Galin v. Bieker

70 So. 2d 254, 260 Ala. 265, 1954 Ala. LEXIS 602
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJanuary 21, 1954
Docket6 Div. 633
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 70 So. 2d 254 (Galin v. Bieker) 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
Galin v. Bieker, 70 So. 2d 254, 260 Ala. 265, 1954 Ala. LEXIS 602 (Ala. 1954).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

This is an appeal by complainant from a decree rendered on June 30, 1953, sustaining demurrer to her bill of complaint and overruling her demurrer to a cross bill filed against her,

The bill made several persons respondents, among them was Margaret Bieker Young who filed a demurrer to it as amended, although her demurrer was not made to it as last amended. The decree recites that “it was submitted on the demurrer to the bill of complaint as amended”, without stating who were the parties that demurred. Citation of appeal was issued to Mrs. Young and the other respondents; and the supersedeas bond on appeal recites that she was one of the respondents who obtained a decree sustaining the demurrer to the bill. On this appeal she is complaining by her counsel that there was no decree rendered on her demurrer, and that the appeal ought to be dismissal as to her. It appears that the record sustains her counsel. The fact that citation of appeal was given her does not prejudice her right in any respect to demur to the bill as amended and have her demurrer acted upon, and it is not necessary for this Court to make any order in that connection. The appeal does not affect her.

■ As stated’ above, the decree recites that the. demurrer to the bill as amended is sustained. The original bill had been-filed on August 3, 1944, and it had been amended so many times that the trial judge determined that he would put an end to the pleading and made an order directing the parties to put in final form by a day certain such amendment as -they wished. The complainant on January 22, 1952, filed what is termed a substituted bill, which is set out in the record on pages 259, et seq. The bill is exceedingly long and prolix and contains many distinct transactions between different parties, reciting in voluminous detail every incident connected with each transaction. Demurrer was again filed to that substituted bill and it came on for hearing before the court and a decree was rendered- August 2, 1952 sustaining the demurrer to certain aspects of. the bill,' which eliminated all features of it except one.

That one feature which was left in the bill by the demurrer seeks to quiet the title in the complainant to a tract of eighteen acres and, in the alternative, seeks to have a lien declared on it for money expended by .her in respect to the property. Demurrers were separately filed tp the bill as it -then stood.

' The next matter which appears of record is another amended substituted bill filed February 18, 1953, which purports to be complete within itself as it appears on pages 357, et' seq. of the record. To that substituted bill a demurrer was filed March 2, 1953 purporting to be by the respondents, all excépt Margaret Bieker Young who does not join in that -demurrer, but a separate demurrer was filed for her by her counsel on April 10, 1953. Those demurrers were not ruled on.

The’next matter of record here material is an amendment filed June 11, 1953 to the substituted bill (pages 420-438 of record), adding some eighteen pages of transcript paper to the bill as amended, and setting up nothing in such amendment except a claim for damages of $50,000 stated in various so-called counts of paragraph “R” which is added to the bill of complaint. To the bill as thus amended demurrer was separately filed on June 29, 1953 by all the respondents, except Margaret Bieker Young. It-does not appear that Margaret Bieker Young filed demurrer to the bill as [267]*267last amended; or réfiled her demurrer previously filed;

While in that status, with respect to the original bill, the decree' of June 30, 1953, above referred to,, was rendered by the court. So that the bill as amended, to which that decree sustained the demurrer is as set out beginning on page 357 of the record and on the amendment filed June 11, 1953 which begins on page 420 of the record.

-. It is also noted in the decree of June 30, •1953, that “the demurrer of this complainant to the cross bill, was overruled”. We assume that refers to the cross bill of Z. L. 'and Louise Bieker, his wife, rather than to the cross bill filed'by Ernest Galin, the husband of complainant, although the decree ,on the demurrer does not identify the particular cross bill referred to.

• We think it advisable first to consider the ruling of the court'on demurrer to the bill and then proceed to'the cross bill after the original bill has been considered.

Equity Rule 11, Code 1940, Tit. 7 Appendix requires a bill to contain a clear 'and orderly statement of the facts on which 'the' suit is founded without prolixity or •repetition. It was said in Montgomery v. Drinkard Auto & Truck Co., 257 Ala. 685, 60 So.2d 823, 825, that a “bill should show with certainty'and clearness that the complainant has a right' that warrants- protection,- and tlie respondent must be distinctly informed-of -the nature of -the- case which he is called upon to defend; otherwise it is subject to demurrer.”

In the substituted bill' filed February 18, 1953 (beginning on page 357 of record), 'which was a part of the final substituted bill, ■to which the demurrer was sustained in the decree of June -30, 1953 and from which the appeal is taken, there are set out grounds of demurrer to the cross bill of Z. L. Bieker, Sr, That has no place in a bill of complaint. The cross bill should be defended by' a separate pleading, either in the nature of a demurrer or an answer to it. Equity Rule 26.' The bill of complaint is no place in which to demur to or answer a cross bill, but it undertakes here to do that as a feature of the relief sought in the bill. The bill then seeks to exercise the equity of redemption of an eighteen acre tract of land from a first mortgage given by Z. L. Bieker, Sr., and wife to one Popp, then held by Z. L. Bieker, Jr. It appears that her claim to do so is based on a conveyance to her of the equity of redemption by Z. L. Bieker, Sr., and wife.

So far as now material, it is sufficient to note that the land involved in this suit consists of two tracts, one of which we will refer to as eighteen acres and the other as lot No. 237. This property was owned by J. F. Bieker. In 1938 and 1939, respectively, .he and his wife executed separate deeds conveying the eighteen acres to his son Z. L. Bieker and lot No. 237 to three of his children Z. L. Bieker, Margaret Bieker Young and Ervena Bieker Galin.

In 1943 J. F. Bieker filed a suit in equity in the circuit court against Z.- L. Bieker, ’in which- Margaret Bieker Young and Ervena Bieker Galin joined, alleging that a material part of the consideration of those deeds was a promise to support him, and he claimed the right to exercise an option conferred by the statute to vacate those deeds. There was a final decree rendered in said cause on December 9, 1943, which granted the prayér of the bill and cancelled those two deeds.

The said Z. L. Bieker and his wife executed two mortgages on the eighteen acre tract. The first mortgage was-made oh August 3, 1938 to the Michael Popp Estate for $750; and a second mortgage was given by them'on the same day to George Popp for $150. The first-mortgage at the time this-bill'Was filed had been assigned to Z. L. Bieker, Jr., and the complainant, Ervena Galin, had taken up and had assigned ■ to her the second mortgage.., She also claimed that Z. L. Bieker, Sr., and wife, on August 12, 1943, conveyed to her said eighteen acres of land (Exhibit “H”).

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Bluebook (online)
70 So. 2d 254, 260 Ala. 265, 1954 Ala. LEXIS 602, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/galin-v-bieker-ala-1954.