Derrill v. Dillard

278 So. 2d 358, 291 Ala. 96, 1973 Ala. LEXIS 1057
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedMay 10, 1973
DocketSC 107
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 278 So. 2d 358 (Derrill v. Dillard) 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
Derrill v. Dillard, 278 So. 2d 358, 291 Ala. 96, 1973 Ala. LEXIS 1057 (Ala. 1973).

Opinion

*98 MERRILL, Justice.

This appeal is from a decree establishing a boundary line between the parties and vesting title in the ownership of the disputed property, .26 of an acre in the complainant-appellee.

This is one of those unfortunate instances where ill feeling between the parties has caused extensive litigation over approximately one-fourth of an acre which, under the undisputed testimony, was “low, wet, overgrown and snaky.” Many witnesses testified and the record here is a two-volume transcript.

The disputed strip is in the NW corner of the SW ¼ NW ¼ of Section 17, west of the Shirley Bridge Road, north of Poole Branch and contains .26 acres.

Conceding that this map is not drawn to scale, we insert it to help clarify the situation:

Appellee Dillard owned the SE ¼ of NE ¼ of Section 18 and a strip off the west side of the SW 54 of the NW 54 west of the public road in Section 17, Township 20, Range 11, containing 5 acres more or less, being the same land conveyed to J. W. Sartain by W. W. Sartain and wife by recorded deed in their chain of title. Appellee contends that the disputed strip is the north end of this description while appellant contends that appellee owns land north of Poole Branch in Section 17.

Appellant purchased the M. E. Vaughn homeplace from H. V. Smith (his father) in 1948 and the description in his deed reads:

“The Northwest Quarter (NW¼) of the Northwest Quarter (NW¼) of Section 17, Township 20, Range 11 West, situated in Tuscaloosa County, Alabama. It being the intention to convey the forty *99 acres more or less on which the old home site of Mrs. M. E. Vaughn is located and being the place adjoining the home place of H. V. Smith where he now resides whether properly described or not.”

It will be noted that the deed does not mention any land in the SW ¼ of NW ¼ of Section 17 and even though appellant built his house on that forty in 1948, the only paper title appellant has is that it was part of the “old home site of Mrs. M. E. Vaughn.” There is no contest in this case of appellant’s ownership of the land where his house is located. It is undisputed that the H. V. Smith home place is south of Poole Branch and the M. E. Vaughn land is north of the branch where it adjoined the H. V. Smith home place.

The trial court wrote a full and comprehensive opinion, tracing the title of each of the parties, making several findings and decreed that the appellee was the owner in fee simple of the .26 acres, and that the true and correct boundary line was as follows:

“The Shirley’s Bridge Road being the East boundary line of Complainant’s property and the West boundary line of Respondent’s property where said road passes through the Southwest Quarter of the Northwest Quarter of Section 17, Township 20, Range 11 West; and the North boundary line of the Southwest Quarter of the Northwest Quarter of said Section 17, Township 20, Range 11 West being the North boundary line of Complainant’s property in said Section 17, all being in Tuscaloosa County, Alabama.”

Appellee’s father had owned the Dillard property before he sold to appellee, and his father lived there for over twenty years. He purchased the land from his father in April, 1970, and shortly thereafter, appellant’s wife told him that the contested strip was Smith land. He then employed E. L. Hendrix, a surveyor, to run his lines, and while they were running the lines, appellant came down, cursed him, ordered him off the property and, according to appellee, appellant said, “I’ll kill you if you don’t get off.” Appellant later testified that he was mad “and I did threaten him.”

We quote some of the findings of the trial court:

“The Court further finds that the property heretofore described as having been purchased by the Complainant, Sydney K. Dillard, from his father, O. D. Dillard, was purchased by the said O. D. Dillard from one Walter B. Spencer and wife, Janie Guy, by Deed dated February 15, 1941, and recorded in said Probate Office in Deed Book 224, Page 267. The said Walter B. Spencer, also known as Walter Burris Spencer, was a witness at the trial of this case and testified on behalf of Complainant, Sydney K. Dillard.
“The Court also finds that the said Walter B. Spencer purchased all of said property conveyed to said O. D. Dillard, along with other property, from Mrs. Mary H. J. Ward, by deed dated January 11, 1937, and recorded in said Probate Office in Deed Book 178, Page 505, and went into possession shortly thereafter, and while in possession and before conveying the property described in the deed to said O. D. Dillard dated February 15, 1941, he had one Scott Eads, a surveyor of Tuscaloosa County, Alabama, to run the lines on his property and set and mark the corners, including the corners of the property that he later sold to said O. D. Dillard, and that he pointed out these corners to O. D. Dillard, including the Northwest corner and also the Northeast corner, both being marked by an iron pipe, of the Parcel in Controversy; and the Court further finds that the Northwest corner of this Parcel in Controversy (containing 0.26 of an acre), was the Northwest corner of the Southwest Quarter of the Northwest Quarter of said Section 17, and the Northeast corner of the said Parcel in Controversy was located where the North boundary line of said Southwest Quarter of the Northwest Quarter of said Section 17 intersected the west *100 margin of the Shirley’s Bridge Road; that witness Spencer and said O. D. Dillard walked over this property and these particular corners were pointed out to Mr. O. D. Dillard when he purchased the property above mentioned from said Spencer; that the said Walter B. Spencer was in actual possession of all the property he sold to said O. D. Dillard in said deed of February 15, 1941, including the property lying west of Shirley’s Bridge Road and north of Poole’s Branch to the North Quarter Section line of said Southwest Quarter of the Northwest Quarter of said Section 17.
“The Court further finds that said corners and markers as set by said surveyor, Scott Eads, and as shown by the said Walter B. Spencer to said O. D. Dillard, were later located and confirmed by a survey made and prepared by witness, E. L. Hendrix, a qualified and duly registered surveyor in Tuscaloosa County, Alabama, dated September 29, 1970, said survey having been offered in evidence by Complainant and admitted as Complainant’s Exhibit 13, and this survey showed that the said ‘strip off of the west side of the Southwest Quarter of the Northwest Quarter of Section 17 west of the public road containing 5 acres, more or less’, actually contains approximately two and one-half (2i/>) acres, and also that the Parcel in Controversy is bounded on the East by the Shirley’s Bridge Road, on the North by the North boundary line of said Southwest Quarter of the Northwest Quarter of said Section 17, on the West by the West boundary of said Southwest Quarter of the Northwest Quarter of said Section 17, and on the South by Poole’s Branch.
* * * * * *
“The Court further finds that Complainant, Sydney K. Dillard, and his predecessors in title through Walter B.

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Bluebook (online)
278 So. 2d 358, 291 Ala. 96, 1973 Ala. LEXIS 1057, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/derrill-v-dillard-ala-1973.