Dunn v. Ponceler

193 So. 723, 239 Ala. 53, 1940 Ala. LEXIS 26
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJanuary 18, 1940
Docket4 Div. 89.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 193 So. 723 (Dunn v. Ponceler) 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
Dunn v. Ponceler, 193 So. 723, 239 Ala. 53, 1940 Ala. LEXIS 26 (Ala. 1940).

Opinion

ANDERSON, Chief Justice.

The bill in this cause was filed by the complainants, the appellees, to have the *55 court to adjudge and decree certain sales of lands of the complainants by the sheriff of Barbour County, made under executions issued against them from the Circuit Court of Jefferson County, Alabama, “void and of no effect,” and to have the deeds executed by said sheriff to the purchaser, Maude Dunn, cancelled as clouds upon the title of complainants.

The parties to this appeal have appeared before this court on four separate appeals, litigating the title to the lands involved in this suit. Dunn v. Ponceler et al., 230 Ala. 375, 161 So. 450; Dunn v. Ponceler et al., 235 Ala. 269, 178 So. 40; and Dunn v. Ponceler et al., 235 Ala. 280, 178 So. 47.

The first above mentioned case was an action of ejectment brought by these appellees against this appellant for the identical lands involved in this suit. There was judgment for the plaintiffs and the defendant Dunn prosecuted an appeal from said judgment, and on that appeal we construed the will of the late O. B. Pruett, the first husband of appellee, Ponceler, and the father of the appellee Walker, holding that the lands in suit were subject to appellant’s judgment lien, and, as a result of such holding, we reversed said case, and remanded it for new trial in the Circuit Court of Barbour County. That-suit was commenced on June 9th, 1933, and the reversal and remandment by this court was on May 9th, 1935, and the final judgment was rendered in the circuit court on October 14, 1935. The first sale of the lands by the sheriff of Barbour County under appellant’s execution was on June 20, 1932, and the second sale was made on August 13th, 1932.

The present bill was filed by the complainants against the said Maude Dunn on July 7, 1936. So, excluding the,time of the pendency of the ejectment suit, it appears that the present bill was filed less than two years after the execution sales complained of were made.

On the former appeal in this cause, Dunn v. Ponceler et al., 235 Ala. 269, 178 So. 40, a full and complete statement of the material and essential allegations of the bill was set out in the opinion rendered in the case. That appeal was taken by the present appellant from a decree of the circuit court, overruling the appellant’s, demurrers and holding that the bill presented a case for equitable relief. The demurrers took the point (1) that the Circuit Court of Barbour County (in equity) was without jurisdiction to entertain the bill; (2) res adjudicata; (3) laches; (4) statute of limitations; and (5) multifariousness. On that appeal we held that the bill presented a case for equitable relief against said sales, and affirmed the decree of the lower court.

On the return of the case to the circuit court, the respondent-appellant made answer to the bill, in which, among other matters and things, the said respondent denied that the property, under conditions then prevailing, and the uncertainty as to the title of the execution debtors, sold for an amount greatly less than its value, as charged in the bill, and also setting up the statute of limitations of one year; laches; and that the cause of action was res adjudicata, and by amended answers, set up that the complainant “wrongfully failed and refused to invoke a remedy by law at any time and resorted to this court of equity long after the expiration of one year from the acquisition of said notice (notice of the fraud) in disregard and violation of Section 6522 of the Code of 1923;” and further that the complainants were barred by laches by reason of the provisions of subsection (5) of Section 8949 of the 'Code and by laches by reason of the provisions of sections 8966 and 8959 of the Code; and by the “irremediable change of parties.”

We may here say that we have again considered our conclusion and holding on the former appeal, and we are still impressed that we reached a proper decision on all questions presented on that appeal, — and we adhere thereto.

On submission for final decree, the court below entered a decree granting the complainant full relief; holding that the sale under execution of the various pieces of property described in the bill (except the piece known as the residence house and lot), constituted a fraud on the rights of the complainants. It decreed that said sales should be, and were, “set aside and annulled and declared to be void and of no force and effect.” By this decree the court ordered that the register, after first deducting from the amount deposited by the complainants (which was the full amount of appellant’s judgment and interest), all accrued costs which were taxed against the respondent-appellant, pay to the said Maude Dunn the sum remaining, and that such payment “shall be in complete satisfaction of the judgment obtained by the said Maude Dunn against said complainants, and that the title to all the parcels sold by the sheriff under execution to said Maude Dunn shall be reinvested in said complainants, free from any *56 lien and encumbrance, so far as the judgment of said Maude Dunn against these complainants secured in the Circuit Court of Jefferson County, Alabama, may be concerned.”

From the foregoing decree, the present appeal is' prosecuted by the said Maude Dunn.

Having determined that the bill contained equity, it only remains to determine whether (1) the evidence sustains its averments, and (2) whether or not the bill was defective in not making the parties to whom the appellant Dunn, pending the litigation between the parties, had conveyed an undivided interest in payment of their attorney’s fees in representing her in the litigation with the complainants over said lands, parties to the bill, and lastly, whether the complainants are barred by laches and the statute of limitations from asserting the invalidity of said sales.

It appears from the evidence that the appellant on the 24th day of February, 1936, conveyed to James A. Simpson, as trustee, and to G. W. Winn, as trustee, a one-third undivided interest in the said judgment rendered in favor of said Dunn against the complainants, and a one-third undivided interest in the lands involved in this suit. It further appears that the conveyance to said parties was in trust for the named trustees, and their respective law partners.

It further appears from the evidence that James J. Winn, the law partner of said G. W. Winn, conveyed his one-twelfth undivided interest in said property to the said Dunn on April 30th, 1936, for the sum of $250; and that the said G. W. Winn had died before this bill was filed, leaving surviving him certain named children, who have not been made parties to this litigation, nor have the said James A. Simpson, and his law partners, been made parties.

The evidence in this case has been carefully considered, and the conclusion is unescapable that the property sold under the executions on appellant’s judgment, was sold by the sheriff to the appellant, execution plaintiff, for not exceeding five per cent of its true value.

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Bluebook (online)
193 So. 723, 239 Ala. 53, 1940 Ala. LEXIS 26, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dunn-v-ponceler-ala-1940.