Lockard v. Lockard

16 Ala. 423
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJune 15, 1849
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 16 Ala. 423 (Lockard v. Lockard) 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
Lockard v. Lockard, 16 Ala. 423 (Ala. 1849).

Opinion

CHILTON, J.

This bill was filed by one tenant in common against liis co-tenant to have an account of the rent of a tract of land owned by the parties, and cultivated in the year 1842, by the defendant alone;.

The bill charges that the parties own the land as tenants in common, and that the defendant refused to consent to, a division, but excluded the complainant from a participation of the rents. That in the early part of 1842,' the parties having agreed upon the manner for dividing said tract,, the complainant called on the defendant to consummate the division, but he refused, and the said defendant retracted from the said [427]*427agreement, alleging that it did not suit bis purpose to make a division then or for that year. Upon suebrefusal,.the complainant informed the defendant in the language of the bill; “if he would not divide said land, he should pay him five dollars per acre- for one half of the number of acres which he should cultivate of said land for the year 1842, to* which, your orator understood the said George Lockard to- yield his assent. That your orator believing said statement and assent to constitute an agreement between said George Lockard and your orator, by which the said George, was to pay five dollars per acre rent to your orator for one half of the land he should cultivate for the year 1842, orator instituted suit in. the County Court of said county to recover,” &e. The complainant then, avers thathe filed in the action by reason of not procuring, sufficient testimony to- prove the* agreement aforesaid,. &c.

The answer of defendant denies the agreement to pay rent} and insists that he did not exclude the plaintiff from the land, but only cultivated fifty, of one hundred acres of cleared land, leaving the other fifty acres unoccupied.

The case being, submitted on bill; answer and proof, the chancellor dismissed the bill for want of equity. To reverse his decree,, the complainant brings the case to this- court.

The decree of the chancellor states,, that after the case was brought om to. be heard, and after the- bill, answer and depositions had been read, and the case in part argued, the complainant moved to- amend his bill,, but the chancellor o verruled- the motion,, for the reason that it came too late. What the character of the- amendments proposed to- be made was, we are not informed, and even conceding that the- refusal to-- allow the amendment is a matter reversable on error, we cannot pronounce in this case, that the party has been; injuriously affected by it. But it is insisted that the objection here urged against the bill, to wit, that it shows upon its face that the complainant has an adequate remedy at law,, is- in. the nature of a demurrer, and not having been taken before the trial and before the parties had incurred all the expense consequent upon the prosecutions of the cause,, should be considered as abandoned.

There is no question but that the objection was proper subject matter for demurrer;, but it shows at the same1 time that the Court of Chancery has no- jurisdictions of the Gauss,,if iiv [428]*428deed, as we shall presently see, the court of law had ample jurisdiction, and could have afforded the complainant adequate relief. The bill then would be without equity, and according to the letter of the statute, subject to a motion to dismiss it at any time. Clay’s Digest, 616, § 31. In Andrews & Bro’s v. McCoy, 8 Ala. Rep. 920, 925, it is said, ,(a bill which does not allege a cause of action, cannot be entertained, and there is no sensible distinction between the absence of such necessary allegations sho'whng a cause of action, and an alternative admission that no cause of action exists, as the bill must be construed most strongly against the pleader.” In that case, one of the'alternative averments in the bill, viz, that the defendant in chancery held certain notes in payment of preexisting debts, showed that the plaintiff was not entitled to recover, but ás upon the other alternative he was entitled to the relief sought, this court held, that as the defendant in the bill had taken no objection to the bill in the court below, he could not after a final decree raise the objection for the first time in this court

It is manifest the case above refered to, and to which we are cited as an authority to show that the defendant in this case could not take advantage of the defect in the bill at the final hearing, does not sustain that position. In the case at bar the defendant did raise the objection, and it was sustained by the chancellor. In the case of Andrews & Bro. v. McCoy, supra, the objection was considered as waived, nqt having been taken in the court below, and for that reason, Vas disallowed in this court. '

The authorities cited by the counsel for the plaintiff in error show very clearly, but for the 31st rule of chancery practice, which we have adopted, (Clay’s Digest, 616,) the defendant below, not having availed himself of the objection by demurrer, could not, upon the hearing, have insisted' upon it as ground for dismissing the bill — according to the generally received practice in courts of equity, if the defendant had demurred, and had embraced the same matter in his answer which is covered by his demurrer, the effect of the answer would have been to have overruled the demurrer. Story’s Eq. PI. § 465, ancl authorities cited. Our rules of practice Step very different.. In this State, the defendant may embrace [429]*429all the matter of his plea and demurrer iu his answer, and is entitled to the same benefit thereof as if the same had been pleaded. Clay’s Digest, 351, § 36; Crawford, et al. v. Childress, 1 Ala. Rep. 482. Neither is it required to file a replication to an answer, but in all cases where the answer shall have been filed ten days before the sitting of the court, or the bill is taken pro confesso for want of an answer, the cause regularly stands for trial at the next sifting of the court. Ib. § 38. Inasmuch as submitting to answer is not under the influence of our statutes a waiver of the party’s right to object to the want of equity in the bill, and as such objection may be made at any time, even though the party has failed to answer, and the bill has been taken for confessed against him, it is very certain that he did not, in this case, lose his right to make the motion to dismiss at the hearing — Freeman et al. v. McBroom, 11 Ala. Rep. 943; and further, that as the statute fixes upon the term when the cause is to be fried, no notice is required to be given the opposite party of the motion to dismiss. He is presumed to be in court by his counsel, who in this case, as the decre shows, was actually in court, and argued the cause. The-question then recurs, does the bill upon its face show equity — if it does not, under the principles above laid down, the chancellor correctly dismissed it.

Concéding that the court of chancery has jurisdiction to compel an account and to decree compensation between tenants in common of real estate, where one has received of the .

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Hines v. Seibels
86 So. 43 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1920)
Randolph v. Bradford
86 So. 39 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1920)
Penny v. British & American Mortgage Co.
31 So. 96 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1901)
Evans v. English
61 Ala. 416 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1878)
Tubb v. Fort
58 Ala. 277 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1877)
Autrey v. Frieze
59 Ala. 587 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1877)
Tate v. Evans
54 Ala. 16 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1875)
Taylor v. Harwell
54 Ala. 596 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1875)
Powell v. Stewart
17 Ala. 719 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1850)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
16 Ala. 423, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lockard-v-lockard-ala-1849.