Smithson v. Handley
This text of 91 So. 447 (Smithson v. Handley) 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.
Opinion
On the trial of a statutory action of ejectment brought by appellant against appellee for a strip of land lying along the line between the N. W. % of S. W. % and S. W. % of S. W. % of section 7, township 14, range 3 east, on the one side, and the N. E. % of the S. W. % and S. E.% of S. W. % of the same section on the other, the court in its oral charge to the jury intructed them, in substance, (1) that, if the parties agreed upon and established the line between them, they thereupon became owners of the land on their respective sides, and that (2) if there was an agreement made by these parties that the line run by the county surveyor was the true line between them, then plaintiff cannot recover. In the same connection the court instructed the jury (3) that if they found that the line by agreement was established by the county surveyor, and the parties remained in possession up to the line on their respective sides for _ 20 years or more, then the line so established was the line between the parties, whether correctly established in the beginning or not. Exceptions were duly reserved.
The evidence tended to show that in 1895 plaintiff sold and conveyed to defendant the two (approximate) 40’s lying east of the line in dispute, retaining title to and possession of the two 40’s lying west. The conveyance described tbe line now in dispute by reference to the lines of the government survey. The testimony for defendant tended to show that at the time the land was sold plaintiff made an agreement as to the boundary line, and showed defendant “where it was to come to,” and that defendant gave the deed to the surveyor, and told him to locate it. Page 18 of the transcript. There was also some evidence to the effect that plaintiff’s husband was present when the surveyor ran the line thus agreed upon. Thereafter, as the testimony for defendant went to show, defendant occupied the land on his side of the line thus established for more than 20 years before this suit was brought.
Affirmed.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
91 So. 447, 206 Ala. 353, 1921 Ala. LEXIS 163, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smithson-v-handley-ala-1921.