Hollis v. Watkins

66 So. 29, 189 Ala. 292, 1914 Ala. LEXIS 122
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJune 30, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 66 So. 29 (Hollis v. Watkins) 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
Hollis v. Watkins, 66 So. 29, 189 Ala. 292, 1914 Ala. LEXIS 122 (Ala. 1914).

Opinion

de GRAFFENRIED, J.

J. K. P. Hollis and T. C. Hollis were tenants of a tract of land containing something less than 1,000 acres. They were brothers, and each was married. J. K. P. Hollis was without children, but T. C. Hollis was the father of seven. The relations between the families were evidently pleasant, because, for a long period of years, the two families lived in harmony upon the said property. In fact, all of the children of T. C. Hollis appear to have been born on this land, and some of them were of lawful age when T. C. Hollis died.

There were two residences and separate settlements on the land. One of these residences was occupied by J. K. P. Hollis and his wife, Mattie Hollis. The other residence was occupied by said T. C. Hollis and his wife, Susie Hollis, and their children. The two families cnl[294]*294tivatecl separate fields upon the property, but the two brothers remained tenants in common of the property until T. C. Hollis died. After the death of T. 0. Hollis, which occurred several years before the filing of the bill, his widow and children remained upon the property and continued to- reside upon and cultivate parts of it, just as T. C. Hollis had done prior to his death. J. K. P. Hollis then died, leaving the said Mattie Hollis as his widow and the said seven children of his deceased brother, T. C. Hollis, as his only heirs. Upon the death of their fath'er, T. C. Hollis, his said seven children— the said T. C. Hollis left no will — became, as his heirs, tenants in common of Ms undivided half interest in the said lands, subject, of course, to the dower and homestead rights of their mother, Susie Hollis. Upon the death of their uncle, J. K. P. Hollis — who- also died without a will — -these seven children became the owners, as tenants in coihmon, as his only heirs, of his undivided one-half interest in said lands, subject to the homestead and dower rights of the said widow of J. K. P. Hollis. No homestead has been set apart to the widow of T. C.Hollis, and no dower has been assigned to her. A homestead has been set apart out of the lands to the said Mattie Hollis, the widow of J. K. P. Hollis.

1. The widow and heirs of T. C. Hollis and the widow and heirs of J. K. P. Hollis, in tMs proceeding, upon the facts of this case, and under its peculiar equity, piust be treated as if the heirs of T. 0. Hollis and th-e heirs of J. K. P. Hollis were not the same individuals. As to this land, when T. C. Hollis died, his widow and his heirs stood in his shoes. They were, in so- far as this land is concerned, invested with the same legal and equitable rights that the said T. C. Hollis had in them while he lived, no more and no less. They were entitled, just as T. C. Hollis was entitled, to- have these lands [295]*295partitioned, and, under the evidence in this case, the lands could then — and can now — lie divided into two equal parts. If such partition had then been had, a homestead could, out of the part set aside to the widow and heirs of T. C. Hollis, have been set apart to the widow of said T. C. Hollis, and dower could have been assigned to her out of such part. Upon the death of J. K. P. Hollis a homestead could have been set apart and dower could have been assigned to- his widow out of the part allotted to said J. K. P. Hollis. Indeed, but for the fact that T. C. Hollis and J. K. P. Hollis were brothers and that each, for many years prior to the death of said T. C. Hollis, had resided upon and separately cultivated different parts of said lands, but for the fact that J. K. P. Hollis had no children, and that the children of his deceased brother, upon his death, wo-uld become his only heirs — we think it probable that, upon the death of T. C. Hollis, a partition would have been had. Now, out of respect to the conflicting rights and equities of the parties, since J. K. P. Hollis is dead, his widow and his heirs should, at the hands of the courts, receive the same treatment as if J. K. P. Hollis himself had left children, or, as already stated, as if his heirs Avere not the children of his brother, T. C. Hollis. The law intends that a widow shall, when that can be done, in addition to her dower, have a homestead upon her deceased husband’s lands so long as she shall live. Where, in the nature of things, a homestead-— a place in which to actually reside — cannot be set apart to a widow, then the law undertakes to make provision for her in lieu of a homestead. This homestead — this shelter which the humanity of the law makes for the widow — Avhen properly set apart to- her, cannot, since the adoption of the code of 1907 (see section 4196 of said Code) be sold, even for reinvestment, without the [296]*296consent of the widow.—Clements v. Faulk, 181 Ala. 219, 61 South. 265.

The facts of this case bring it squarely, almost literally, within the doctrine which was recently declared by this court in Upshaw, et al v. Upshaw, et al., 180 Ala. 204, 60 South. 804. In that case this court said: “The fact that said John R. Upshaw and A. W. Upshaw both died before any partition of the land was made, or before the. lands were sold for the purposes of distribution, cannot, we think, affect that right which followed the lands into the hands of the heirs and widows of the respective parties. The widow and heirs of John R. Upshaw stand in his shoes, and the widow and heirs of A. W. Upshaw stand in his shoes. If the 450 acres of land can be equitably divided so as to give the heirs of John R. Upshaw in severalty two-thirds of said land in acreage and value, and the heirs of A. W. Upshaw in severalty one-third of said land in acreage and value, then, by appropriate proceedings, this can be done, and the homestead of each widow can be set apart and the dower of each can be properly assigned by metes and bounds out of the lands so set aside to each set of heirs.”

In this case, when T. C. Hollis died, a right of 'do wer and homestead immediately, in his widow’s favor, attached to an undivided moiety in said lands. At that time, undoubtedly, upon appropriate proceedings, a court of equity could have divided the land into two equal parts, and out of the part alloted to the widow and heirs of T. C. Hollis could have set apart to the widow her homestead and dower.—Upshaw v. Upshaw, supra. Indeed,, when this bill was filed, one of the children of T. C. Hollis was a minor, and he was not only peculiarly within the protection of a court of equity, but also' of our statutes securing the rights of homestead.

[297]*2972. We are also satisfied that if, upon the death of T. C. Hollis, a partition of the lands had been had between said J. K. P. Hollis and the widow and heirs of T. 0. Hollis, the court, in dividing the lands, would have set apart to J. K. P. Hollis, in severalty, that half of the land in acreage and value upon which his residence is situated, and to the widow and heirs of T. 0. Hollis that half of the land in acreage and value upon which their residence — the residence of T. C. Hollis — is situated. As already stated, T. C. Hollis and J. K. P. Hollis each had a residence upon these lands, which residences are three-quarters of a mile apart. While there had never been an actual partition of the property by these brothers, nevertheless the residences and their appurtenances had been by both of the occupants occupied and used separately for such periods of time as to indicate that each, as against himself and his heirs,

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Bluebook (online)
66 So. 29, 189 Ala. 292, 1914 Ala. LEXIS 122, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hollis-v-watkins-ala-1914.