Martin v. Cannon
This text of 71 So. 996 (Martin v. Cannon) 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.
Opinion
“In all judicial proceedings, the essential facts constituting the cause of action must appear, in a way that an issue can be formed upon them, and so that the court can proceed, in an intelligent manner, to observe and enforce the rights of the parties. When we read and analyze the several provisions of the several sections of this system, we see plainly that no case would be stated upon which the court could intelligently act, which failed to show that there was a joint or common property, and what that property was; that there were joint or common owners thereof, who they were, and their respective interests therein.”
Again it was said in said opinion:
“We must not, however, be understood as holding that the statutory system for the sale of property for distribution, as embodied in sections 3253 to 3259, inclusive, supra, does not require the petition for a sale to set forth a proper description of the property to be sold, and to make the joint tenants, or tenants in common, parties thereto, showing their respective interests in the property.” (Italics supplied.)
We think that good pleading requires that the petition or bill should set forth the interest of each joint owner, and not leave it [153]*153to conjecture or inference, which the present bill fails to do, and which said infirmity was pointed out by the respondent’s demurrer, and the chancery court erred in overruling said demurrer.
The decree of the chancery court is reversed, and one is here rendered sustaining the demurrer, and the cause is remanded, and the complainants are given 30 days within which to amend said bill.
Reversed, rendered, and remanded.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
71 So. 996, 196 Ala. 151, 1916 Ala. LEXIS 427, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/martin-v-cannon-ala-1916.