Purvis v. Ennis

61 So. 2d 451, 258 Ala. 174, 1952 Ala. LEXIS 59
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedNovember 20, 1952
Docket4 Div. 631
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 61 So. 2d 451 (Purvis v. Ennis) 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
Purvis v. Ennis, 61 So. 2d 451, 258 Ala. 174, 1952 Ala. LEXIS 59 (Ala. 1952).

Opinion

*176 LIVINGSTON, Chief Justice.

This is an appeal from a decree of the Circuit Court of Houston County, Alabama, in equity, appointing commissioners to set aside dower to appellant, and ordering other lands sold for division among tenants in common.

One J. L. Ennis died intestate in the year 1930, leaving surviving a widow, Cora Cunningham Ennis, who is now Cora Purvis, and is the appellant here. He left no lineal descendants, but did leave surviving him a brother, Alto L. Ennis, and two sisters, Mrs. Jessie Roebuck and Mrs. Tullie Roebuck, as his only heirs at law.

The bill of complaint in this cause was filed by Alto L. Ennis against Cora Ennis, Mrs. Jessie Roebuck, Mrs. Tullie Roebuck, and one E. M. Grimsley.

In addition to the foregoing facts, the bill, as amended, alleged, in substance, that at the time of his death, J. L. Ennis was seized and possessed of a forty-acre tract of land on which he and his wife, Cora Ennis (now Mrs. Purvis) lived; that he also owned an eighty-acre tract of land which is the subject matter of this suit; that' the forty-acre tract was encumbered by two mortgages, and the eighty-acre tract by one mortgage, made by the intestate in 1925 to the Federal liand Bank of New Orleans; that the respondent, E. M. Grimsley, has purchased the Federal Land Bank mortgage on the éighty-acre tract of land and is proceeding with the foreclosure of same; that shortly after J. L. Ennis died, Cora Ennis, his widow, Alto L. Ennis, Mrs. Jessie Roebuck and Mrs. Tullie Roebuck, his' only heirs at law, entered into a verbal agreement to the effect that Cora Ennis was to have and retain possession of all of the lands of J. L. Ennis, deceased, together with the rents and profits thereof during her lifetime upon certain conditions. The amended bill setting up this agreement reads as follows:

“Plaintiff further alleges that immediately after the death of said J. L. Ennis, the plaintiff took preliminary steps to have an administrator appointed on the estate' of J. L. Ennis, but before said proceedings were filed, Mrs. Cora Ennis, Widow of said J. L. Ennis, approached the plaintiff about ■his plan to have an administrator appointed. At said time, the indebtedness then existing on the lands involved in this case as well as the indebtedness on the forty acre homestead tract mentioned in the original bill was discussed between them. The plaintiff at said time reminded the said Mrs. Cora Ennis, that the plaintiff and his sisters Mrs. Tullie Roebuck and Mrs. Jessie Roebuck as the heirs at law of J. L. Ennis, deceased, were the owners of said eighty acres of land involved in this suit, as well as the homestead tract referred-to, but they were willing for her to have possession as widow as. long as she lived, provided she would pay the indebtedness on said lands and keep- up the places as her own responsibility.. Plaintiff further notified said Mrs. Cora Ennis at said time she could not sell said lands, whereupon she stated to the plaintiff that she knew she could not sell said lands and did not intend to try to sell same because she knew that the plaintiff and his said two sisters would have to sign a deed in order for her to sell said lands. Whereupon, plaintiff desisted in further steps to have an administrator appointed and- notified the said Mrs-. Cora Ennis that she could continue in possession of said lands as long as she lived, under the conditions stated. *177 Thereupon, and ever since, said Mrs. Cora Ennis has continued in such possession of the lands involved in this suit, recognizing the title of the plaintiff and his said sisters, complying with the terms of possession stated, collecting the rents, income and profits from said lands, with no notice to the plaintiff or his said sisters that she had defaulted in the payment of said mortgage indebtedness, until the plaintiff and his said sisters became aware of the facts alleged in paragraph four of the original bill of complaint, as to the proceedings by the defendant, E. M. Grimsley, to foreclose said mortgage therein mentioned.”

The bill further avers that Cora Ennis sold the forty-acre homestead tract of land.

The bill, as amended, sought to bar the dower rights of the appellant in the eighty-a'cre tract of land, but prayed, in the alternative, that if the dower rights of the widow in the said eighty acres of land were not barred that such dower be set apart to the widow, and the remainder of said eighty-acre tract be sold for division among the heirs at law of J. L. Ennis, deceased. Complainant also offered to pay the mortgage indebtedness found to- be due.

By plea and answer, the appellant, Cora Ennis Purvis, interposed defenses of the statute of limitations, adverse possession, and equitable estoppel. Appellant also denied making the agreement set out in the bill of complaint, and sought, by cross bill, to have exemptions in lieu of homestead, and dower, set apart to her out of the eighty-acre- tract, and to have title to the entire eighty-acre tract declared in appellant, or to have a lien established on said land because of payments of the debts of her husband, taxes, and expenditures for improvements.

.The cause was submitted for final decree on evidence taken before a commissioner in'the court below.

The trial court made and entered the following decree:

“The matter here considered is the bill o'f plaintiff to sell, for division the land described in said bill, the answers of defendants, Mrs. Tullie Roebuck, and Mrs. Jessie Roebuck, the answer and cross-bill, original and amended, of defendants, Mrs. Cora Cunningham and E. M. Grimsley, answers of cross-defendants to cross-bill, agreement of parties for submission, and testimony as noted by the attorneys of record for plaintiff and defendants, Mrs. Cora Cunningham and E. M. Grimsley; upon consideration of the same, it is the judgment and opinion of the Court that plaintiff is entitled to relief on his bill of complaint and that the defendant is not entitled to relief on her cross-bill; therefore,
“It is ordered, adjudged and decreed by the Court that plaintiff, Alto L. Ennis, and defendants, Mrs. Tullie Roebuck and Mrs. Jessie Roebuck, are the joint owners and tenants in common of the following described real estate:
“E J/2 SW J4, Section 28, Township 2, Range 26, Houston County, Alabama, containing 80 acres, more or less.
“It is further ordered, adjudged and decreed by the Court that Alto Ennis, Mrs.-Tullie Roebuck and Mrs. Jessie Roebuck, each, own an undivided one-third interest in the above described real estate, each subject however, to the mortgage held and owned by defendant, E. M. Grimsley, and each subject, also, to the dower rights of defendant, Mrs. Cora Cunningham, as the widow of J. L. Ennis, deceased.
“The court finds from the testimony in this case that the possession of the land involved in this suit by defendant, Mrs. Cora Cunningham, for a period of about 18 years was a permissive possession and could not and did not effect the rights o'f the joint owners thereof in and to said land.
“The Court also finds from the testimony in this case that the failure of defendant, Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
61 So. 2d 451, 258 Ala. 174, 1952 Ala. LEXIS 59, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/purvis-v-ennis-ala-1952.