Hatton v. Landman

28 Ala. 127
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJanuary 15, 1856
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 28 Ala. 127 (Hatton v. Landman) 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
Hatton v. Landman, 28 Ala. 127 (Ala. 1856).

Opinion

RICE, J.

The resulting trust alleged in the bill is a mere creature of equity, founded upon presumptive intention, and designed to carry that intention into effect, — not to defeat it. It will not attach in the person who supplies the purchase money, if it was not the intention of either party that the estate should vest in him or her. It will not be raised in opposition to the declaration of the person who advances the money, nor in opposition to the obvious purpose and design of the .transaction. The presumption of such a trust does not arise, from the mere fact that the purchase money is supplied by a parent, and the conveyance taken in the name of the son, who is not shown to be provided for.---1 White & Tudor’s Lead. Cases in Equity, 204.

It is conceded, on all hands, that no such trust is proved as to the eighty-acre tract described in the bill; but it is contended that such trust is proved as to the quarter-section conveyed by Samuel Hatton to James Hatton on the 11th February, 1834. And that is the only-matter which we are called upon to examine and decide.

There is evidence that the price really paid for the quarter-section was one thousand dollars; that James was an economical and money-making man, and a good manager; that his mother (a widow) had the benefit of his undivided attention to her business, from 1827 or 1828, until her death in 1841; that during that period he attended to no other business; that she also had the services of his only slave on her plantation, until the last of the year 1839; that these services of James and his slave, up to February, 1834, (when the conveyance of the [136]*136land was made to James,) were worth a much larger sum than the price paid for the land. There is no proof that James ever received any compensation for these services, unless the money paid for the land, or the land itself, was regarded and treated as such compensation.

Mrs. Jamar (a sister of Samuel and James Hatton, and of the female complainants) testifies that, before the land was conveyed to James, she was at her mother’s, when the land was spoken of; that Samuel then told her mother they wished to buy the land for James, that James wanted it for himself that her mother replied, she was willing for it to be bought for James, provided it could be paid for without getting her in debt or selling her negroes. There is no proof, or pre-tence, that the purchase of the land did get her in debt, or cause the sale of any of her negroes.

There are three subscribing witnesses to the conveyance of the land to James. One of them is not examined, and no reason is shown for this omission. The testimony of the other two does not even tend to prove any thing like a resulting trust for the mother of James, but, on the contrary, tends to prove that the purchase was made for him.

There is evidence that, when the mother of James told him that her money paid for the land, he admitted that fact, but claimed the land as his ownj that she knew he claimed the land as his own; that, soon after her death, ho took actual possession of it, and claimed and used it as 1ns own, until his death in March, 1847, and devised it to his widow, who continued in possession until she sold and conveyed it to Toney, a bona fide purchaser without notice of any opposing claim to it; that some (if not all) of the complainants knew that James claimed the land as his own before his mother’s death, and continued to claim and use it as his own after her death; that complainants were of lawful age as far back as 1834; and that Nancy Hatton did not marry John M. Lynch until after the death of her mother, Frances Hatton.

The bill was not filed until October, 1850, more than sixteen years after the conveyance to James, more than nine years after the death of his mother, about three years and a half after his death, and nearly a year after the sale by his widow to Toney. No excuse for this long and remarkable [137]*137delay in asserting their claim is proved by the complainants. They allege ignorance of the facts on their part, and concealment of the facts on the part of James Hatton; but this allegation is disproved.

Mr. Acklen testifies, that James Hatton, “some time in the year 1885, a short time before the date of his mother's will,” had a conversation with him “ relative to a tract OR tracts of land lying in Madison county;” and that James then stated “ that the legal title to said lands was in him, but that it was purchased with his mother’s money.” If it is conceded that James Hatton made this statement in relation to the quarter-section described in the bill, it is insufficient to support the claim of complainants, as asserted in their bill, when taken in connection With, the fact that James was the son of Frances Hatton. For, when the title to land is taken to a son, and-the purchase money is supplied by the parent, the purchase is deemed prima facie as intended as an advancement, so as to rebut the presumption of a resulting trust for the parent. 2 Story’s Eq. Jur. §§ 1201, 1202.

But the date of the will of Frances Hatton is July, 1838, which proves that Mr. Acklen makes a mistake of about three years as to the date of the will, although it was written by himself! We have no doubt of Ms honesty, but we have as little doubt that he is mistaken as to this date. And we believe he is also mistaken, when he says that James Hatton “assigned as a reason for that, that the wife of Samuel Hat-ton, from whom the conveyance was made, would not consent to unite in a conveyance with her husband to his mother, on account of some family ill-feeling, but was willing to convey to James Hatton, and did so.” For it is incontestably proved that, on the very day the conveyance of the quarter-section was made to James Hatton, the wife of Samuel did unite with her husband in a conveyance of another tract to his mother ! Besides this, the subscribing witnesses who are examined clearly prove -that “ family ill-feeling” was not the reason why the conveyance was made to James Hatton.

Mr. Acklen testifies, also, that after he wrote the will, it was read over to Frances Hatton, in the presence (as he thinks) of James Hatton and James Landman; that “ the subject of the land was then mentioned, as it had been left out [138]*138of the will, and it was then agreed by her, James Hatton, and James Landman, that it might stand in that way, as James Hatton would do what was right between his sisters, Nancy Hatton and Mrs. Landman, after she was gone, in relation to the land.” The bill does not set forth this agreement, nor claim any right under it. But, if it did, it is clear that it could not be enforced as an agreement, because it is void for uncertainty. It furnishes no means by which the court could determine “ what was right between his sisters” and James, in relation to the land. — Erwin v. Erwin, 25 Ala. Rep. 236.

But it is urged, that, although the agreement is void for uncertainty as an agreement, yet it is an admission that the land really did not belong to James, but to his mother. We cannot assent to that; for we cannot belieye that an agreement by A., to do “ what was right” between himself and his sisters, in relation to land which was held by him under a conveyance from its former undisputed owner, is, per se, an admission that the land did not belong to him but to another person. — Flagg v. Mann, 14 Pick. Rep. 481.

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Bluebook (online)
28 Ala. 127, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hatton-v-landman-ala-1856.