Busby v. Pierson

128 So. 2d 516, 272 Ala. 59, 1961 Ala. LEXIS 356
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedMarch 30, 1961
Docket6 Div. 487
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 128 So. 2d 516 (Busby v. Pierson) 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
Busby v. Pierson, 128 So. 2d 516, 272 Ala. 59, 1961 Ala. LEXIS 356 (Ala. 1961).

Opinion

*61 STAKELY, Justice.

Billie Gail Negron Busby (appellant) filed a bill to quiet title in rem to certain real estate located in Jefferson County. Lela Echols Pierson and others (appellees), include the heirs, devisees and next of kin of L. W. Mann, deceased, and A. T. Echols, deceased, and “any and all persons in the world claiming any right, title, interest, lien or encumbrance upon” the property in question. A guardian ad litem was appointed to represent the interests of Peggy Light, a minor, and all unknown parties who are infants or persons of unsound mind.

The land in question is part of a six acre tract. The conflicting claims at issue in the litigation result from the following situation. In 1903 J. T. and Alice D. Shugart conveyed the tract to A. T. Echols. A. T. Echols, who lived on this tract in a cabin with his family, died intestate in 1917. It appears that no administration proceedings were had on his estate. In 1923 the widow of A. T. Echols, Hattie Echols, who died in 1958, conveyed the tract by deed to L. W. Mann. In 1930 the interest sold to Mann passed to the State by virtue of a tax sale for failure to pay 1929 taxes. In 1945 the State conveyed its rights and interest, without warranty or covenant, to William Negron, who in 1954 conveyed his interest in approximately five of the six acres to his daughter Billie Gail Negron Busby, complainant below and appellant here.

Appellant’s position is that she holds a fee-simple title to the tract, free of liens and encumbrances, and is in possession of the land. The appellees, some of whom were the children of A. T. Echols and Hattie Echols at the time of his death and some of whom are the children of R. Harvey Echols, a son of A. T. Echols and Hattie Echols, who died after the death of A. T. Echols, on the other hand, contend that under the Alabama homestead statutes in effect at the death of A. T. Echols, §§ 4196 and 4198, Code of 1907, the widow Hattie Echols took only a life interest, with remainder in the children and grandchildren of the heretofore deceased A. T. Echols, that the interest successively conveyed, from Hattie Echols to the present appellant, was but the life estate of the widow Echols, that this life estate expired upon the death of Hattie Echols in 1958, that the property in question is now that of the appellees by virtue of the remainder interest.

The appellees filed a cross-bill to have the title quieted in their favor and by amendment to the cross-bill, sought relief in the form of a sale for division.

On November 19, 1958, a decree was entered by the court quieting title to the real estate in favor of appellant and dismissing the cross-bill. On December 19, 1958, the appellees filed an application for rehearing, which was presented to the trial court on that date. On the same date the trial court issued an order setting hearing for January 16, 1959, and continuing the case until that time. On April 7, 1959, the trial court granted the application for rehearing. There is no order or decree continuing the cause or retaining jurisdiction after January 16 that appears in the original record of the proceedings. On May 13, 1959 the appellees filed a motion for resubmission. On August 18, 1959 the trial court entered a final decree which purports to quiet title to the real estate in favor of the appellees. *62 It is from this decree that the appellant has appealed.

The guardian ad litem has moved to dismiss the appeal on the following grounds, in substance: (1) that the failure of the appellant to insist on any of the particular errors assigned constitutes a waiver of all the assignments, and (2) that the failure of the appellant to serve the guardian ad litem with a copy of the assignments of error requires dismissal of the appeal.

For reasons which we see no need to set forth, we do not think well of the first ground of the motion, but do consider that the second ground is good. Since we shall undertake to show that the final decree which vests title to the real estate in the appellees who are the children of A. T. Echols and Hattie Echols or their descendants, should be affirmed, we see no point in granting the motion to dismiss the appeal. The minor Peggy Light is one of the heirs of A. T. Echols and Hattie Echols.

In her original brief appellant, apparently in relation to her assignments of error number 2, 7, 10 and 11, attacks the trial court’s decree of April 7, 1959, granting the application for rehearing on the ground that the cause had by that date become discontinued and that the decree was thus rendered without jurisdiction. Appellant points out in brief correctly that the original record is devoid of any order continuing the cause or retaining jurisdiction in the trial court after January 16, 1959.

The transcript was filed in this court by appellant on December 9, 1959. On January 26, 1960, the trial judge entered a “Decree Nunc Pro Tunc,” which on the direction of the trial judge was certified to this Court as a “supplemental transcript” and filed in this Court on January 27, 1960. This nunc pro tunc decree, contained in the supplemental transcript, orders in substance the entering of a continuance, effective January 16, 1959, of the cause and a retention of jurisdiction until January 23, 1959, and, the taking of the cause under advisement and submission on its merits, effective January 23, 1959. The record is ordered to be amended accordingly and the supplemental transcript containing the decree to be filed in this Court. If this decree is effective, it will serve to supply the fatal omissions in the original transcript which, appellant contends, caused a discontinuance and consequently a loss of jurisdiction in the trial court. For purposes of the present assignment of error, the decree of April 7 would be thus valid.

Appellant has filed a motion to strike the supplemental transcript and a supporting brief.

Title 7, § 567, Code of 1940 provides that:

“The circuit courts * * * may, at any time within three years after the rendition of final judgment, upon the application of either party, amend any clerical error, mistake in the calculation of interest, or other mistake of the clerk or register, and may direct the writing up of any judgment, when the order for judgment was made at a previous time and the clerk or register had failed at such previous time to enter such judgment on the minutes of the court, when there is sufficient matter apparent on the record or entries of the court to amend by * *

Appellant contends that the quoted statutory provision does not authorize the nunc pro tunc decree in the instant case.

It appears from the nunc pro tunc decree itself that upon the filing of the appellees’ application for rehearing on December 19, 1958, the trial court on that date continued the application to Januai-y 23, 1959.

“and through inadvertence * * * [the] Court failed to make its written order so continuing said Application * * * but that its notes and records show that such order was made by * * * [the] Court and that on January 23, 1959 * * * [the] Court took the Application for Re-Hearing under submission and * * * al *63

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Bluebook (online)
128 So. 2d 516, 272 Ala. 59, 1961 Ala. LEXIS 356, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/busby-v-pierson-ala-1961.