McClelland v. Coston

149 So. 697, 227 Ala. 267, 1933 Ala. LEXIS 224
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJune 8, 1933
Docket1 Div. 744.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 149 So. 697 (McClelland v. Coston) 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
McClelland v. Coston, 149 So. 697, 227 Ala. 267, 1933 Ala. LEXIS 224 (Ala. 1933).

Opinion

*269 KNIGHT, Justice.

Suit by G. J. Coston, appellee here, to recover damages for breach of a covenant of warranty in the sale of lands by appellant’s intestate, and another, to the appellee.

From a judgment for plaintiff in the court below against the said H. H. McClelland, as administrator of the estate of James H. McCreary, deceased, one of the covenantors, the main appeal in this case is prosecuted. There is also a cross-appeal by the appellee against (Mrs.) Mattie E. Massey, in whose favor there was a judgment in the court below.

This case has been before this court once before, and, upon that appeal, the deed executed by appellant’s intestate and Mrs. Massey was construed adversely to the present! •contention of the appellant. Coston v. Mc-Clelland et al., 220 Ala. 598, 127 So. 176, 177. In the report of this case on former appeal, the deed now before this court is set; out in full, so that it would serve no useful purpose to again set it out, either in this opinion, or in the report of the present appeal.

On the former appeal we held that: “So far as the deed discloses, apart from the rule of construction to be presently noted, the intent of the grantors was to convey the entire fee, undivided as among themselves, or a part of the fee undivided as between themselves and another proprietor or other proprietors. But the deed recites a valuable consideration of $15,000 to the grantors in hand paid, and its terms ihust be construed most strongly against the grantors and in .favor of the grantee. Dickson v. Van Hoose, 157 Ala. 459, 47 So. 718, 19 L. R. A. (N. S.) 719, and authorities there cited. So construed, the deed offered in evidence purported to convey the entire! fee, undivided as between the two grantors, and the covenant, for aught now appearing, must be construed as a warranty of that fee on the joint and several responsibility of both grantors.” Coston v. McClelland et al., supra.

The case was further considered on rehearing, and the court adhered to its original opinion. A reconsideration of the case, on .this appeal, convinces us that the construction heretofore placed upon the deed was correct, and we adhere thereto.

The case of Clements v. T. S. Faulk & Co., 181 Ala. 219, 61 So. 264, and other cases cited by appellant in supplemental brief filed are not analogous tq the one now before us, as a casual reading of the same will disclose.

On remandment of the cause, the plaintiff filed additional counts A and B.

The defendant filed demurrer to the complaint, and to each count separately and severally. This demurrer was overruled by the court.

We are fully persuaded that the several counts were sufficient as against the grounds of demurrer directed thereto, and the court properly overruled the same. As we see it, the question attempted to be raised by the demurrer was settled adversely to the appellant on the former appeal, and we see no good reason to depart from that ruling. If it may be said that count A was defective in any of the particulars pointed out by the demurrer (which is not conceded), the original complaint and added count B stated the plaintiff’s case fully, and if plaintiff was entitled to recover at all, the recovery could be had under the counts of the complaint, other than count A. The error, if any, in overruling the demurrer to count A would, therefore, be harmless.

With their demurrer to the several counts of the complaint overruled, the defendants filed the plea of general issue and a number of other special pleas; the special pleas being lettered from A to V, both inclusive, and others were numbered 1, 3, 4, and 5. Plea 1 was the general issue. Plea 2, if there' was one, appears to have been omitted. The court sustained plaintiff’s demurrers to pleas lettered from A to N, and” to pleas O, P, R, but overruled demurrers to pleas 1, 2 (omitted), 3, 4, and 5, and to Q, S, T, U, and Y.

The special pleas attempt to set up misrepresentations, concealment of facts, and deceit practiced by the plaintiff in procuring the execution of the deed, and insanity on the part of James PI. McCreary, one of the grantors.

Pleas O and P, setting up the insanity of James H. McCreary, were insufficient, and. *270 subject to demurrer for failure to allege notice to the grantee of the grantor’s insanity. Section 6822 of the Code provides: “When-e.ver any person shall in good faith, and for a valuable consideration, purchase real estate from an insane person, without notice of such insanity, such contract and conveyance shall not be void, but such insane person may recover from the vendee or those claiming under him, the difference between the market value of such' real estate at the time of the sale and the price paid therefor, with interest thereon, and shall have a lien on such real estate to secure the same,- and the purchasers from such vendee, without notice of the insanity of the original vendor, shall be protected in like manner and have the benefits of this section.” This section of the Code has received judicial construction in the following cases: Hale v. Hale, 201 Ala. 28, 75 So. 150; Hughes v. Dempsey, 209 Ala. 375, 96 435; Alexander v. Livingston, 206 Ala. 186, 89 So. 520; Thomas v. Holden, 191 Ala. 142, 67 So. 992. However, the insanity of the appellant’s intestate at the time of the execution of the deed was treated by the court and the parties as one of the litigated issues in the case.

The other pleas of the defendants, which undertook to set up fraud, misrepresentations, fraudulent concealment of facts, and deceit, and to which demurrers were sustained, were manifestly bad, in that they failed to state the facts relied upon to show fraud, misrepresentation, deceit, and fraudulent concealment. In all such cases it is required that the facts relied upon to show the fraud, misrepresentations; deceit, or concealment should be stated, and not the mere deductions or conclusions of the pleader. Nat. Park Bank v. L. & N. R. Co., 199 Ala. 192, 74 So. 69; Williams et al. v. Bedenbaugh, 215 Ala. 200, 110 So. 286; Griel v. Lomax, 89 Ala. 420, 6 So. 741; Cannon v. Birmingham Trust & Savs. Co., 194 Ala. 469, 69 So. 934; Pratt, etc., Co. v. McClain, 135 Ala. 455, 33 So. 185, 93 Am. St. Rep. 35; Mountain v. Whitman, 103 Ala. 630, 16 So. 15; Little v. Sterne, 125 Ala. 609, 27 So. 972; Warren v. Hunt, 114 Ala. 506, 21 So. 939; Loucheim v. Bank, 98 Ala. 521, 13 So. 374; Reynolds v. Coal Co., 100 Ala. 296, 14 So. 573; Hyman v. Langston, 210 Ala. 509, 98 So. 564. And of course, as to the pleas attempting to charge the plaintiff with a fraudulent concealment of the facts by silence, facts should be averred from which the duty to speak arises. Williams et al. v. Bedenbaugh, supra.

We are at the conclusion that the court did not err in sustaining the demurrers to defendants’ pleas A to N, and pleas O, P, and R.

It is insisted that the court committed error in permitting plaintiff to read in evidence the deed executed by the defendants to the plaintiff. ■ It is true there was in the ease a plea of non est factuml in plea 5, but before the offer was made to read the deed in evidence, the justice of the peace who took the acknowledgments to the deed, had testified that Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
149 So. 697, 227 Ala. 267, 1933 Ala. LEXIS 224, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcclelland-v-coston-ala-1933.