Hutchinson v. Miller

962 So. 2d 884, 2007 WL 291062
CourtCourt of Civil Appeals of Alabama
DecidedFebruary 2, 2007
Docket2050923
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 962 So. 2d 884 (Hutchinson v. Miller) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Civil Appeals of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hutchinson v. Miller, 962 So. 2d 884, 2007 WL 291062 (Ala. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinions

[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 886

This appeal concerns the jurisdiction of the probate courts of Alabama to hear cases involving the partition of property or the sale of property and the division of the sale proceeds.

Joseph W. Hutchinson, Jr. ("the plaintiff), brought an action in the Choctaw Probate Court seeking a sale for division of certain oil, gas, and mineral rights associated with a parcel of land located in Choctaw County; the plaintiff allegedly held a fractional interest in that parcel. As amended, the complaint named nine defendants who were alleged cotenants as to those rights. After one of those defendants, appearing pro se, had filed an answer in letter form to the complaint, counsel for the eight other defendants ("the moving defendants") filed a motion to dismiss the action pursuant to Rule 12(b)(1), Ala. R. Civ. P.,1 which pertains to dismissal for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction. In that motion, the moving defendants alleged that the action was not properly brought in the probate court under § 35-6-40, Ala. Code 1975, because there was no "open estate in that court," and they contended that the probate court should decline jurisdiction because, they said, the probate court was without power to "do complete justice" in the action. No evidentiary material was submitted in support of the moving defendants' motion.2 *Page 887

The probate court entered a judgment dismissing the action without prejudice, citing both grounds asserted by the moving defendants. The plaintiffs appeal from the probate court's judgment to the Alabama Supreme Court was transferred to this court pursuant to § 12-2-7(6), Ala. Code 1975.

Because the probate court's judgment expressly stated that the action had been dismissed "without prejudice," the finality of the judgment under review may, at first glance, be questioned in light of the rule followed in Palughi v. Dow,659 So.2d 112, 113 (Ala. 1995). However, we distinguish Palughi on the basis that the probate court's judgment of dismissal of the action, on the basis of lack of subject-matter jurisdiction, "conclusively determine[d] the issues before the court" (659 So.2d at 113) upon the submission of the moving defendants' motion to dismiss for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction, thus rendering the judgment final. We therefore reach the merits of the contentions raised by the parties on appeal, applying, as we must, a de novo standard of review to the probate court's judgment. See State Dep't of Revenue v. Arnold909 So.2d 192, 193 (Ala. 2005).

As the Supreme Court noted in Wilkinson v. Stuart,74 Ala. 198, 203 (1883), although "[t]he partition of lands between joint tenants, tenants in common, and co-parceners, is an established head of equity jurisdiction" — jurisdiction that, under our merged system of law and equity, lies in our circuit courts under Rule 2, Ala. R. Civ. P., and §12-11-31, Ala. Code 1975 — "[b]y statute, it is very common to confer a like jurisdiction upon other tribunals, of superior or inferior jurisdiction." From at least 1852, probate courts in the several counties of this state have had, by statute, jurisdiction to partition lands held by cotenants within those counties. See § 670, subdiv. 10, Ala. Code 1852 (now codified as § 12-13-1(9), Ala. Code 1975). That jurisdiction was extended by the legislature in 1856 so as to allow the probate courts to "decree and order a sale of all property, whether the same be real, personal, or mixed." Act No. 32, § 1, 1855-56 Ala. Acts. In 1858, the legislature reaffirmed the jurisdiction of the probate court to partition lands. See Act No. 219, § 1, 1857-58 Ala. Acts. Thus, there are two remedial "systems" available to a cotenant who seeks a severance of his or her interests in jointly held property: (a) apartition of that property, if it can be equitably divided, or (b) the sale of the property and the division of the sale proceeds, if the property cannot be equitably divided; as our Supreme Court noted in Hillens v.Brinsfield, 108 Ala. 605, 613, 18 So. 604, 607 (1895), "the two systems are separate and distinct, each complete in itself."

The Alabama Code of 1867 recodified the probate court's power to partition property and codified for the first time the probate court's power to sell property for division. Section 3105 of that Code addressed partition:

"Any property, real, personal or mixed, held by joint owners or tenants in common, may be divided among them on the application of the persons entitled thereto, or any one of them, in writing to the judge of probate of the county in which the property is. Such application may be made by the executor or administrator of a deceased person in interest, or by the guardian of a minor or person of unsound mind."

*Page 888

Section 3120 of that Code, in contrast, addressed the probate court's power to sell property for division:

"Judges of the probate court may decree and order a sale of all property, whether real, personal or mixed, held by joint owners or tenants in common, when the same cannot be equitably partitioned or divided between such joint owners or tenants in common, notwithstanding they, or any number of them, are infants, or persons of unsound mind."

As the probate-court partition provision of the 1867 Code was carried forward into subsequent codes, the two sentences contained therein were conflated into one longer sentence through the use of a semicolon and the conjunction "and":

"Any property, real, personal, or mixed, held by joint owners or tenants in common, may be divided among them, on the written application of one or more of them to the probate court of the county in which the property is situate; and such application may be made by the executor or administrator of a deceased person in interest, or by the guardian of a minor or person of unsound mind."

Ala. Code 1886, § 3237; accord § 35-6-40, Ala. Code 1975 (bearing no changes from the 1886 codification apart from the replacement of the word "situate" with "situated"). Likewise, § 35-6-58, Ala. Code 1975, which is the modern statute addressing sale-for-division jurisdiction in the probate court, provides that real and personal property of joint owners or tenants in common that "cannot be equitably divided or partitioned" may be sold for division "not-withstanding they, or any of them, are infants or persons of unsound mind" (emphasis added).

We recite that legislative history at length to demonstrate the error of the moving defendants' contention, and the probate court's holding in accord with that contention, that the reference in § 35-6-40, Ala.

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Hutchinson v. Miller
962 So. 2d 884 (Court of Civil Appeals of Alabama, 2007)

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Bluebook (online)
962 So. 2d 884, 2007 WL 291062, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hutchinson-v-miller-alacivapp-2007.