McCurdy v. Middleton

82 Ala. 131
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedDecember 15, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 82 Ala. 131 (McCurdy v. Middleton) 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
McCurdy v. Middleton, 82 Ala. 131 (Ala. 1886).

Opinion

STONE, C. J.

— There is evidently a mistake in the description of the lands, the subject of this suit, if the transcript be a correct copy of the original papers. There is no discrepancy in the various descriptions of the lands in sections 13 and 24. The bill describes and claims relief as to 360 acres in section 14, being the south-east quarter, the south half of the north-east quarter, the east half of the south-west quarter, and the south-east quarter of the northwest quarter. These numbers form a perfect square, bounded east and south by the section lines, and approaching the northern and western lines, within a fourth of a mile. The testimony of Mrs. Middleton varies from this description to this extent: It omits all mention of the southeast quarter, and substitutes the south-west quarter; thus, twice describing the east-half of the south-west quarter, and causing one description to overlap the other. The answers admit the correctness of the descriptions set forth in [134]*134the bill, and we suppose the bill is correct as to the lands in 14. It follows that, if this were the only error, it could work no injury, if the bill sets forth the true numbers.

In section 23 there is also a discrepancy. The bill claims relief as to the south half of the north-west quarter. If this be correct, it does not adjoin the other dower lands, but is separated from them by a quarter of a mile. Mrs. Middleton, in- her testimony, describes this eighty as the east half of the north-west quarter. This adjoins the lands allotted in 14, and may be the correct description. We have no means of determining which, or whether either, is correct. We have, ourselves, discovered the foregoing discrepancies.

The present bill is by the administrators of Robert F. Simonton, and seeks to enforce a vendor’s lien on certain lands sold to Mrs. A. W. Middleton, then Mrs. Simonton. ’No title was made, but the same was retained by the vendor. It is now in Mrs. Roxana Simonton, widow and sole devisee of Robert F. Simonton. The pleadings and testimony leave no contest or doubt about the following facts : That six hundred and forty acres of land, being the dower tract —that is, the reversionary fee in the same — was sold by R. F. Simonton to Mrs. A. W. Simonton, for the agreed sum of twenty-four hundred dollars, one-third to be paid in cash, one-third at the end of one year, and the remaining third at the end of two years; the deferred payments to draw interest; and that a receipt was given to Simonton for the first and second installments of the purchase-money, bearing date November, 1869, and expressing that they were m payment of said first and second installments. It is shown that, subsequently, Mrs. A. W. Simonton — now Mrs. Middleton — purchased the residue of the tract — 960 acres. This purchase preceded the occurrences after mentioned; and there is no attempt at proof that the lands, the subject of the second purchase, were ever paid for. It is thus shown that, at the time Mrs. Middleton claims she paid the third and last installment for the dower land, she owed not only that installment, but an additional, much larger indebtedness, contracted in the second purchase; but it is left in doubt when it matured.

The real and only controversy in this case is, whether Mrs. Middleton has or has not paid the third installment of the dower-land purchase- — -eight hundred dollars, with its interest. The testimony of three of the witnesses bears on this inquiry, but that of Mrs. Middleton is fullest and most important. Her account of what she relies on as payment is as follows: “The next fall [must have been 1870] I sent [135]*135to him [B. F. Simonton!, at Statesville, North Carolina, six hundred dollars in money, with accounts against him, enough, as I thought, to pay the balance. . . . Boscoe Wiley was my agent, and, at the time the money was sent, I instructed him to write B. F. Simonton to credit it to the debt due on the reversionary interest, and did not know anything to the' contrary until after the death of B. F. Simonton. Have no receipt for the six hundred dollars and the accounts.....For the third payment, I sent him at Statesville, North Carolina, six hundred dollars, and accounts against him for more than would cover the last payment. . . . The last payment was forwarded to him, at Statesville, North Carolina, at the end of the second year [1870], through Given & Marks, Montgomery, Alabama, I think. My agent, Boscoe Wiley, went to Montgomery, at my request, to forward the money. I owed B. F. Simonton for nothing, except the lands purchased.” This is all Mrs. Middleton testifies, as to what she claims as payment of the third installment. True, she testifies to other cross demands she has against B. F. Simonton; but she states nothing-tending to show any agreement, understanding, or instruction, that they should be applied in liquidation of any debt.

Boscoe Wiley, the agent, testifies as follows : “Tine said Amanda [A. W. Middleton] paid the seventeen hundred and twenty-eight dollars [first and second installments, with interest]. I was present, and saw B- F. Simonton execute the receipt, dated November 13, 1869. I paid nothing to B. F. Simonton that I recollect of, except about fourteen hundred dollars, as the estimated amount due for his part of thje crop for 1869.”

A paper, without date or signature, was shown to this witness, and he was interrogated in regard- to it. The paper, “Exhibit B,” is as follows :

- “Amts, paid B. F. Simonton, by Mrs. A. W. Simonton, as last payment on dower part of the Simonton plantation—

To B. Wiley, for services rendered...............$200 00

Amt. taxes paid for him, 1869................. 71 28

One-half losses on Baphael Williamson........ 22 11

One-half “ “ Geo. Williamson ......... 22 11

To one-half rent of 10 mules, 1869............... 75 00

Credit, date Nov., 1869....................... 390 50

Ten mules furnished by Mrs. A. W. Simonton for 1869, whereas B. F. Simonton furnished none.

Interest on all the above for twelve months.

One-half commissions due James Marks & Co., on advances to freedmen...................$50 00.”

[136]*136The last item of this account tends to show it was made out about November, 1870. • ■

Roscoe Wiley’s testimony in relation to this paper, and the transactions it refers to, is in the following language: “I do not remember how much money A. W. Middleton paid to R. E. Simonton, but do know that she paid large sums of money to him at different times. The receipt for seventeen hundred and twenty-eight dollars, and marked ‘Exhibit C,’ was written by R. F. Simonton, and delivered in mv presence. The greater portion of exhibit ‘B’ is in my handwriting. I can not say exactly when it was made, but was made at the request of Mrs. A. W. Middleton, to be used in her settlement with R. E. Simonton. The two hundred dollar item was the amount R. F. Simonton instructed A. W. Middleton to pay me, for services rendered for the year 1869, in superintending the farm, when they farmed together. I can not say if the items in exhibit ‘B’ were the last payment on the dower or not; do not remember; know that I would not have receipted as last payment, unless it had been true. May have intended in said exhibit, part of ■last payment. I can not say that*all of the purchase-money was paid to R. E. Simonton for dower.” Witness then goes on to testify of cross demands in favor of Mrs. Middleton, and against R. F.

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Bluebook (online)
82 Ala. 131, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccurdy-v-middleton-ala-1886.