De Kalb County v. McClain
This text of 78 So. 961 (De Kalb County v. McClain) 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.
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The county of De Kalb contracted with appellee to purchase from him chert and gravel for the purpose of improving and maintaining the public roads of the county. Appellant county was to dig and haul the road-making material from the land of appellee at an agreed price to the latter per cubic yard. A stated quantity of the material was so dug, hauled, and used by the county. But the county declines to pay appellee therefor, basing its declination upon the fact that the material used by it was ■mineral matter, and that appellee did not own the minerals on and in the land from which said material was táken, but that the minerals were owned by one Killian. This defense was set up by special pleas 3 and 4. Demurrers were interposed to the pleas, but there appears to have been no ruling thereon. The trial was had on these issues, and after all the evidence was introduced the court gave the affirmative charge for the plaintiff, and the county appeals.
While there is a difference of opinion among members of the court as to the extent of this doctrine, and as to its applicability to certain cases, this defense is not availing, under the views of any member of the court. See majority and minority opinions in the case of Pearce v. Aldrich Mining Co., 184 Ala. 610, 64- South. 321, where most all the authorities are reviewed. In that case it is said in the majority opinion:
“The general rule is that'when things which in their natural state form part of the freehold are severed therefrom, and converted into chattels, they belong to the owner of the land. Mere changes in the form of things, so long as the identity of the material can be traced, will not work a change of ownership. And trover or detinue may be maintained for their conversion or detention, if • they are removed from the freehold. The owner of the freehold cannot, however, maintain either of these actions if, at the time of the severance he had not actual or constructive possession of the land — if the land was then held and occupied adversely to him. Cooper v. Watson, 73 Ala. 252; Adler v. Prestwood, 122. Ala. 367, 24 South. 999; Brooks v. Rogers, 101 Ala. 111, 13 South. 386. It is also well settled that, unless it is necessary to prove a constructive possession of land, the title thereto cannot be put in issue in these transitory actions. Or, as was said by this court, speaking through Briekell, C. J., in the case of Fielder v. Childs, 73 Ala. 567, and again in the case of Cooper v. Watson, supra, ‘the law will not permit the title to land to be inquired into directly.’ ”
This is undoubted law, and its observance is necessary to preserve certainty as to titles to land. If the nature, character, and extent of title to land can be inquired into and litigated in every transitory action which the owner and possessor may have with third parties, as to its products and usufructs after they are severed therefrom, then no title to land can ever be secure or be determined. If every fact alleged in these special pleas were true, and all the defendant’s evidence were true, they constituted no defense to this action. The plaintiff was in the updisputed possession of the land, including the road material sold and removed from the land and used by the county on the public roads. So far as this record shows, no other person has ever claimed the material or sought to *566 hold the comity liable therefor. The county appears to speak as a pure volunteer in asserting Killian’s title to the material.
The case is not brought within the rules declared in Sloss-Sheffield Co. v. Taff, 178 Ala. 391, 59 South. 658, or in Black Warrior Co. v. West, 170 Ala. 346, 54 South. 200, or in Hooper v. Bankhead, 171 Ala. 626, 54 South. 549, for the reasons that those were real actions, or actions in the nature thereof, or proceedings in equity in which the title to land can be directly inquired into and determined, and in those cases there was evidence to show that, after the severance of the surface and mineral by deed, the owner of the surface did not claim the minerals or mineral rights. 1-Iere the action is purely transitory and personal, and the undisputed evidence shows that plaintiff was in the possession of the road material sold and removed and was claiming it as his own. This precluded the right of Killian and those claiming under him to show constructive possession by the introduction of deeds. Pearce v. Aldrich Co., 184 Ala. 610, 64 South. 321.
The only verdict or j'udgment which should have been rendered was rendered; and hence the judgment is affirmed.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
78 So. 961, 201 Ala. 565, 1918 Ala. LEXIS 145, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/de-kalb-county-v-mcclain-ala-1918.