Jordan v. Ellis

176 So. 2d 244, 278 Ala. 116, 1965 Ala. LEXIS 861
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJune 3, 1965
Docket4 Div. 169
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 176 So. 2d 244 (Jordan v. Ellis) 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
Jordan v. Ellis, 176 So. 2d 244, 278 Ala. 116, 1965 Ala. LEXIS 861 (Ala. 1965).

Opinion

COLEMAN, Justice.

Respondents appeal from decree granting prayer that one hundred twenty acres of land be sold for division of proceeds among tenants in common and denying respondents’ prayer for an accounting.

The case presents the unhappy aspect of a lawsuit with a mother on one side and her eight children on the other.

The mother, who is complainant, and her husband owned the land in equal shares when husband died in 1946. Four of the children were minors at that time. The land was mortgaged. The mother continued to live on the land, made payments on the mortgage, and reared the minor children. In 1956, she married again and moved off the land.

It is stipulated that the mother has received $1125.00 for rent and $88.00 for pulpwood during the years 1954, 1956, 1957, and 1958. The court states in final decree that “The evidence shows that the widow collected some $2000.00 rent from the land, from 1947 until 1962.”

The mother testified that two of the sons sold some of the timber • for $400.00, paid off the mortgage, gave the mother $27.40, and kept the balance which was $200.00.

Respondents contend that the court erred in deciding that the land could not be equitably partitioned in that the court so found because there were eight children, each owning one-sixteenth, and the mother owning one-half.

Complainant has not filed a brief in this court.

The decree recites:

“It is the opinion of the Court, and, it so finds, that the land described in the bill of complaint is owned jointly and as tenants in common by the complainant and respondents, that the complainant owns an undivided one-half interest in the land and the respondents each own an undivided one-sixteenth interest therein. It is further the opinion of the Court that said land cannot be equitably divided nor partitioned in kind and that a sale for division thereof is necessary in order to perfect an equitable division of the proceeds.”

[118]*118Respondents contend that the court failed to give effect to the doctrine which has been expressed as follows:

“Two or more tenants in common may unite in a bill against another co-tenant, and may jointly elect to consider their several moieties as one moiety, and to have it set apart to them as one undivided fractional share of the whole. — Donner v. Quartermas, 90 Ala. 164, 8 South. 715, 24 Am.St. Rep. 778; Freeman on Co-Tenancy, § 459; 30 Cyc. 240-261. . . . ” Smith, et al. v. Hill, 168 Ala. 317, 323, 52 So. 949, 950.

See Hall v. Hall, 250 Ala. 702, 704, 35 So.2d 681.

Respondents contend that the court should have determined that the land could be equitably divided into two parts so that one part could go to the mother and the other part to the eight children jointly.

The decree does not state why the land cannot be equitably partitioned. The court does not say that partition in kind must be denied because the land cannot be equitably divided into one-half and the other half further divided into eight parts so that each respondent shall receive one-sixteenth. For aught that appears, the court found that the land cannot be equitably divided into two parts equal in value.

Under the rule that error will not be presumed, we must presume that the court’s finding is that the land cannot be equitably divided into two parts of equal value. Because the testimony was heard ore tenus, we must review the evidence and decide whether the trial court was plainly and palpably wrong in deciding that the land cannot be equitably divided into two equal parts.

In order for the chancery court to sell land for division among joint owners, it must be averred and proven that it cannot be equitably divided. Smith, et al. v. Hill, supra; Littledale v. Brush, 240 Ala. 566, 200 So. 411.

The burden of proof is on him who-asserts that an equitable division cannot be made in kind. Compton v. Simmons, 223 Ala. 352, 135 So. 570.

On the issue whether the land can be equitably divided into two parts of equal value, the evidence is meager.

George Dunn testified that in his judgment, there is no way you could divide the place into nine parts whereby one part would be equal to all the other eight; that you could let a surveyor divide the land half one way and half the other but “As to the value on each side, I don’t know”; that if you take a surveyor and divide the land equal it wouldn’t mean it was equal' in parts, that you could make a fair division of the land but “They would have to ride out over somebody’s land to get to their part.”

The mother testified:

“Q In your best judgment is there any way in which two or three men or anybody could go out there and divide that place into, not necessarily in nine equal parts, but divide it into nine parts whereby the value of one part would be equal to the eight other parts?
“A No, sir, I tell you why, the biggest part of it is in branches; don’t never go dry, never has been dry but one time since we lived on it. The pasture is just boggy people can’t even cut the timber, it’s so boggy they can’t get it out and for that reason it can’t be divided.
“Q Is there not any way it can be divided ?
“A No, sir, because it wouldn’t give one justice. Some would have to take in the branches and what good would it be to them, just that branch. There is timber up in that branch, just some hardwood, gum timber.
[119]*119■“Q Then the house is situated so that somebody would get a branch and somebody would get a house, it couldn’t be divided in equal parts ?
"A Two houses on this side of the highway. There is one out there in front; one on the other side of the road and one down below.
“Q Now, Mrs. Ellis, this 120 acres of land, if one man or three men or if the court appointed somebody to go out there to divide it, don’t you think that land, even though they gave you more, could he divided into two fairly equal parts in value ?
“A No, sir, I don’t, because most of it is in the branch. The best land is above the house and the little patch across the creek and the rest is in hills, gulleys, and pastures.
“Q If they was to give you all of the houses and the best land that would be more than half wouldn’t it?
“A I had rather just sell where they can all have their shares like we should have.
“Q If they were to give you the best land and all of the houses that would be more than the value of rest of it wouldn’t it?
“A I don’t know, there ain’t no house there no good without the land.
“Q There ain’t no houses there no good?
“A No.
“Q Well, if they give you the best land then and give them the sorry land, so to speak, the best land would be more valuable than the rest wouldn’t it?
“A The best land would be the value of the place.
“Q And if they give you all of that why, they could do that couldn’t they? That would be two parts wouldn’t it?
“A

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Bluebook (online)
176 So. 2d 244, 278 Ala. 116, 1965 Ala. LEXIS 861, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jordan-v-ellis-ala-1965.