Owens v. Williams

165 So. 2d 709, 276 Ala. 627, 1964 Ala. LEXIS 417
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJune 18, 1964
Docket5 Div. 787
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 165 So. 2d 709 (Owens v. Williams) 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
Owens v. Williams, 165 So. 2d 709, 276 Ala. 627, 1964 Ala. LEXIS 417 (Ala. 1964).

Opinion

HARWOOD, Justice.

This is an appeal from a decree denying complainant-appellant’s prayer for specific performance of an alleged contract to purchase real estate, finding and decreeing that $750 was a reasonable yearly rental for the years 1961 and 1962, and from that further part of the decree awarding the appellant the sum of $363.71 for improvements made by the appellant upon the said real estate, and which the appellant claims was an inadequate award under the evidence. While there are additional findings and adjudications under the decree, they are not pertinent to this review.

The record in this case is rather voluminous. The evidence presented by the respective parties and their witnesses is in hopeless conflict. A better understanding of the case can probably be had from the following background.

On 6 March 1954, Mrs. Willie Ada Deason, a sister of Rubye Cox Williams (Mrs. J. D. Williams), one of the appellees herein, executed a deed to J. D. Williams and wife, Rubye Williams, conveying to them the 60 acres here involved. The recited consideration was $5.00 cash and execution of a purchase money mortgage for $3,500, payable in annual installments of $500 each. [629]*629This mortgage debt is unpaid except for $250.00.

Thereafter Mr. and Mrs. Williams lived on the 60 acres for a few years, and then moved into Clanton where Mr. Williams operated a filling station.

The complainant below, Fritz P. Owens, is the nephew of J. D. Williams. On 12 February 1959, Fritz P. Owens and his wife moved onto the 60 acres in question, and for two years he operated a peach orchard thereon. It was Owens’ contention that he was on the premises as vendee of J. D. Williams. It is the contention of Rubye Cox Williams and the other appellees that he was on the premises as an annual lessee of Mrs. Williams, J. D. Williams having died on 28 October 1958.

On 20 December 1960, Rubye Cox Williams filed an unlawful detainer suit in the county court of Chilton County, Alabama, against the complainant seeking to recover possession of the premises in question. The next day the complainant filed a bill alleging among other things that a contract was entered into by J. D. Williams, deceased, and the complainant, in the month of January 1956, whereby J. D. Williams had sold to the complainant the land in question for the sum of $6,000, at which time the complainant had paid to J. D. Williams the sum of $500 on the purchase price of the land, and the said J. D. Williams had agreed to accept the balance of said purchase price in payments of $500 per year with interest at 6 per cent. The complainant further averred that J. D. Williams surrendered possession of the land to complainant and that Henry Carroll, a tenant of the complainant, occupied the land during the year 1958, and that the complainant moved upon the property in 1959, and has been in possession since that time.

After the filing of the original complaint demurrers thereto were overruled and an appeal was taken to this court from that ruling. The judgment overruling the demurrer was reversed by this court essentially on the grounds that the allegations in the bill for specific performance of the contract to sell land merely stating that the husband and wife had executed • a deed, without more, was not sufficient to show that the wife was a party to the contract. The court observed that it not being alleged that the wife was a party to the contract to sell, she could not be compelled to convey her dower interest, and that it was not made clear on what basis the complainant sought specific performance as against the widow of J. D. Williams. (See Williams v. Owens, 273 Ala. 625, 143 So.2d 633.)

Upon remandment the bill was amended and the Peoples Savings Bank, Inc., as a holder of a mortgage on the land in question, and Walter C. Hayden, Administrator Ad Litem of the estate of J. D. Williams, were brought in as additional respondents. Also, on her motion Willie Ada Deason was permitted to intervene as holder of an unrecorded purchase money mortgage in the amount of $3,500, executed by J. D. Williams and Rubye Cox Williams at the time they purchased the land from her in 1954. No useful purpose would be served in discussing the pleading aspect of this case, since we are clear to the conclusion that on elementary principles the decree below is due to be affirmed.

In the proceedings below the introduction of the evidence, particularly that of the complainant, took a wide range. Clearly, and to a substantial degree, much of it was inadmissible under the provisions of Section 433, Title 7, Code of Alabama 1940, the so-called “Dead Man’s Statute.” PIowever, as provided by Section 372(1), Title 7, Code of Alabama 1940, we will assume that the court below considered only relevant, material, competent and legal evidence, particularly in view of the agreement made between the attorneys during the trial that objections would be considered as interposed to the questions violating Section 433, Title 7, supra.

In view of the state of the record our task of review has been rendered rather tedious in attempting tó separate the inadmissible evidence, which we cannot con[630]*630sider, and which we presume the court did not consider, from that which is properly admissible. We think, however, that a fair summary of the tendency of the evidence is as follows.

The evidence presented by the complainant tends to show that on 3 January 1957, the complainant and J. D. Williams entered into an agreement whereby the complainant was to purchase the 60 acres in question. The conversation allegedly was in the presence of the complainant’s mother and brother. It is clear that the complainant was to finance his purchase of the land by a proposed loan from the Federal Land Bank. Mr. Eugene Williams, a brother of J. D. Williams, and uncle of the complainant, testified that J. D. Williams had told him of the trade.

“The way I understood it, it was the agreement between him and Pat” (the complainant) “that if Pat didn’t raise the balance of the money in other words, there wasn’t no papers fixed or anything at that particular time and if Pat didn’t raise the balance of the money that this would be worked out as rental.”

Eugene Williams understood that the purchase price was to be $6,000 or $6,500.

Mrs. Gayda Mae Owens, the mother of the complainant, testified that she was present at the trade and that the complainant paid J. D. Williams $500 and was to pay the balance at $500 a year or more if he could. There was nothing said about any interest to be paid.

Mrs. Owens further testified that the complainant while living with her had made entries on the fly leaf of his high school annual as to the payments made by the complainant to J. D. Williams on the place, and that these entries reflected that the complainant had paid $1,015 to J. D. Williams on the place, and that J. D. Williams had told her prior to his death that the complainant had paid him that much.

Mrs. Owens further testified that J. D. Williams at the time of the trade had said that he had leased the premises to Mr_ Henry Carroll for another year (1958) and that Carroll was to set out some peach trees as payment for the rent, and the complainant agreed to this.

John Earl Williams, a brother of the complainant, testified that he was present at this transaction and that J. D. Williams-told the complainant he could pay $500 a year on the place but that no time of payment was fixed. The complainant gave to J. D.

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Bluebook (online)
165 So. 2d 709, 276 Ala. 627, 1964 Ala. LEXIS 417, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/owens-v-williams-ala-1964.