Cooper v. Lindsay

109 Ala. 338
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedNovember 15, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 109 Ala. 338 (Cooper v. Lindsay) 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
Cooper v. Lindsay, 109 Ala. 338 (Ala. 1895).

Opinion

HEAD, J.

Upon the former appeal in this case (Lindsay v. Cooper, 94 Ala. 170), in reversing the decree of the chancellor, who had denied relief to the .complainant, we held: First, that there was-an estoppel upon W. H. Price, by reason of the facts stated in the opinion, to deny that by the sale of the land in controversy, at which Thomas, E. Winston became the purchaser, there passed anything less than an absolute, unincumbered fee ; Second, that the defendants who were in possession, claiming under Price and through a purchaser at a judicial sale, were bound by said estoppel as fully as Price was ; and, third, that the right' of the complainant to maintain the bill was not affected and could not be defeated by any claim of laches, the statute of limitations, or the doctrine of prescription. Upon the remandment of the cause, an amendment was made to the answer of Mrs. Cooper, who now prosecutes this appeal, and this amendment presents the only new feature of the case. In all other respects the record is conceded tobe substantially the same as upon the former appeal. This amendment may be disposed of in a few words. Briefly stated, it sets up that, upon a voluntary division, without administration, of the estate of Judith M. Winston, deceased, made by her adult children, there was allotted to the complainant, a grand-daughter, (and paid to her guardian for her benefit, she being then a minor of tender years) a sum of money, and to the defendant Mrs. Cooper, as for her share in said estate, a note of one Murdock, upon which she indulged him, and to secure which she took from him a mortgage on the land in controversy. This mortgage she subsequently foreclosed, and at the sale she purchased the land for the debt. These facts are made the basis for the argument that complainant is estopped, because she .had the benefit of the money paid her guardian, to take from Mrs. Cooper any part of the laud she claims through Murdock, and the mortgage foreclosure. The proposi-' tion is thus stated by appellant’s"counsel: ‘‘The contention made by her amended answer is, that after the [341]*341complainant below, as one of the children of Thomas E. Winston, had received the equivalent of that debt of Murdock in actual money, while appellant took that debt for an equal amount in a division, where the character of the rights of both were equal and alike, she is estopped in equity from retaking any portion of that division from others of the distributees.” A full and complete answer to this is, that the complainant is not seeking to retake from the appellant any portion of that division, as counsel erroneously suppose. Mrs. Cooper, by the division, did not procure this land, but Murdock’s note, and it was her own folly and misfortune if she surrendered that indebtedness in exchange for land to which Murdock did not have a perfect title, but which belonged in part to the complainant. The foundation stone of the argument being thus withdrawn, the superstructure erected'thereon falls to the ground for want of necessary support. Certainly, no one would seriously contend, that because one distributee accepted a note of a third person as her share of an estate, and allowed a sum of money to be paid to another distributee for the latter’s share, this would authorize the former, without the knowledge, consent or participation of the other distributee, to take the land of the latter, from the maker of the note, in payment thereof, even when both distributees were adults. Much less could such a contentoin be made when, as here, the distributee to whom money was allotted was an infant, having no connection with the division of the estate, or with the indulgence granted to the debtor or with the taking of the mortgage, or with the purchase of the land at the foreclosure sale, all of which were the voluntary acts of the appellant. It is too clear for controversy that the complainant can not be turned into a warrantor of Murdock’s title, nor into a guarantor of the collectibility of the Murdock note, nor, upon any known principle of law, be estopped,.by anything set up in the amendment, from recovering her land from the appellant. Obviously the amendment showed no defense to the bill.

The case is, therefore, before us in the same plight as at the former hearing in this court, and, if the opinion we then announced be adhered to, an affirmance of the decree from which this appeal is prosecuted must follow. - That opinion, delivered by Justice McClellan, fur[342]*342nislies internal evidence of careful consideration and extensive research. Upon application for rehearing, it again received the sanction and approval of the court, and we now have no reason to doubt its correctness. Since an elaborate argument, however, has been made by appellant’s counsel, in an effort to show that the first two propositions therein decided do not harmonize, and that the second principle of law therein laid down is virtually destructive of the first, or, at least, shows that the principle of estoppel was inapplicable, under the facts of the case, to the purchase by Thomas E. Winston at the sale of Price as administrator of Walker’s estate, we will undertake to point out the error of this contention, which seems to form the chief reliance of appellant for a reversal of our former ruling and of the chancellor’s decree, based thereon.

In order to show that the defendants, who claimed under Price and through Barton, a purchaser at a judicial sale, were not entitled to protection as innocent purchasers for value, in good faith, without notice (waiving a direct decision on the question upon which the court was divided, whether mere privity with him who is estopped is sufficient to bind the party by the estoppel, notwithstanding good faith, want of notice, and payment of a valuable consideration), we used this language : “Our conclusion that the respondents are bound by the estoppel which rested on Price will be rested upon another consideration. They are purchasers, it is true, in good faith, without actual notice, and for value. They are also, however, purchasers at a judicial sale, the sale made by Price’s administrator to Barton in 1872, under an order of the probate court. To such sales the rule of caveat emptor applies in its utmost vigor and strictness. The court orders the sale, in such cases,only of such interest and estate and rights in the premises as he had and could have asserted ; no more, no less. The purchaser succeeds to his rights and attitude in respect of the property sold, ‘takes his shoes,’ stands in his place, acquires his interest as the same existed in his hands, subject to all infirmities of title then attaching to the estate, and to all equities, known or secret, which operated a limitation upon the nominal or apparent estate of the intestate in his lifetime. The purchaser buys at his peril; he takes upon himself the risks of any out[343]*343standing rights that- could have been asserted against the decedent; and if, by reason of the existence of such rights, whether known or not, or discoverable or not, he takes nothing by his purchase, he cannot complain.”

The foregoing extract from the opinion is now cited by counsel for appellant, with the suggestion that Thomas E. Winston was himself a purchaser at a judicial sale, and that, therefore, the same rale and its logical result would apply to his purchase at the sale of the interest of Walker’s estate by Price, the administrator. Pursuing the argument, counsel ask a series of questions in reference to said purchase by Winston, as follows: “What prevents the doctrine of caveat emptor

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Bluebook (online)
109 Ala. 338, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cooper-v-lindsay-ala-1895.