Ivey v. Blum

53 Ala. 172
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJune 15, 1875
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 53 Ala. 172 (Ivey v. Blum) 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
Ivey v. Blum, 53 Ala. 172 (Ala. 1875).

Opinion

BRICKELL, C. J.

Prior to 1843 the statute of 1802 was the only statute barring an entry into lands, or limiting actions for their recovery; with the exception of a special statute, enacted in 1816, and applicable only to claims to lands which originated under the Spanish or French governments while they had dominion over a part of the State, and which were subject to confirmation and adjustment by Congress. Clay’s Dig. 328, § 87. The 7th section of the act of [173]*1731802 was borrowed from the English statute, 21st Jac. I. c. 16, (to be found in Angelí on Limitations, 5th ed., App. 3,) and was not, in terms, a' statute of limitations; it simply prohibited an entry into lands, after the lapse of twenty years from the accrual of the right or title of entry, saving the rights of infants, femes covert, non-residents, and persons of unsound mind. Clay’s Dig. 327, §§ 83-4. Prohibiting an entry after the lapse of twenty years, the consequence was, that no action dependent wholly on a right of entry, or merely possessory, was maintainable; and it thus became, as to these actions, a statute of limitations. Doe ex dem. Hallett v. Forest, 8 Ala. 264; Angell on Lim. 5th ed., 369. The 9th section was borrowed' from the 32d Henry VIII. c. 2, (Angelí on Lim., 5th ed., app. 1,) and was, ex vi termini, a statute of limitations, barring real, possessory, and mixed actions for the recovery of lands. The classifications of actions was that recognized in the ancient common law, and known as droitural and possessory. Of the first class the principal was the writ of right. It was regarded as the highest writ in law, and was the last resort of a tenant in fee simple, who had been ousted. Tt was resorted to when the right to maintain a possessory action was barred by the statute of limitations, the prescription against it being of much greater length than that against possessory actions, or after a possessory action had been brought, and judgment therein rendered against the demandant. Stearns on Beal Actions, 314. Of the second class, were writs of assize, writs of entry, and writs ancestral and possessory. These were to recover possession, and were founded on a right of entry, and were called real possessory actions. The action of waste was a mixed action, as the land was recovered, and damages for the injury thereto. The terms of this section clearly imported that it referred to, and operated upon these ancient common law remedies. The 7th section operated as a bar to the modern action of ejectment, and a field of operation somewhat different was assigned to each section. Doe, ex dem. Hallett v. Forest, supra; Henry v. Thorpe, 14 Ala. 103.

In 1843 a statute was enacted, the second section of which provided that all actions for the recovery of lands, tenements or hereditaments, in this State, should be brought within ten years after the accrual of the cause of action, and not afterwards, saving to infants, femes covert, and persons of unsound mind, five years after the removal of their respective disabilities, to bring such actions. Clay’s Dig. 329, § 93. Statutes of limitations, as a general rule, do not operate [174]*174retrospectively. Tne future, not the past, is their field of operation. They do not destroy or impair existing rights, converting the passiveness which was innocent, into negligence, working a loss of rights. They speak from the time of their enactment, barring the rights which afterwards exist, capable of enforcement, during the period prescribed. Williamson v. Field, 2 Sand. ch. 570; Eakin v. Rand, 12 Serg. and R. 330. Hence the statute of 1843 was construed as prospective, not retroactive, barring only causes of action, existing after its enactment for the prescribed period. 2 Brick. Dig. 224, § 92.

Soon after the enactment of this statute, several cases came before this court in which it was said the statute repealed the act of 1802, and that the time elapsing before its passage was wholly effaced. Henry v. Thorpe, supra; Nickles v. Haskins, 15 Ala. 619; Cox v. Davis, 17 Ala. 716. The question was not presented by either of these cases, and all that was said upon it was the mere argument or opinion of the individual judge. In Rawles v. Kennedy, 23 Ala. 240, the question came directly before the court, and a decision of it was indispensable to the rendition of judgment. After deliberate consideration, on principle and authority, the court pronounced that the statute of 1802 was not entirely repealed by the act of 1843. That they could co-exist and each had an office to perform. The statute of 1802 could not operate to prolong possessions, or the time of commencing actions beyond the period prescribed by the act of 1843; but that if .under its operation causes of action or possession antecedent to the act of 1843, would be barred before the bar of that act attached, its bar would be applied. If the statute of 1843 would, in its operation on such antecedent possessions, operate a bar earlier than the act of 1802, its bar would prevail. Such possessions were governed by the first of the two statutes, that would protect them. If, when the act of 1843 was passed, a possession had continued for twenty-five years, its continuance for five years after-wards would complete the bar of the act of 1802. If it had existed but' one day, at the passage of the act of 1843, its continuance for ten years afterwards completed the bar of that act. No other construction could have been adopted without contravening the spirit and policy of the act of 1843 —without prolonging the period in which litigation should be commenced or forever quieted. The act pursuing the policy prevailing in the enactment of statutes of limitations, in modern times, is directed against the subject matter — not the form of action. It is not real, or mixed ac-[175]*175tions, which, are to be barred, but all actions for the recovery of lands, whatever may be their form or character. Whether the recovery was sought by writ of right, founded on title only, or ejectment involing only the ,‘ight of entry and possession, they were barred. The action being for the recovery of lands, it fell within the statute, and its bar. In this State, distinguishing between the forms, and not the subject of actions, in framing statutes of limitation, was at all times the involuntary obedience yielded to' precedent, rather than a consideration of public convenience. No such distinction is now recognized in our statute book.

Thus stood the statute of limitations, until the adoption of the Code of 1852, which took effect on the 17th of January, 1853. The 10th section of this Code declared all general statutes repealed, which were not embraced in it. The last section of the chapter devoted to limitations of actions, declared its provisions applicable “to all subsisting causes of action, except such as suits have been commenced upon, and all now pending, and those upon which suits may be commenced within one year from the time this Code goes into operation.” Code of 1852, § 2502. The act of February 15, 1854; (Pamph. Acts, 1853-4, p. 71.) now § 2926 of the Revised Code, repealed § 2502 of the Code of 1852, and provided the limitations of the Code should apply only to possessions or causes of action originating on or after the 17th January, 1853. Prior possessions and causes of action, were to be controlled by the former statute of limitation, which for that purpose only,were revived and continued of force.

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Bluebook (online)
53 Ala. 172, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ivey-v-blum-ala-1875.