

The purpose of the bill was to have the court declare that a municipal improvement assessment made by the City of Birmingham against certain property of the Cemetery Company was void and that the deed wherein the City became the purchaser at a sale to satisfy the said assessment was likewise void.

Demurrer was sustained to the original bill. Respondent answered the bill as amended. .The appeal is from a decree denying relief and dismissing the bill.

The facts as stipulated between the parties are in substance as follows: Greenwood Cemetery Company was incorporated in June, 1925, for the following purposes, as expressed in its certificate of incorporation: (1) To purchase or otherwise acquire and own real estate; (2) to construct, lay out, and maintain one or more cemeteries in Jefferson County, Alabama, and to use or permit the same to be used for the burial therein of human remains; (3) to buy, sell, rent, lease and sub-lease real estate; (4) to borrow money and execute notes and mortgages to secure said notes whether for money borrowed or other indebtedness; (5) to sell lots and graves iin such cemetery, and to do any and all other things necessary or customary in the operation of a cemetery. The amount of the total authorized capital stock was $3,-000, all of which was paid in.

In June, 1925, the Greenwood Cemetery Company received a deed to approximately sixteen acres of land, which land was described by metes and bounds, and was conveyed as one tract. The property described in said deed also included p strip of land approximately thirty feet wide, used as a dirt road continuously since a date prior to December 31, 1910. Complainants insist that the Greenwood Cemetery Company has continuously owned as one parcel all the land embraced in the deed, including the road, which they contend is a private road. The said dirt road goes through the cemetery. At one end it intersects Woodlawn Road and at the other end it intersects University Avenue. Woodlawn Road and University Avenue are both public thoroughfares of the City of Birmingham. The respondent claims that said dirt road is a public road by prescription. It appears that since 1910 the City of Birmingham at intervals has worked and maintained the said dirt road and it has been used since that time by the public without any interruption, hindrance or protest on the part of any person or corporation holding title to the abutting lands. There is no evidence to the contrary.

*230 There is no survey of record which makes a division of the entire tract of land which was conveyed to the Greenwood Cemetery Company in 1925 but, for the purpose of clarifying the issues in this case, a map was. introduced in evidence, which was prepared by agreement of the parties itnder the supervision of the City Engineer. This map shows the land purchased in 1925 by the Greenwood Cemetery Company to be divided into three tracts. The map shows that one tract is bounded by lines apparently drawn with a red pencil and is referred to in the testimony as the red tract; another tract is bounded by lines drawn with a blue pencil and is referred to in the evidence as the blue tract; while the third tract is bounded by lines apparently drawn with a yellow pencil and is referred to as the yellow tract. A rough sketch of the pertinent features of the map is hereafter set out, wherein that tract which is referred to in the evidence as the red tract is designated as Tract No. 1 and will be hereinafter so referred to. That portion of the land referred to as the blue tract is designated as Tract No. 2, and that portion referred to in the testimony as the yellow tract is designated Tract No. 3. ever been used for any purpose other than for burial purposes, all of it having been used and held under the authority covered by the certificate' of incorporation. A charge of ten dollars per grave has been made. Of this sum, five dollars has been used to pay for the opening of the grave and the rest of said sum has been used for incidental expenses in maintaining the property. No dividends have been declared nor is it contemplated that dividends or profits will be paid or made from the cemetery.

On December 13, 1927, the City of Birmingham, by and through its City Commission, duly adopted an ordinance which provided for the improvement of Wood-lawn Road which, according to the map, abuts that portion of the land described herein as Tract No. 1.

An assessment was levied against Tract No. 1 on the 26th day of March, 1929, in the amount of $900.28. On April 30, 1929, the Greenwood Cemetery Company appealed from the assessment levied against Tract No. 1. Thereafter on the 31st day of December, 1929, the City Commission of the City of Birmingham reduced the amount of the assessment to $750.23,

No bodies have ever been interred on Tracts No. 1 and No. 3, but more than five thousand bodies have been interred upon Tract No. 2. None of the property has whereupon the Greenwood Cemetery Company, acting by and through its duly authorized agents, withdrew its appeal from the assessment.

*231 . Upon default in payment of the assessment after the same had been reduced, the City of Birmingham became the purchaser of said Tract No. 1 at a foreclosure sale of the assessment lien claimed by the City against' said property. A deed conveying the said Tract No. 1 to the City of-Birmingham, based upon said foreclosure sale, was executed on May 29, 1931, and filed for record on June 8, 1931.

At the time the City of Birmingham made said .assessment and sale, there had been no «subdivision of the property acquired by the Greenwood Cemetery Company in 1925. There had been no survey setting the land or any part thereof off in lots or blocks by the Greenwood Cemetery Company. The manner in which the City arrived at its description of Tract No. 1, which description was the description contained in the foreclosure deed to the City, was by private survey made by its engineers. Neither the Greenwood Cemetery Company nor any of its duly authorized agents had any knowledge of said survey being made either at'the time that it was made or prior to said assessment. At the time of the assessment' and sale thereunder, the Greenwood Cemetery Company owned as one tract all of the lands designated herein as Tracts 1, 2 and 3, in that the said Cemetery Company had acquired all of said lands by deed executed in 1925, heretofore referred to.

Complainants now claim that Tract No. 1 is needed by them for burial purposes.

The parties agree that the ordinance providing for the improvement of Wood-lawn Road, the assessment against Tract No. 1, the sale thereof, and the deed were all valid in every respect unless said assessment and deed are void for either, or ^both of the following reasons: (1) That Tract No. 1 was exempt from assessment as cemetery property; (2) the amount of the assessment exceeded the increased value of said Tract No. 1 by reason of the special benefits derived from Woodlawn Road.

It appears that sometime subsequent to the date on which the City of Birmingham secured the deed to Tract No. 1, the Greenwood Cemetery Company went into the hands of a receiver.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

State v. City of Montgomery
151 So. 856 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1933)
Jasper Land Co. v. City of Jasper
127 So. 210 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1930)
Jefferson County v. City of Birmingham
178 So. 226 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1938)
Alldredge v. Dunlap
197 So. 36 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1940)
City of Birmingham v. State Ex Rel. Carmichael
170 So. 64 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1936)
Armstrong v. Williamson & Wilson
125 So. 681 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1930)
Jones v. Lacey
125 So. 635 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1930)
Florence Gin Co. v. City of Florence
147 So. 417 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1933)
Wynn v. First Nat. Bank of Dothan
159 So. 58 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1934)
City of Birmingham v. Terrell
158 So. 748 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1935)
Peoples v. State Security Bank
119 So. 226 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1928)
Day v. City of Montgomery
93 So. 609 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1922)
City of Woodlawn v. Durham
50 So. 356 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1909)
City of Huntsville v. Madison County
52 So. 326 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1910)
City of Birmingham v. Wills
59 So. 173 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1912)
City of Huntsville v. Gudenrath
69 So. 629 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1915)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
27 So. 2d 249, 248 Ala. 227, 1946 Ala. LEXIS 224, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brooks-v-city-of-birmingham-ala-1946.