Dent v. Foy

90 So. 317, 206 Ala. 454, 1921 Ala. LEXIS 185
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJune 30, 1921
Docket4 Div. 910.
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 90 So. 317 (Dent v. Foy) 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
Dent v. Foy, 90 So. 317, 206 Ala. 454, 1921 Ala. LEXIS 185 (Ala. 1921).

Opinions

GARDNER, J.

Appellants were duly appointed administrators of the estate of George H. Dent, deceased, and during the pendency of the administration thereof appellees, heirs of said estate, being grandchildren of deceased, filed a bill in the circuit court of Barbour county, in equity, for the removal of the administration into that court. This these heirs had a right to do without assigning any special equity (Acts 1911, p. 575); but the bill also contained averments seeking to charge some of the heirs with advancements, and other matters not necessary here to mention, including also a wale of the real estate of decedent for division among the heirs. There were demurrers interposed to this bill, which were overruled ; and the decree subsequently affirmed on appeal to this court. Dent v. Foy, 204 Ala. 404, 85 South. 709.

Subsequently appellants, as administrators of said estate, filed their petition in the circuit court setting up the pendency of the administration in that court that the widow had conveyed to the heirs her dower interest, that the estate owed no debts, and that several of the adult heirs had made written requests that the real estate described in the petition, as belonging to the estate, be sold for division by the administrators, and sought to have an order of court for a sale of the lands for the purpose of division among the heirs, as provided by statute. The written consent of the adult heirs, which in all respects was full and complete, .was duly filed with this petition.

The appellees to this petition filed pleas in abatement, setting up in substance the bill which they had previously filed seeking to remove the administration into the equity court, wherein, among other matters, they sought a sale of this land for division; and that the parties were the same, as was also the objects of the- two proceedings. Upon the hearing of the petition, the court sustained these pleas in abatement, and dismissed the petition for a sale of the lands for division. From the decree dismissing the petition, the administrators have prosecuted this appeal.

[1] There is therefore but one question here presented for consideration, and that is whether or not the filing of the bill by the appellees for the removal of the administration into the equity court — in which bill a sale of the lands for division was also sought — takes from the administrators of estate the i-ight to obtain an order for sale for division among the heirs, after having obtained the written consent of some of the, adult heirs as provided by statute. We answer the question in the negative. We recognize, of course, as contended by counsel for appellees, that upon the death of the ancestor the title to the land descends immediately to the heirs who have the right of immediate possession; but, as was held in Marshall v. Marshall, 86 Ala. 383, 5 South. 475, as well as in all the decisions, this is subject to “statutory authority of the personal representative to rent them, and to obtain a judicial order of sale for the payment of debts or for distribution.”' In Tindal v. Drake, 51 Ala. 574, speaking to the same subject, the court said:

*456 “The statutes of this state confer on the personal representative authority to rent and to obtain judicial decree for the sale of lands. These statutes are not construed as intercepting the descent, or affecting the common-law right of the heir to recover rents and profits, until the personal representative asserts the power they confer.”

The same principle is well expressed, in Nelson v. Murfee, 09 Ala. 598, as follows:

“Under our statutes, as at common law, the title to lands, on the death of the ancestor, descends immediately to the heir at law, or next of kin. Unlike the rule of the common law, however, it does not vest in the heir absolutely, but the descent may be intercepted, and the possession claimed and held by the personal representative, for the purposes of administration. * * Among the unquestioned powers conferred upon him is the right to petition for and obtain an order to sell the lands of his testator or intestate, for the payment of debts.”

The right of the administrator for an order from the probate court for a sale of the lands .for division upon the written consent of an adult heir or devisee is conferred by statute, and numerous sections of the Code deal with this particular power and its exorcise. Section 2521 et seq., Code 1907.

In ’Bragg v. Beers, 71 Ala. 151, the court, in speaking of the right of the heir to remove the administration into the chancery court, said:

“The court, proceeding according to its own practice, is governed by and applies the law controlling the settlement of administrations, the distribution of assets, or the partition or division of property, which prevails in the court of probate. The parties lose neither right nor remedy by resorting to a court of equity, instead of invoking the jurisdiction of the court of probate. If, to effect a final settlement, distribution, and partition, a sale of lands is necessary, the court will order the sale in all cases in which, under like circumstances, the court of probate would have had jurisdiction to order it.”

In Roy v. Roy, 159 Ala. 555, 48 South. 793, it was held that, after the removal of an administration into the chancery court, where a sale of the lands was sought by the administrator, all the requirements of the numerous sections as to such a sale in the probate court must be complied with, such as publications, guardian ad litem appointed for that particular proceeding, testimony taken as provided by the statute, and other provisions not necessary to note.

Subsequent to that decision the Legislature passed an act (Acts 1911, supra) the first section of which provided in substance that, upon the removal of the administration into the chancery court, that court may, in its discretion, proceed according to its own rules of practice, without regard to the statutory requirements providing for sale by administrators in the probate court. It is insisted by counsel for appellees that this statute renders inapplicable the language used in Bragg v. Beers, supra.

We do not so construe the statute. It is evident the purpose was to avoid the strict rule' as to the statutory requirements — some of which we have just noted — laid down in Roy v. Roy, supra, requiring a court of chancery to follow all the statutory provisions for a sale of the lands for division in the probate court. But it was not' intended, nor do we think the language of the statute is subject to such construction, to so change the rule of law recognized in the Bragg Case, supra, to the effect that by a transfer of the administration into the equity court the parties should lose any right secured to them by statute. As remarked by this court in Jemison v. Brasher, 202 Ala. 578, 81 South. 80:

“Taking jurisdiction, a court of. equity will administer the estate and apply the substantive law regulating the conduct and settlement of administration in the probate court.”

It was the unquestioned right of the administrator upon the request of an adult heir to obtain an order of sale of real estate for division. This was a statutory and substantial right.

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Bluebook (online)
90 So. 317, 206 Ala. 454, 1921 Ala. LEXIS 185, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dent-v-foy-ala-1921.