Busbee v. Thomas

57 So. 587, 175 Ala. 423, 1912 Ala. LEXIS 122
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJanuary 18, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 57 So. 587 (Busbee v. Thomas) 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
Busbee v. Thomas, 57 So. 587, 175 Ala. 423, 1912 Ala. LEXIS 122 (Ala. 1912).

Opinion

SOMERVILLE, J.

The appellees sued the appellants in ejectment, and had verdict and judgment for the land- sued for.

The issue in the trial court and on this appeal hinges upon the proper interpretation of the deed offered by plaintiffs in support of their title. This deed Avas executed in 1853 by the owner, one Bradford, to one Kelly and others, as trustees, principally for the maintenance of a school, and in part for other charitable uses. The plaintiffs constitute the present board of trustees, claiming in succession to those originally named in the grant. The deed conveys “the follOAving described lot of land lying and being in the county -of Coosa and state of Alabama, and being a part of section eight in township tAventy-three and range tAventy east, in the Tallapoosa land district, containing and bounded as folloAvs; to Avit: Begimiing at the line of section eight [429]*429ivhere scád line strikes Socapatoy creek; thence down the north hank of said creek to a stake; thence due north to a stakej thence east to a stake in said section line; thence south with said line to the beginning. Said lines to he run so as to contain ten acres, and the academy, and said trustees are to have said ten acres run so it contains the academy and the Baptist Church and ten acres of land as they want it.”

The evidence shows with reasonable certainty that at the time of the grant in question an academy building stood near the southwest corner of the tract sued for, and a Baptist Church near the northeast corner; that for about 50 years past the tract has been commonly known as the “Bradford Academy Lot,” and its boundaries and corners have been identified and well known to a number of people living in the neighborhood; that the entire tract contains about 17 acres; and that rectangular lines running from the eastern and southern boundaries (as fixed by the deed), so as to barely include the academy and church buildings as they originally stood, would inclose about 13 acres.

Defendants objected to the introduction of the Bradford deed, on the grounds (1) that it was void for uncertainty of description; (2) because it vested in the trustees merely a power to lay off 10 acres, as they pleased, so as to include the academy and church, and this power has never been executed; and (3) because it was not shown that plaintiffs are the persons who can recover under the deed.

The rules of interpretation which declare the primacy and effect of variant modes of description in deeds, have been too often stated to permit of repetition here. It is obvious that the deed before us fully describes the tract of land intended to be conveyed by monuments, courses, and boundaries, located with reference to a beginning [430]*430point that is fixed and certain, by means of which the entire tract can, or conld originally, be definitely pointed out. It is true that distances are not specified; but the termini of the several boundaries, which are, of course, the corners of the tract, are fixed as to the western corners by stakes on the specified courses, and as to the eastern corners by the intersection of the courses with a known section line. The deed Avas therefore prima facie certain as to the land conveyed, and clearly admissible in evidence, it, of course, devolved on the plaintiffs to show the identity of' the tract thus described Avith the tract sued for; and in doing this it was necessary by competent evidence to locate the monuments and boundaries set forth in the deed. As to this, the only points of real controversy were with respect to the two stakes AAdiick indicated the southAvestern and northwestern corners, and with respect to the actual location of the western and northern boundaries.

H. R. Robbins, 64 years old, testified that he had lived in the neighborhood of the land practically all his life; that he attended school there as a boy; that he kneAV the original trustees; and that they were in possession of the tract of land sued for when he first kneAV it before the War, when it AA-as used for school, church, and cemetery purposes.

In the absence of any surviving monuments at all, an ancient possession under an ancient deed might be sufficient evidence of the original boundaries mentioned in the deed; and when such possession continues uninterruptedly for nearly half a century the fact becomes very cogent indeed. — Owen v. Bartholomew, 9 Pick. (Mass.) 520; Aldrich v. Griffith, 66 Vt. 390, 29 Atl. 376.

■ But Robbins goes further and testifies to the presence óf a stake at the northwest corner, which he had frequently seen when a schoolboy, prior, we may fairly [431]*431assume, to the year 1860. Much latitude must be allowed in the proof of ancient boundaries, and it was clearly for the jury to say, from all the circumstances before them, whether this stake was the stake referred to in the deed.

It will be noted that, since the southwest corner and the lines of the southern and eastern boundaries were certainly known, and since the western and northern, boundaries ran with the point of the compass and at right angles to each other, the location of the northwest corner would suffice to complete and close the entire boundary on all the four sides.

W. T. Smith, son of one of the original trustees, testified that he saw an iron post placed at the northwest corner more than 40 years ago; that about 30 years ago his father and one McKinney, who was also one of' the original trustees, pointed out to him on the land the corners and marked boundaries of the academy lot, which were the same as those now claimed by the plaintiffs. These boundaries Avere also shoAvn to have been commonly knoAvn in the community for, perhaps, a generation or more.

This, and much other testimony of a similár nature, however strongly disputed, necessarily carried to the jury the issue of the identification of the land, and Avas sufficient in this aspect to support a verdict for the plaintiffs. — C. & G. Ry. Co. v. Pilcher, 163 Ala. 401, 51 South. 11.

Whatever notion the grantor, Bradford, or the trustees, or any one else, may have had as to the number of acres contained in the tract he granted by specific boundaries is' Avholly immaterial. Even had be expressly declared an intention to convey only 10 acres, it would be unavailing to limit or qualify his definite description of the grant by monuments, corners and bouri[432]*432darles. This is a fixed rule of construction, and a rule of property as old as. the common law; and neither weight nor effect is ever given to a description in terms of quantity, except for the purpose of relieving some otherwise irremediable ambiguity in the more, particular description. — Page v. Whatley, 162 Ala. 473, 50 South. 116; S. C. Cement Co. v. U. L. Cement Co., 138 Ind. 297, 37 N. E. 721. But Ave discover in the grantor’s allusions to quantity no more than a mere estimate of the probable acreage of the tract; and, having regard to his plain purpose, we think he intended to limit the area doAvnward, rather than upward. In any case, hoAVever, this specification must yield to the boundaries actually named.

The right of the plaintiffs to sue in the capacity of trustees Avas duly and reasonably shoAvn. They were elected as such, as shown by the minutes of the board, and.were serving in that capacity.

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Bluebook (online)
57 So. 587, 175 Ala. 423, 1912 Ala. LEXIS 122, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/busbee-v-thomas-ala-1912.