McAnally v. Farish

14 So. 2d 516, 244 Ala. 598, 1943 Ala. LEXIS 269
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJune 30, 1943
Docket8 Div. 216.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 14 So. 2d 516 (McAnally v. Farish) 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
McAnally v. Farish, 14 So. 2d 516, 244 Ala. 598, 1943 Ala. LEXIS 269 (Ala. 1943).

Opinion

*599 BROWN, Justice.

The original bill, filed May 19, 1942, by the appellee as successor in office of J. B. Little as Superintendent of Banks, liquidating the Tennessee Valley Bank, against appellants seeks the foreclosure of a mortgage executed by R. D. Chunn and his wife Ruby Chunn on the 24th day of April, 1922, to J. B. Patterson to secure an indebtedness of $2,150, payable October 1, 1922.

The complainant pleads, in her bill, the proceedings and decree of the Circuit Court of Morgan County, in equity sitting, in the case of these appellants as complainant against said J. B. Little et al., a statutory bill to quiet the title, to the lands here involved, and other lands, which said decree, rendered on June 12, 1940, adjudicated and declared that said complainants in that case were the owners of said lands, subject to the encumbrance created by the mortgage which the present bill seeks to foreclose, in respect to which the decree recites: “It is further ordered, adjudged and decreed by the court that J. B. Little, as Superintendent of Banks of the State of Alabama, liquidating the Tennessee Valley Bank, a corporation, owns and holds a claim, lien and encumbrance, by virtue of a mortgage executed by R. D. Chunn and wife, Ruby Chunn, on April 24, 1922, to J. B. Patterson, and which mortgage is recorded in the Probate Office of Morgan County, Alabama, on Mortgage Book 296, Page 276, and which said mortgage is now owned and held by the said J. B. Little, as Superintendent of Banks of the State of Alabama, liquidating the Tennessee Valley Bank, a corporation, which said mortgage constitutes a lien, claim and encumbrance on a two-thirds (2/3) undivided title, share and interest in and to the following described lands in Morgan County, Alabama, to-wit: “The Southeast 1/4 of the Southwest 1/4 of Section 17, Township 6, Range 1 West; the Northeast 1/4 of the Northwest 1/4 and the Northwest 1/4 of the Northeast 1/4 of Section 20, Township 6, Range 1 West.”

The appellants, defendants in the circuit court, make their answer a cross-bill, and attack the validity of the mortgage here sought to be foreclosed on the ground that their paternal ancestor R. D. Chunn only had a life estate in the lands covered by said mortgage in consequence of his relationship as husband to defendants’ maternal ancestor Laura Lee Chunn from whom they claim title through the process of devolution, under the statutes of descent and distribution.

In furtherance of and support of this claim, the cross-bill alleges, “That on or about April 21, 1902 there was filed for record in the office of the Judge of Probate of Morgan County, Alabama, a warranty deed purporting to have been executed by Edmund T. Overstreet and wife, Ida Overstreet, and Thomas Overstreet and wife, Anna Overstreet, as grantors, to R. D. Chunn, as grantee, for a recited consideration of $900.00, which conveyance bears date of November 23, 1897 and appears to have been acknowledged jointly and separately on November 23, 1897 by said grantors before John T. Terry, a Notary Public, Morgan County, Alabama; said deed appears of record in the office of the Judge of Probate of Morgan County, Alabama, in Deed Book 73, at page 326. * * * that R. D. Chunn was the husband of Laura Lee Chunn, who was the mother of defendants; that the said Laura Lee Chunn did not join in the conveyance purported to have been executed on November 23, 1897 by Edmund T. Overstreet and Thomas Overstreet to R. D. Chunn, and that the said Edmund T. Overstreet and Thomas Overstreet did not execute said purported deed to the said R. D. Chunn dated November 23, 1897, but that said deed was a forgery because Edmund T. Overstreet died on or about October 24th, 1897, and the record of his death was discovered to be in the office of the Judge of Probate of Morgan County, Alabama, on June 2nd 1942, in the births and deaths record. * * * the fraud of forgery of Edmund T. Overstreet’s name on the deed to R. D. Chunn has been called to the attention of this Court immediately up- *600 an learning of the same, and that the failure to make discovery of said fraud previously was no fault of defendants.”

The appellants on the predicate laid by said allegations in their cross-bill seek to invoke the jurisdiction and power of the circuit court to review the record and proceedings in the former litigation between appellants, Little and others, on the ground of evidence newly discovered, and in support of these averments offer the depositions of the witnesses Clovis Babler and T. J. Overstreet. Miss Babler testified on direct examination:

“Your name is Miss Clovis Babler? A. It is.
“Q. You are now Chief Clerk in the Probate Office of Morgan County, Alabama? A. I am.
“Q. I show you a book appearing to be the births and deaths register, 1896 to 1899, Morgan County, Alabama. I will ask you to please turn to the record of deaths on October 24, 1897. Does the book appear to have any page marks or numbers? A. It does not. The pages are not numbered.
“Q. It is a bound book, though, is it not ? A. It is.
“Q. Does there appear in this book under October 24, 1897, the name Ed Over-street? A. There does.
“Q. Place of birth Alabama? A. Yes sir.
“Q. Age twenty-six ? A. Yes.
“Q. And was there an informant of his death? A. Yes.
“Q. Who was it? A. S. C. Smith, M. D.
“Q. Place of death Beat 8, Morgan County? A. Yes.
“Q. Does it say Valhermosa Springs in there? A. It says place of burial Valhermosa Springs.
“Q. Does any person by the name of Ed Overstreet, Edmon Overstreet or Edward Overstreet appear to have died in the months of October or November 1897 according to that record other than the one just testified about on October 24, 1897? A. No sir.
“Q. Is that the original record that is now in the custody of the Probate Judge? A. It is.
“Q. You have been a clerk in the office of the Judge of Probate how long? A. Twenty-two years.
“Q. Has that book been in the possession of the Probate Judge during that period of time? A. It has.
“Q. Is there any other record of births, and deaths for that same period of time in the office of the Judge of Probate? A. No, there is not.”
Overstreet testified that he was Ed Overstreet’s brother, that they lived during Ed’s lifetime at Valhermosa Springs in Morgan County, Beat 8, and further, to quote from his depositions, “About the time of Mr. Ed’s death, do you recall about that ? A. I think I do pretty well. It was in October.
“Q. What year? A. I don’t know the year.
“Q. Was it in the eighties, the nineties, in nineteen hundred or when? A. I think it was about 1900, but I wouldn’t be positive. It was somewhere along about then. It has been a long time.
“Q. Was October 1897 about the time of his death? A. I can’t hardly tell.
“Q. Do you remember when it was? A.

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Bluebook (online)
14 So. 2d 516, 244 Ala. 598, 1943 Ala. LEXIS 269, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcanally-v-farish-ala-1943.