Sibley v. McMahon

98 So. 805, 210 Ala. 598, 1924 Ala. LEXIS 23
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJanuary 24, 1924
Docket1 Div. 292.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 98 So. 805 (Sibley v. McMahon) 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
Sibley v. McMahon, 98 So. 805, 210 Ala. 598, 1924 Ala. LEXIS 23 (Ala. 1924).

Opinion

MILLER, J.

The complainant, Harriet B. Sibley (appellant), filed this bill in equity against Grace St. John McMahon and W. Otis McMahon, the respondents and appellees, and avers the appellant Mrs. Sibley, tbe appellee Mrs. McMahon, and Dr. O. H. Harris, own separately dwelling lots which adjoin, all facing on Ooneeption street in tbe city of Mobile. Tbe residence lot of Mrs. McMahon is on the corner of Conception and St. Anthony streets. There is- a common alley to the three residences leading north from St. Anthony street in the rear of the residence of Dr. Hams and Mrs. McMahon to the residence lot of the complainant. The bill alleges:

“That said alleyway is a common alleyway and has been used by all of the occupants of the above said property, including your complainant, continuously for# a period of more than twenty years, and that your complainant is vested with a legal easement in and to said alleyway and a perpetual right to the use of said alleyway, together with the other owners of said property abutting thereon.”

It appears from the bill that by agreement of the parties a gate was erected and locked at the entrance of the alley, and each of the owners of these lots furnished with- a key — each having free and -unobstructed .use of the alley until, to wit, October 26, 1921, when the respondents locked the gate and would not give complainant or her tenants a key to the lock, thereby depriving and denying the complainant the right to use the alleyway. The complainant seeks by the bill to have her legal right to use the common alley established, and an injunction restraining the respondents from further interference or obstruction of the alleyway.

The respondents by their answer “admit the allegations as to the location of said alleyway,” but deny that it has been used by the complainant for 20 years. They claim and aver complainant has no interest in or right to the alleyway. Mrs. McMahon, a respondent, claims to own, the alleyway by deed dated December 4, 1903, executed by *600 her mother to her -and hy adverse possession under that deed. The answer admits:

, “On or about the 26th day of October, 1921, they locked the said gate or caused same to be locked, without furnishing 'complainant with a key, and they admit that they deprived complainant of free entrance and exit to and from said alleyway.”

The court on final hearing on pleading and proof denied complainant the relief she seeks, dismissed the bill of complaint, and taxed her with the costs of the cause. This appeal is prosecuted by the complainant from that decree, and it is assigned as error.

The evidence in this cause is documentary, and by deposition of the witnesses. No witness was examined orally in the presence of the court, so we must give no weight to the decision of the trial court upon the facts, and we must indulge no presumption in its favor. The statute requires that we shall weigh the evidence and give such judgment and render such decree as we deem just under the pleading and proof. The review here is de novo as to the facts. Subdivision 1, | 5955, Code 1907; Shows v. Folmar, 133 Ala. 599, 32 South. 495; Freeman v. Blount, 172 Ala. 655, 55 South. 293.

The bill alleges the complainant, Mrs. Sibley, is vested with a legal easement in and to this alleyway, and a perpetual right to the use of it, together with the other owners of the other two residence lots. The complainant alleges in legal effect that she, Mrs. McMahon, and Dr. Harris, are joint owners or tenants in common -of the easement right of the alley, with the right of each to use it in dommon from St. Anthony street in going to and from, their respective lots. Is this averment sustained by the-proof? The property in question, this alleyway, and the three lots adjoining, from the abstract of title in evidence, appears to be a part of a Spanish grant to Thomas Price, known as the Price tract. The title to the ■alleyway or the alley was in Gustave Beal in 1836. On October 17, 1836, he conveyed the lot' now owned by complainant to Charles Batre, and after conveying and describing the lot the conveyance states:

“With an alleyway thirteen feet more or less on the corner of the west end of the south boundary line, extending to St. Anthony street, which said alley Joshua S. Secor or his assigns and David Munsen or his assigns, have and use in common with the grantor or his assigns.”

Tne complainant has an unbroken chain of title to the lot with the alleyway right and use in common with the owners of the other lots, from the different owners connected to and with Charles Batre, the grantee from Gustave Beal. This lot, with right to use the alleyway in .common with the owners of the other two lots, was conveyed to the complainant on September 1, 1884, by Augusta Evans Wilson, as trustee. On March 5, 1836, Gustave Beal granted to Joshua S. Secor right of way in and to a certain passageway leading from St. Anthony street, having a front of 13 feet on -the north side of St. Anthony street and a depth of about 80 feet. The conveyance bounds the alleyway, and it states “said alley to be used as an alley in connection with the adjoining owners.” Dr. Harris’ right to the use of the alley comes through this source. On December 4, 1903, Ellen F. St. John conveyed to respondent a lot fronting 44 feet, more or less, on Conception street with a depth of 149 feet on St. Anthony street, “extending to and including an alleyway in the rear of said lot, which alleyway has a width of about thirteen (13) feet, and said lot is the same width in rear as in front.” Henry G. Humphries, on March 17, 1857, conveyed to Thomas St. John a lot on Conception street 43% feet, more or less, and depth on St. Anthony street of 135 feet more or less, “to the alleyway in the rear * * * with all -the rights, uses and privileges of the said alleyway in the rear.” Thomas St. John conveyed on May 5, 1858, the same dbovedescribed property to D. C. ■ Anderson, as trustee, for Ellen F. St. John, wife of grantor.

It is clear and evident from the abstract of title to this property that the complainant, the respondent Mrs. McMahon, and ■Dr. Harris, each have an easement right in common in this alley. They are tenants in common in their right to use it, and we so hold.

The trial court based its decree on the case of Sharpe v. Marcus, 137 Ala. 147, 33 South. 821, as applicable to the facts in this ease. The appellees insist the principles declared in that case and in Jesse French Co. v. Forbes, 129 Ala. 471, 29 South. 683, 87 Am. St. Rep. 71, should govern and control in this cause. These cases have no conclusive or persuasive bearing on the facts of this case. The facts are strikingly different. There an attempt is made to establish an easement in an alley by prescription; here this bill alleges, and it is sustained by the proof, that “complainant is vested with a legal easement in and to said alleyway and a perpetual right to the use of said alleyway, together with the other owners of the said property abutting thereon.” The title to this easement in and the right to use of* this alley is traced by purchase to a common source, Gustave Beal, in 1836, by the' evidence as hereinbefore shown. The right to use the alley is owned by purchase by three persons, and one of the three cotenants is attempting to divest a part of this title of another cotenant owner by adverse possession.

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Bluebook (online)
98 So. 805, 210 Ala. 598, 1924 Ala. LEXIS 23, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sibley-v-mcmahon-ala-1924.