Golden v. Golden

54 So. 2d 460, 256 Ala. 187, 1951 Ala. LEXIS 66
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedOctober 4, 1951
Docket8 Div. 566
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 54 So. 2d 460 (Golden v. Golden) 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
Golden v. Golden, 54 So. 2d 460, 256 Ala. 187, 1951 Ala. LEXIS 66 (Ala. 1951).

Opinion

LIVINGSTON, Chief Justice.

This is an appeal from a final decree inequity specifically enforcing an instrument executed by heirs at law of W. B. Golden, deceased, wherein they agreed that the widow, their mother, might have a life interest in real property to which they held legal title, and right to use of personal property.

W. B. Golden died intestate July 9, 1946, leaving as survivors his widow, Mrs. Carrie Golden, and nine children, viz.: O. IT. Golden, Claude Golden, Bertha Sanders, Leonard Golden, Eva Sanders, Myrtle Baugh, William Golden, Fannie Golden and Leroy Golden. He left an estate consisting of approximately 76 acres of land, $2,700 in cash in bank and other personal property of apparently small consequence. On October 20, 1947, on their petition, O. H. and Leonard Golden were granted letters of administration upon the estate. Shortly thereafter the administrators filed petition in the probate court to set aside homestead exemption and dower interest to the widow in the land described and, also, to allot to her $1,000 worth of personal property. Commissioners and appraisers were appointed by the court and made their report. Thereafter the administrators filed a petition to require the widow to account for the personal property. At the same time they filed petition for authority to pay to the widow $1,000. It appears that authority for payment of this sum to the widow was granted and the money paid. It would seem, however, that the petition for an accounting was abandoned. The administrators filed a report of partial settle-[189]*189merit. On the same date Leonard Golden, individually, filed a petition to sell the remainder of the lands, after allotments made to the widow, for division among the joint owners thereof. Action upon this petition to set apart exemptions in the land to the widow and upon the petition to sell for division were pending when Leonard Golden effected the removal of administration of the estate from the probate court to the circuit court in equity.

In the circuit court submission was had upon the petition to sell the lands, and a decree was entered ordering such a sale on a date fixed therein. Prior to the date of sale, however, the widow, Mrs. Carrie Golden, filed an original bill, making respondents thereto all of the heirs at law hereinabove named. The bill alleges that on September 30, 1946, the respondents, surviving children and heirs at law of W. B. Golden, excepting O. H. Golden, executed and delivered to complainant, their mother, an instrument in writing attached to and made a part of the bill. The purpose and prayer of the bill is that the instrument be given effect as one conveying a life estate in the lands to complainant and a conveyance or sale to her of their interests in the funds of the estate' — except as to the interest of said O. H. Golden — or, in the alternative if the instrument be held to be insufficient as such conveyance, that it be held to be an equitable agreement to convey such interests and that it be specifically enforced as such.

Omitting the signatures, the instrument exhibited with the bill is as follows:

“State of Alabama 1 . "Jackson County Agreement
“Know All Men By These Presents, That, Whereas, W. B. Golden, deceased, departed this life in Jackson County, Alabama, in June, 1946, and,
“Whereas, the said W. B. Golden, deceased, left surviving him his widow, Carrie Golden, and the following named children: Leroy Golden, Fannie Golden, William Golden, Mrs. Myrtle Baugh, Mrs. Eva Sanders, Mrs. Bertha Sanders, Leonard Golden, Claud Golden and Oscar Golden, as his heirs and only heirs at law, and,
“Whereas, the said W. B. Golden was at the time of his death seized and possessed of a farm consisting of eighty (80) acres of land located near Section, Alabama, and in addition was seized and possessed of Two Thousand Seven Hundred Ninety-Six and 86/100 ($2796.86) Dollars, in cash, together with other personal property consisting of farming tools, equipment, etc., and,
“Whereas, it is the desire of the undersigned that their mother, the said Carrie Golden, have the use and benefit of the above described farm for and during her lifetime, and that she have the use and benefit of the cash and other personal property belonging to the said W. B. Golden at the time of his death, with the right and privilege of using so much or all of said cash and said personal property as may be necessary to comfortably support her for and during her lifetime.
“Now, Therefore, in consideration of the premises, and the love and affection that we bear toward our mother, the said Carrie Golden, and the further consideration of Five and 00/100 ($5.00) Dollars, cash, to us in hand paid by the said Carrie Golden, we do hereby agree that our said mother shall have the use and benefit of the above described farm for and during her lifetime, with the right and privilege to rent said farm and to collect the rents therefrom, and to exercise full and complete control of said farm as though the same were her own, for and during her lifetime; and we further agree that our said mother have the cash now on deposit with the State National Bank, Scottsboro, Alabama, in the sum of $2796.86 for her use and benefit, with the right and privilege to spend and use all or so much of said money as may be necessary for her comfortable support and maintenance, for and during her lifetime, together with the use of any other personal property that our deceased father, W. B. Golden, owned at the time of his death, with the understanding that any unused portion of said cash now on deposit with the State National Bank and any personal property remaining shall revert to the undersigned, according to the law of descent and distribution in the State of Alabama, upon the death' of our said mother.
[190]*190“Witness our hands and seals this the 30 day of September, 1946.”

Respondents O. H. Golden and Leonard Golden, as administrators and individually, and Mrs. Bertha Sanders and Mrs. Myrtle Baugh moved to strike the bill and filed a demurrer thereto. These being overruled, they filed an answer attacking the instrument on .the grounds (1) that it was not signed at all by respondent O. H. Golden, and was signed 'by the other respondents joining in the answer as the result of false and fraudulent representations made by other heirs; (2) that the instrument had to do with real estate and was not executed in the presence of witnesses in the manner required by law; and (3) that the agreement was signed with the understanding that it would not become binding until or unless signed by each and every heir of said W. B. Golden. Testimony was taken by agreement, and the cause was submitted for final decree on the bill and answer and testimony noted.

By its decree the court below held that the instrument- involved was not sufficient as one to convey title to real property, but that it was susceptible of enforcement as an agreement to convey upon the part of all those who executed it. It was, therefore, decreed that a life estate in and to the interest of each of those signing the instrument in the realty be divested out of them and invested in the complainant, and, further, that the net funds remaining in the hands of the administrators be declared to be the property of complainant, with right to the use thereof as stipulated in the agreement.

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Bluebook (online)
54 So. 2d 460, 256 Ala. 187, 1951 Ala. LEXIS 66, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/golden-v-golden-ala-1951.