Hames v. Irwin

45 So. 2d 281, 253 Ala. 458, 1949 Ala. LEXIS 250
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedOctober 6, 1949
Docket8 Div. 382.
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 45 So. 2d 281 (Hames v. Irwin) 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
Hames v. Irwin, 45 So. 2d 281, 253 Ala. 458, 1949 Ala. LEXIS 250 (Ala. 1949).

Opinion

LAWSON, Justice.

This appeal is from a final decree ordering a sale'for division among tenants in common of a tract of land consisting of approximately eighty acres.

For the purposes of this appeal, we can treat the appellees, complainants below, as being the children of D. W. Irwin, deceased, and the respondents below as being one Willie Shelton and the children of L. R. Hames, deceased.

The real controversy is between complainants and the respondent Charles E. Hames, 'one of the children of L. R. Hames, deceased.

Complainants contend that they own an undivided Yi interest in the property and that the respondents Nina Lois Hames and George I. Hames each own an undivided Yr interest therein. Charles E. Hames claims title to all the property.

Submission to the trial court was in the main on documentary evidence and written agreements of the parties. There was one witness examined orally ¡before the court, but her testimony has no bearing upon the real issues in the case.

The trial court decreed that the complainants are the owners of an undivided Yi interest in the suit property and that respondent Charles E. Hames is the owner of an undivided Vi interest therein. From that decree Charles E. Hames has appealed to this court. None of the other -respondents have appealed.

L. R. Hames, the father of appellant, owned the suit property at the time of his • death, having acquired it by purchase from one L. E. Wood in 1905. L. R. Hamds died prior to May 18, 1921. He was survived by his. widow, Ida A. Hames, and seven children, Lena C. Hames, J. R. Hames, Denia Hames Nelson, Jennie Flames Collins, Nina Lois Hames, George I. Hames, and the appellant, Charles E. Hames. .

It is the contention of complainants, appellees, that their father, D. W-. Irwin, acquired the interest of all the children of L. R. Hames except that of Nina Lois Hames *461 and George I. Hames. D. W. Irwin died in 1929. The complainants, of course, claim under their father.

Complainants claim an undivided % interest in the suit property, that is, the interest of Lena C. Hames and J. R. Hames, as a result of mortgage foreclosure proceedings. The record shows that on May 18, 1921, the widow of L. R. Hames, deceased, Ida A. Hames, and two of the children, Lena C. and J. R., executed a mortgage on the 160-acre tract of land, of which the suit property is a part, to D. W. Irwin to secure an indebtedness of approximately $1800. I. L. "Hames, the wife of J. R. Hames, joined in the conveyance, but her separate acknowledgement was not taken. This mortgage was foreclosed on, to wit, January 21, 1922, and D. W. Irwin, the mortgagee, was the purchaser at the foreclosure sale, as was authorized by the terms of the mortgage. The foreclosure deed purported to .convey to Irwin “the undivided interest of Ida A. Hames, J. R. Hames and L. [Lena] .C. Hames.”

Complainants claim to own the undivided SA interest of Jennie Hames Collins, Denia Hames Nelson, and Charles E. Hames, the appellant, by virtue of a sheriff’s deed of July 21, 1927, following an execution sale of July 19, 1927. D. W. Irwin, the father of complainants, was the grantee named in the sheriff’s deed. It affirmatively .appears in the said sheriff’s deed that the execution sale was held in front of the Post Office door in the town of Courtland, in Lawrence County, and not at the court house in Moulton, which town is and was the county seat of Lawrence County. We know judicially that there was no court house in the town of Courtland or in any town in Lawrence County other than Moulton.

The suit property was sold at tax sale on August 10, 1931. Respondent Willie Shelton was the purchaser at said sale. The probate judge of Lawrence County executed a tax deed to Shelton on September 1, 1933.

On March S, 1934, George I. Hames and Nina Lois Hames, by quitclaim deeds, conveyed their interest in the suit property to ■the appellant, Charles E. Hames.

Thereafter on, to wit, January 30, 1935, Willie Shelton, the tax sale purchaser, conveyed his interest in the suit property to appellant. However, the consideration expressed in the deed from Shelton to appellant was not paid. Appellant executed a mortgage on the property to Shelton to secure the purchase price. Appellant has paid some interest but none of the principal. It was agreed that out of the proceeds of the sale of the property, if such sale should be ordered, Shelton should be paid the sum of ?440 before distribution and that out of the share to which the appellant, Charles E. Hames, might be entitled, Shelton' should be paid the sum of $100. This appeal doe's not any wise question the decree of the court in so far as it effectuates the terms of this agreement.

Appellant contends that by virtue of the tax sale proceedings the complainants lost whatever interest they may have had in the said property and that .by virtue of the conveyance to him by Shelton he owns all of the property.

We cannot agree with this contetltion. The tax deed was void in that the sale was based on an assessment made by the tax assessor to D. W. Irwin for the tax year beginning October 1, 1929, and ending " September 30, 1930. At the time of such assessment D. W. Irwin was dead, his death having occurred on January 23, 1929. Land cannot be assessed for taxation as the property of a deceased owner or of his estate and a sale founded on such ah assess- " ment is a nullify. Webb v. Griffin, 243 Ala. 468, 10 So.2d 458, and cases cited. The tax deed being void, all that Shelton acquired was a right to be reimbursed by one who had a right to redeem in such amount as the law allows (§ 283, Title 51, Code 1940), unless possession such as is required’under § 295, Title 51, Code 1940, is shown. Odom v. Averett, 248 Ala. 289, 27 So.2d 479. § 295, Title 51, supra, is commonly referred to as the short statute of limitations.

Shelton was never in possession of the property. The only evidence in this, case as to the possession of the suit property-.is found in an agreement of the parties, which . is as follows:

*462 “The undersigned solicitors of record representing all the parties complainant in the above entitled cause and representing all the parties respondent except those-against whom decrees pro con'fesso have heretofore been rendered and those parties respondent, namely, to wit: — Nina Lois Hames, G. P. Collins and Jennie Collins, who have heretofore agreed in writing for a submission of this cause -for final decree, hereby agreed, -consent and assent by, between and among themselves as follows :—

“1. That the Hames, that is, C. E. Hames, (Charles E. Hames), J. R. Hames, and their mother -and father before them (and the rest of the Hame [sic] heirs), and those through whom they -claim have been in the -actual possession of the real estate involved in this cause, and that the complainants nor the 'complainants’ ancestors have at any time been in possession of any of this land involved in this suit. Nor does [sic] the Ha-mes derive their title nor claim to said land through or by the complainants nor the complainants’ forefathers. That the Hames have been in possession of this lands [sic] involved in this suit for a period of over 40 years.

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45 So. 2d 281, 253 Ala. 458, 1949 Ala. LEXIS 250, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hames-v-irwin-ala-1949.