Smith v. Holloway

66 So. 2d 877, 259 Ala. 393, 1953 Ala. LEXIS 322
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedAugust 6, 1953
Docket4 Div. 720
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 66 So. 2d 877 (Smith v. Holloway) 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
Smith v. Holloway, 66 So. 2d 877, 259 Ala. 393, 1953 Ala. LEXIS 322 (Ala. 1953).

Opinion

LAWSON, Justice.

S. O. Smith was the owner of a tract of land in Covington County, Alabama, consisting of approximately 170 acres, on which he and his family lived for many years.

On November 19, 1939, S. O. Smith was living in Florida and on that date an instrument in the form of a warranty deed was executed purporting to convey the 170-acre tract of land to Mrs. Gertrude A. Holloway for a recited consideration of $1,500 and the assumption by the grantee of an indebtedness owed by S. O. Smith and wife, Margaret Smith, to the Federal Land Bank of New Orleans, which indebtedness was secured by a mortgage on the land.

In October, 1943, S. O. Smith filed an ejectment suit against Mrs. Gertrude A. Holloway and her tenant, Virgil Holloway, seeking to recover possession of the 170-acre tract of land, together with damages for its detention. In the fall of 1945, on motion of Mrs. Holloway, the cause was transferred to the equity side of the court.

Thereupon Mrs. Holloway filed her bill of complaint against S. O. Smith who, according to the bill, was then a resident of Okaloosa County, Florida. In her said bill Mrs. Holloway alleged the execution and delivery of the deed of November 19, 1939; the manner in which the consideration therefor was paid and secured; that she had gone into possession' of the property and had made certain improvements thereon and was still in possession thereof; that S. O. Smith was contending that he was non compos mentis at the time of the execution of the deed and had filed suit in ejectment to recover the land covered by the deed; that she purchased the land in good faith without any knowledge of the claimed mental infirmity of S. O. Smith and without knowledge of any fact which if followed up would have apprised her of any abnormal mental condition of S. O. Smith as claimed. The prayer of the bill filed by Mrs. Holloway against S. O. Smith was in substance that it be decreed that the deed as executed by S. O. Smith and wife on November 13, 1939, be held valid and of full force and effect.

S. O. Smith by and through two firms of attorneys of the Covington County Bar filed a sworn answer to the bill of Mrs. Holloway wherein he categorically denied that he executed and delivered the deed to Mrs. Holloway; that Mrs. Holloway purchased the land described in the deed of November 19, 1939; that he authorized payment in the manner averred in Mrs. Holloway’s bill; that Mrs. Holloway paid him any money as the purchase price of the said lands; that he authorized Mrs. Holloway to go into possession of the land. In addition to denying the material averments of the bill filed against him by Mrs. Holloway, the said S. O. Smith in his answer averred in substance as follows:

That he had owned the suit property for many years and had resided and raised his family thereon; that Mrs. Holloway lived nearby and knew that he was old, sick, diseased and had been confined to his bed; that he was removed from his home on the suit property to Inverness, Florida, in an ambulance while he was still sick and diseased and not ab’le in any manner physically or mentally to enter into or consummate contracts or execute and deliver a deed; that Mrs. Holloway knew or was in possession of facts which by the exercise of reasonable diligence would have informed her of his said disabilities; that on the date the said deed is said to have been signed and delivered he was confined to his bed in Inverness, Florida, under the treatment of a physician and attended by a nurse; that he was at that time so ill, weak and diseased and so without his mental faculties as not to be capable of transacting business and executing and consummating a sale of land, all of which was known to Mrs. Holloway, but nevertheless she “sought by artifice, or by fraudulent obtaining possession of the lands involved, to thus obtain the legal or equitable title, claim, or possession, of such lands”; that Mrs. Holloway went into possession of the suit property without his authority or knowledge and has wrongfully [396]*396withheld said property from him; “that the reasonable market value of the use or hire, or reasonable annual rental value thereof was, and is the sum of to-wit, $500.00 per annum; and that respondent was, and is, entitled to the possession of the lands involved, together with the reasonable market valuation of the annual rental value thereof, from the complainant, from the date of her wrongful entry, to-wit, January 1940, with judgment and decree dispossessing the complainant, her tenants, agents, servants and employees.”

S. O. Smith made his answer a cross-bill wherein he prayed for the cancellation of the deed of November 19, 1939; that Mrs. Holloway be dispossessed of the suit property and that she be required to pay him damages for the detention of the land and for improvements removed therefrom.

Mrs. Holloway duly filed her answer to the cross-bill wherein she denied its material allegations.

The .cause having been transferred to equity on motion of Mrs. Holloway, S. O. Smith was entitled to a decree cancelling the deed of November 19, 1939, if he could prove the averments of his answer — cross bill as to fraud or insanity, since it is averred that Mrs. Holloway had notice of the alleged insanity. See § 41, Title 9, Code 1940; Livingston v. Livingston, 210 Ala. 420, 98 So. 281.

Evidently there was a failure of such proof, for on August 26, 1946, the circuit court of Covington County, after hearing the witnesses testify orally in open court, rendered a decree granting the relief prayed for by Mrs. Holloway in her bill and denying the relief prayed for in Smith’s cross bill. The deed of November 19, 1939, was decreed to be valid and of full force •and effect. The cross bill of S. O. Smith was dismissed and he was taxed with the ■costs.

In so far as we are advised, there was no appeal from that decree. It would seem, therefore, that the decree of August 26, 1946, finally settled the controversy as to the validity of the deed of November 19, 1939. But such is not the case.

On October 14, 1950, S. O. Smith, suing by his daughter as next friend filed a bill in the circuit court of Covington County, in equity, against Mrs. Gertrude A. Holloway; her husband, T. F. Holloway; and Mrs. Alice Miller, to whom, according to the averments of the bill, Mrs. Gertrude A. Holloway had conveyed the said 170-acre tract of land.

The two main aspects of the bill or which relief was sought are: (1) to have set aside and vacated as void the decree of August 26, 1946; and (2) to have the deed of November 19, 1939, set aside and annulled. The bill also prayed that a guardian ad litem be appointed to represent S. O. Smith.

Respondents’ demurrer to the original bill was sustained on March 30, 1951. The bill was amended on June 5, 1951.

On September 28, 1951, the death of S. O. Smith having been suggested, a decree was entered substituting the personal representative and heirs at law of S. O. Smith as parties complainant.

Demurrer of respondents to the amended bill was sustained on January 21, 1952. The bill was again amended and on April 15, 1952, the trial court entered a decree sustaining the demurrer of respondents to the bill as last amended, but the bill as last amended was not dismissed.

The substituted complainants have appealed from the decree of April 15, 1952, but some of their assignments of error attack the decrees of March 30, 1951, and January 21, 1952. Such assignments of error will not be considered.

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Related

Willett v. Webster
148 N.E.2d 267 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1958)
Smith v. Holloway
78 So. 2d 318 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1955)

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Bluebook (online)
66 So. 2d 877, 259 Ala. 393, 1953 Ala. LEXIS 322, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-holloway-ala-1953.