Henderson v. Noland

189 So. 732, 238 Ala. 213, 123 A.L.R. 483, 1939 Ala. LEXIS 349
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedMay 18, 1939
Docket6 Div. 438.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 189 So. 732 (Henderson v. Noland) 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
Henderson v. Noland, 189 So. 732, 238 Ala. 213, 123 A.L.R. 483, 1939 Ala. LEXIS 349 (Ala. 1939).

Opinion

FOSTER, Justice.

This is an action of ejectment by appel-lee against appellants, of whom John Henderson alone claims the land. It seeks to recover a strip of land of about five acres in a parallelogram near the center of the north half of northeast quarter of northwest quarter, section 33.

It is claimed to be a portion of a tract of ninety-six acres purchased by appellee from Mrs. Ollie Pearson Thomas by warranty deed, dated October 28, 1936. Both parties claim under J. G. Pearson, deceased, whose will was admitted to record on April 16, 1934. He left surviving five adult children, to whom all his property was bequeathed, and all of whom conveyed to one of them, Mrs. Ollie Pearson Thomas, supra, by warranty deed, dated November 2, 1935, —the land said to contain, ninety-six acres describing two forties as eighty acres, also sixteen acres in the north half of northeast quarter of northwest quarter, Section 33. This deed recites in parenthesis that deceased owned twenty-three acres in the north end of said forty, and had deeded five acres of the east end of it to Mitchell, and two acres of the east end to another, and described in a deed from one Tilley to Marler. This makes seven acres recited in this deed as having been conveyed by J. G. Pearson in his life time, which taken from the twenty-three acres, just mentioned, leaves sixteen, which with the two forties make the ninety-six acres conveyed to Mrs. Thomas. She by the same description conveyed ninety-six acres to appellee. He claims, and the evidence shows, that in order to embrace such acreage, and to take off the seven acres on the east end of the twenty-three acres his east line will extend to a location which includes the five acres here in queston claimed by John Henderson. John Henderson claims this five acres under a chain of title from J. G. Pearson in connection with the two tracts, to which reference was made above as a five acre tract and a two acre tract, each separately.

Of course the deed to Mrs. Thomas and by her to appellee could not serve to convey land not owned by J. G. Pearson in his life time. Whether the five acres now in dispute are included in the tracts which he had sold in his life time is a matter which must have attention. He had deeded to Mitchell on January 6, 1911, a tract said to embrace thirty-eight and one-half acres, which includes thirty acres in an adjoining forty on the east and the lot here in question, which is described as here material, as follows: “Beginning at the NE corner of the NE% of NW^ section 33, T. 20, R. 12 West, thence South 759 feet, *216 thence West 660 ft., thence North 279%ft., thence East 353 ft., thence North 279% ft-, thence East 287 ft., to point of beginning.” A diagram of a lot of that description so situated was introduced by defendant and is as follows:

Defendant insists that this was intended to embrace eight and one-half acres, described so that where it has north 279.5 feet, it should have been 379.5 feet.

Defendant claims that Mitchell sold this eight and one-half acres to R. S. Marler, but the deed was not produced. R. S. Mar-ler sold to Mrs. M. L. Marler a tract by deed dated February 15, 1919, including a lot, eight and one-half acres described as above, using the number 379.5 instead of 279.5. Mrs. M. L. Marler sold to her son A. G. Marler (and brother of R. S. Mar-ler) by deed dated September 5, 1922, eight and one-half acres by the same description. A. G. Marler is alleged to have sold the same to J. W. Jones, hut no deed was produced. ’

J. W. Jones sold to Thomas F. Harless by deed dated December 29, 1926, land including east half of northeast quarter of northwest quarter section 33. Thomas F. Harless sold to Oscar L. Pearson and Anna Pearson Springer by deed dated February 3, 1937, land by same description last above mentioned. Oscar L. Pearson and Anna Pearson Springer sold to appellant John Henderson by deed dated November 13, 1937, land by that same description.

The last three conveyances above purport to describe ten acres supposed to include the eight and one-half acres above mentioned and also the three and a quarter acres lying north and west of the other, making eleven and three-quarters acres in a parallelogram, including the five acres s.ued for off the west side thereof. This-, three and one-quarter acres is supposed to have been conveyed by J. G. Pearson before he died to one Tilley. There was no such deed produced. But there was pror duced a mortgage of record from Tilley to Pearson dated December 9, 1918, due November 1, 1924, including 213% acres, and which is supposed to include this three and. one-quarter acres as embraced in that part of the description as follows: “18 acres more or less described as follows: in NE% of NW%, seventeen acres off the South end deeded to W. O. Mills five acres-off the East end deeded to M. C. Mitchell, the remainder being 18 acres more or less, lying North and West of above described' parcels in sec. 33.” This small tract is then supposed to be included in a deed' from Tilley to Mrs. M. L. Marler, supra, by deed dated March 20, 1920, and to be-included in a description as follows: “Beginning ten yards north of the SW corner of the Osker Pearson 20 acres running-East 115 yards, thence South 145 yds., thence West 115 thence North 145 yards to point of beginning containing 3% acres more or less.” Said land being in section-33.

Mrs. Marler includes this by the same-description in her deed embracing also the eight and one-half acres to A. G. Marler, supra. And we have shown that the deed' by him to J. W. Jones was not produced, hut that the deeds from Jones to Harless, and from Harless to Oscar L. Pearson and Anna Pearson Springer, and from them to appellant John Henderson, describe ten acres as being the east half of northeast half of northwest quarter of section 33.

Appellant has argued only three assignments of error. One is the refusal to him. of -the affirmative charge; the second is in giving charge 6 for appellee, which we interpret to mean that although Oscar L. Pearson and Mrs. Anna Pearson Springer may not, along with the other heirs of J. G. Pearson, have owned the tract in dispute when they deeded it to Mrs. Ollie Pearson Thomas on November 2, 1935, and when she deeded it to appellee on October 28, 1936, the title which they later acquired from Harless, as shown above, on February 3, 1937, immediately passed to appel-lee under the warranties in his deed-chough the charge is not clearly framed, it is argued as meaning what we have said, without a suggestion that it is misleading in its effect.) The third contention in. *217 -argument is based on the denial of the motion for a new trial.

When there is an ambiguity or uncertainty apparent in the description of property conveyed in a deed, evidence of collateral circumstances which will tend to make it certain is admissible. Karter v. East, 220 Ala. 511, 125 So. 655; Slaughter v. Carney Mill Co., 221 Ala. 121, 127 So. 671, citing the older cases. In such a situation, the interpretation of the conveyance is a question for the court, while the finding of the attendant facts is a function of the jury. Chambers v. Ringstaff, 69 Ala. 140.

And here, as in all cases when the evidence is in conflict or the inferences are conflicting, the court must submit the finding as to them to the jury. Chattahoochie & Gulf Rwy. Co. v. Pilcher, 163 Ala. 401, 51 So. 11; Klepac v. Fendley, 222 Ala. 417, 132 So. 619; Garrow v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
189 So. 732, 238 Ala. 213, 123 A.L.R. 483, 1939 Ala. LEXIS 349, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/henderson-v-noland-ala-1939.