Long v. Holden

112 So. 444, 216 Ala. 81, 52 A.L.R. 536, 1927 Ala. LEXIS 49
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedApril 14, 1927
Docket8 Div. 895.
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 112 So. 444 (Long v. Holden) 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
Long v. Holden, 112 So. 444, 216 Ala. 81, 52 A.L.R. 536, 1927 Ala. LEXIS 49 (Ala. 1927).

Opinion

SOMERVILLE, J.

The bill of complaint is filed by an alleged tenant in common against two cotenants, and prays for a decree quieting a claim of exclusive and hostile ownership asserted by Lora L. Holden, one of the respondents; and for a decree of sale for division of the jointly owned real estate.

Lora L. Holden, individually, demurred' to the bill, and the appeal is by the complainant from a decree sustaining her demurrer. The record shows that notice of the appeal was served on Lora L. Holden only, and she now moves to dismiss the appeal because her corespondent Dempsey W. Holden has not been made a party to the appeal.

“As a general rule, where a judgment is favorable to one or more codefendants, and adverse as to others, the latter should be joined in an appeal or writ of error brought by plaintiff to review the action in favor of the former.” 3 Corp. Jur. 1019, § 973, citing, among other cases, Duncan v. Hargrove, 22 Ala. 150. This rule, as the cases show, is based on the principle that an entire cause of action cannot be severed into two or more proceedings, to be separately pursued; and, where the issue of *83 the appeal may so result, all codefendants should properly be made parties to the appeal. Hunter v. Wakefield, 97 Ga. 543, 25 S. E. 347, 54 Am. St. Rep. 438. But, looking to the reason of the rule, it can have no application here. As said by Bleckley, J., in McGaughey Bros. v. Latham, 63 Ga. 67, 71:

“The answer [to the motion to dismiss the appeal] is, that only one of the defendants demurred to the declaration, and the judgment upon that demurrer is the sole subject-matter of the writ of error. The other defendant is thus no party to the controversy here, and were the plaintiffs in error to succeed in reversing the ruling which they complain of, his liability to them would not be enlarg'ed. Their effort in this court is not to bind him, but to bind another with him, on the supposition that he is already bound.”

To the same effect is Wilson v. Stewart, 63 Ind. 294.

An additional consideration in the instant case is that the omitted corespondent is not an adversary party in the ordinary sense, and a judgment of reversal in favor of the complainant would in fact benefit Mm by protecting bis interest in the common property. He could not be adversely affected.

Strictly analogous, and in harmony with the foregoing views, is the case of Washington v. Arnold, 167 Ala. 448, 52 So. 463, where the appeal was by an unsuccessful demur-rant, without notice to a codefendant who did not demur, or one who demurred separately.

Of course, if the judgment on demurrer had been in favor of both respondents, both would have been necessary parties to the appeal. Clark v. Knox, 65 Ala. 401.

The motion to dismiss the appeal is not well grounded and will be overruled.

The bill of complaint shows that the parties to the bill are all children and heirs at law of J. S. Holden, deceased, and that the deed under which complainant asserts their tenancy in common, and under which the respondent Lora L. Holden asserts her exclusive ownership of the land therein conveyed, is a deed of bargain and sale executed by one John H. Davis to John S. Holden, for the consideration of $4,000. The grant, the habendum, and the covenants are to John S. Holden, and his heirs and assigns. Immediately following the description, and just before the habendum, there is written, in quotation marks, “It is so understood that at my death this land is to go to my daughter, L. L. Holden.”

The construction and effect to be given to this statement, made, as it must he presumed, and as is in fact conceded, by John S. Holden, the grantee in the deed, is the sole and decisive question presented by the bill and demurrer, and the ruling of the trial court thereon. The theory of complainant is that it did not limit to a life estate the otherwise fee-simple title granted to John S. Holden; while the contention of the respondent, Lora L. Holden, adopted and effectuated by the decree of the trial court, is that it limited the estate granted to the life of John S. Holden, and vested in her the remainder, to he enjoyed by her after his death.

Innumerable cases may be 'cited to the proposition that the cardinal rule for the construction of written instruments is to ascertain, if possible, from the language employed, the intention of the parties, and then to give effect to such intention, if it can be done without violation of law. As often stated, the intention must be gathered from a fair consideration of the whole instrument (Hamner v. Smith, 22 Ala. 433; McWilliams v. Ramsay, 23 Ala. 813, 817), or from its “four corners.” Slaughter v. Hall, 201 Ala. 212, 77 So. 738.

In most of the cases the qualification is properly stated that the intention, as gathered from the language of the -whole deed, will be effectuated if consistent with law. Hamner v. Smith, 22 Ala. 433, 438; Jenkins v. McConico, 26 Ala. 213, 237; Campbell v. Gilbert, 57 Ala. 569; Dinkins v. Latham, 154 Ala. 90, 99, 45 So. 60; Ala. Corn Mills Co. 'v. Mobile Docks Co., 200 Ala. 126, 128, 75 So. 574; 18 Corpus Juris, 254, § 198. This means, of course, where deeds and devises to real estate are concerned, that even a clearly stated intention will be ineffectual if the instrument does not, as to the mode of its execution, and the use of language apt for the purpose stated, meet the requirements of the law. 8 R. C. L. 1035, § 91. In Culver v. Carroll, 175 Ala. 469, 479, 57 So. 767, 771 (Ann. Cas. 1914D, 103), we quoted with approval this statement from Brown v. Brown, 66 Me. 320:

“The intention of an owner of property in his attempted act of transferring it is not necessarily and always supreme. The law has prescribed certain plain rules to be Observed in the execution of such important instruments as those by which the title to real property is' transferred; and, whatever courts may sometimes have done in their zeal to carry into effect the intention of parties, the' law itself does not permit its salutary rules to be broken or bent to meet the exigencies of ignorance or negligence; deeming it better, on the whole, that the intention of a party in disposing of Ms property should occasionally fail, than that its important and firmly established rules made and applied for the benefit of all be overridden.”

It must be noted also that in the case of deeds poll the intention to be ascertained is primarily that of the grantor. Hamner v. Smith, 22 Ala. 433, 438; May v. Ritchie, 65 Ala. 602, 603; Dickson v. Van Hoose, 157 Ala. 465, 47 So. 718, 19 L. R. A. (N. S.) 719; Graves v. Wheeler, 180 Ala. 412, 415, 61 So. 341.

It will be noted that the statement in the deed relied on to create and pass a remainder interest to Lora L. Holden, is not the lan *84 guage of the grantor, but of the grantee, speaking in the first person singular. The grantor conveys the land to John S. Holden in terms which import a fee-simple estate. The grantee has written into the deed before its execution his individualized statement that “it is so understood that at my death this land is to go td my daughter, L. L. Holden. Very clearly, he intended this daughter to have the property at his death, to the exclusion of his other children. Whether he intended for her to take a vested present interest under and by this deed,

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Bluebook (online)
112 So. 444, 216 Ala. 81, 52 A.L.R. 536, 1927 Ala. LEXIS 49, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/long-v-holden-ala-1927.