Holly v. Dinkins

80 So. 861, 202 Ala. 477, 1919 Ala. LEXIS 289
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJanuary 23, 1919
Docket3 Div. 371-371a.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 80 So. 861 (Holly v. Dinkins) 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
Holly v. Dinkins, 80 So. 861, 202 Ala. 477, 1919 Ala. LEXIS 289 (Ala. 1919).

Opinion

SAYRE, J.

Pretermitting for the moment some questions of notice and intention, and as well some disputed facts to be stated and considered in qualification later on, the face of the transactions involved in this cause may be stated in brief as follows: In January, 1895, Mary E. Dickson, then the owner in-possession of the land in suit, an improved 40-acre parcel of land near Lowndesboro, was joined by her husband in the execution of a conveyance purporting to vest an unqualified fee in Sallie.B. Dinkins. Mrs. Dinkins and her husband went immediately into possession, and there remained until September, 1896, when she died intestate, leaving her husband and two children, then of very tender years, the complainants in the original bill in this cause. During the period covered by our statement thus far — and before — the property was under a mortgage which had been given to Colonel Brewer of Hayneville by'Mrs. Dickson’s predecessor in title, and in addition to the sum of $2,000 which she paid in cash out of her separate purse, Mrs. Din-kins assumed to pay this mortgage as a part of the consideration for the conveyance to-her. January 1, 1897, the Dicksons — on the request of Dinkins and on his statement, according to the witness Dickson, that “he had lost the deed [meaning the deed to Mrs. Dinkins], or something had happened” — upon a recited consideration of $2,000 paid by Dinkins, but upon no new consideration in fact, executed a deed to Dinkins, who, being then and there in possession by his tenant Whetstone, conveyed to Holly by deed purporting to pass the entire fee in consideration of a small cash payment made by Holly to Brewer, and his three separate promissory notes for $456 each, payable to Dinkins in one, two, and three years, and his assumption of the balance due on the Brewer mortgage, amounting, principal and interest, to $600, which sum, according to the agreement of the-parties to that transaction, thereby became-the principal of the debt due to Brewer, assumed by Holly, and bearing interest from that date. Holly thereupon went into possession, and has so remained until this time. The three notes were paid as they matured, and on March 8, 1911, Holly paid the balance *478 then due upon the Brewer mortgage. At that time, along with other papers, Brewer handed to Holly the- deed from the Dicksons to Mrs. Dinkins, which had never been recorded. On the same day Holly had this deed placed upon the public records of the county. On April 21, 1914, complainant Rudolph Dinkins having recently become of age, and complainant Margaret Dinkins having been relieved of the disabilities of nonage, the original bill in this cause was filed, charging that Dinkins and Holly conspired together to defraud complainants of their inheritance, or, in the alternative, that defendant, Holly, took his deed with notice of complainants’ right in the premises, and praying that the deed from the Dicksons to Dinkins be canceled as a cloud upon their estate in remainder, that the deed from Din-kins to defendant, Holly, be declared to have no other legal effect than a conveyance of said Dinkins’ estate for life, and for general relief. In his answer, which was made a cross-bill under the statute, Holly denied the averments of the bill circumstantially, set up the facts with reference to the title he had acquired and his payment of the mortgage debt, and prayed, in the event his title to the estate in remainder was declared void, that he be subrogated to- the rights of Brewer under the mortgage that had been held by him. The chancellor decreed relief on both the original and cross bills, and against each relief so granted the parties adversely affected thereby have appealed.

On that version of the facts put forward by complainants in the original bill, defendant, Holly, acquired an estate for the life of Dinkins, who took such estate under the statute as surviving husband of the owner; that fact is expressly conceded in the complainants’ -bill, and will accordingly be accepted as a fact, though defendant’s right and ■title to that part of the estate might well be determined on the identical considerations to be stated in respect to the estate in remainder, to which more properly the inquiry here relates.

It is contended for defendant that the deed purporting to convey title from the Dicksons to Mrs. Dinkins was never delivered to the grantee named therein, but was delivered in escrow to Colonel Brewer, to be delivered to the grantee when the mortgage held by Brewer should be paid in full. Upon considering the evidence on this point with due care, we feel constrained to accept this contention. Dinkins testifies to these facts, and, while he has been made the mark of much critical and uncomplimentary comment, his testimony, as between his children and his vendee, appears to us to have been given with candor, nor is it contradicted save by a witness whose memory is admittedly bad, and who has been inextricably involved in more than one important relevant statement of demonstrated error. Dinkins and this witness, the latter the husband of the grantor in'the deed to Mrs. Dinkins, among themselves negotiated and managed that transaction for their respective wives, and they alone, after the lapse of more than 20 years, could be expected to remember the details. Brewer does not testify — he may be dead — but it is not disputed that when Holly had finished paying the mortgage held by him (Brewer), in 1911 he handed over to- Holly the unrecorded deed from the Dicksons to Mrs. Dinkins. This fact affords strong confirmation .of the testimony of Dinkins as to how and why this deed came into the hands of Brewer, for it is only by an acceptance of his testimony that this fact, itself undisputed and presumptively indisputable can be reconciled with those rules of conduct which ordinarily govern rational men, however selfish, in such matters; and while the court is not at this time concerned about the character and reputation of this witness, save as they may affect his credibility, the fact of the escrow, in connection with his situation at the time, will serve to explain his subsequent action as upon a reasonable hypothesis of human conduct, if not extenuate on moral grounds. Brewer, as a common agent, held the escrow in trust for the parties to it, but as mortgagee he had a paramount interest and right. At the time when Dinkins took his deed the condition upon which the escrow, was held could never be performed by the grantee; she having died, and neither Dinkins nor his children, it is to be inferred from the evidence in the record, could hope to redeem from the mortgage within any reasonable time. He knew that the legal estate, subject to the mortgage, remained in Mrs. Dickson, and that the equity in his wife’s estate was subject to foreclosure at any time. In this situation 'he chose to procure the deed to himself and make a sale to Holly.

[1, 2] As we have found, in effect, the legal title — a bare legal title, it is true — to the entire estate remained in Mrs. Dickson until she executed her deed to Dinkins. This results from our -finding as to the escrow. But in view of our conclusion as t;o notice, to be stated, this result is not necessary to appellant’s case; for-, while a bona fide purchaser for value must connect himself with the legal estate (Shorter v. Frazer, 64 Ala. 74), the law is very clear that where one claims title to land through an instrument that is not recorded, as do appellees in this case, his claim will fail against one who has purchased the land in good faith, for a valuable consideration, without notice, actual or constructive, of such claim (Chandler v. Tardy, 58 Ala. 150).

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Bluebook (online)
80 So. 861, 202 Ala. 477, 1919 Ala. LEXIS 289, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holly-v-dinkins-ala-1919.