State v. Broos

60 So. 2d 843, 257 Ala. 690, 1952 Ala. LEXIS 42
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedOctober 16, 1952
Docket1 Div. 497
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 60 So. 2d 843 (State v. Broos) 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
State v. Broos, 60 So. 2d 843, 257 Ala. 690, 1952 Ala. LEXIS 42 (Ala. 1952).

Opinion

BROWN, Justice.

This appeal by the plaintiff is from a judgment of the Circuit Court of Mobile County entered on the verdict of a jury in favor of the defendant. The action is statutory ej ectment brought by the State of Alabama, “for the use and benefit of the Board of School Commissioners of Mobile County” for the recovery of possession of a segment of land, situated in the Wheeler-ville Community in Mobile County, consisting of twenty-nine and a fraction acres, located in Section 16, Township 4, Range 2, West, lying immediately north of the Tanner-Williams Ferry Road, leading easterly through Springhill into the City of Mobile. The suit was filed May 9, 1950.

The title to said segment, as a matter of judicial knowledge and as the evidence shows, was,vested in the State for the use of the inhabitants of said township for the establishment and maintenance of public schools by the Act of Congress approved March 2, 1819, authorizing “the inhabitants of the territory of Alabama” .to form for themselves a constitution and state government and “be admitted into the union, upon the sanie footing with the original states, in all respects whatever. * * - * ” 3rd U.S. Stat. at Large, p. 489.

The several propositions submitted to the Convention of Delegates by said act were duly accepted and ratified “in convention at Huntsville, this second day of August, in the year of our Lord one thou-' [694]*694sand eight hundred and nineteen, and of American independence the forty-fourth.” See Code of 1923, Vol. 1, p. 81, for resolution accepting the proposition laid down in the Acts of Congress.

This suit was filed on May 9, 1950, one hundred and thirty years, nine months, and seven days after the title to the said property vested in the state under the Act of Congress and its acceptance by the people of Alabama for the use of the public schools.

The defendant interposed the statutory plea of “not guilty”, the general issue in such actions, and the only appropriate plea thereto if the defendant’s purpose was to contest "the plaintiff’s title and right of possession to the property. Code of 1940, Tit. 7, § 941; Bynum v. Gold, 106 Ala. 427, 17 So. 667. Under such plea any fact tending to defeat plaintiff’s title or sustain that of the defendant is within the scope of the issues. McCormick v. McCormick, 221 Ala. 606, 130 So. 226; Bynum v. Gold, supra.

The defendant, Bessie F. Broos, as the evidence goes to show, is the granddaughter of Frederick Fincher, whose wife was Sarah or Sallie Fincher, and the grandmother of the defendant. Fincher, Sr. acquired a home site in the Wheelerville Community in the year 1855 upon which he built a log house, located by the side of the Tanner-Williams Ferry Road, fronting south, leading from Wheelerville through. Springhill easterly into the City of. Mobile. These facts are affirmed by the evidence which shows that Frederick Fincher, defendant’s father, was 85 or 86 years old when he died in the year 1948 and hence he was born either in 1862 or 1863, six or seven years after the deed from Patrick McKeon was executed to Frederick Finch-er.

The evidence goes to show that the grandmother Sarah or Sallie Fincher was living in the log house within the memory of some of the granddaughters who testified for the defendant. No doubt she was living there with her son Frederick Fincher, Jr., who was born at said house, lived and died on said property. The north line of the house site whereon the log house was built was the section line between Sections 16 and 21, Township 4, South, Range 2 West, Mobile County. The tract of land involved in this suit lies immediately north of the back yard of said house and has been under fence and in cultivation for growing corn, watermelons and for pasture and during all of said time has been enclosed by fence and was so surrounded by fence at the commencement of the suit. The evidence goes to show that from a time of which “the mind of living men runneth not to the contrary,” the land was so occupied, used and fenced.

Ed Thompson, testifying a few days before his 90th birthday, stated that he had known of such use for 80 years. The witness Lord, who was bom in 1870, remembered such occupancy and use since he was 10 or 12 years old. Other witnesses for the defendant, ranging in age from 65 to 41, gave like testimony. The evidence shows that the defendant Bessie Broos derived title “by descent, cast or devise” from a predecessor in possession of the land at the time of his death, her father, Frederick Fincher. He and his predecessors had been in such possession and lived at the old house and occupied said tract in controversy for 86 years, more than 30 years before the passage of the Act of February 2, 1893. The defendant, therefore, is within the protection of one of the major exceptions in said act, now § 828, Title 7. Code of 1940.

The appellant’s major contention is that the court erred in refusing to the plaintiff the general affirmative charge in its favor and in charging the jury orally in that portion of the oral charge to which exception was reserved. This contention is predicated largely on the following statement in brief: “The evidence showed that, from 1873 down to the date of the institution of this lawsuit, the Fincher homeplace and adjoining Fincher property in Section 21, immediately abutting on the land sued for, had been returned for assessment regularly; that the description in the assessment never included the land sued for, nor any land in Section 16; and that the property sued for [695]*695has never been assessed by or in the name of Fred Fincher or any other Fincher.

“The evidence further showed that no claim or declaration of entry and adverse possession, of the land sued for in this action, was ever filed in the Probate Court of Mobile County, Alabama, or recorded in the book kept in the said Court for such records, commonly styled ‘the Adverse Possession Book’.

“The land in question is in the Wheelerville community, some eight or ten miles West of Mobile and two or three miles West of Springhill.

“The law questions that arise on this appeal grow out of rulings on objections to evidence; on plaintiff’s requested charges refused by the trial Judge; and on one portion of the Judge’s oral charge, to which exception was taken.”

The major question of law is whether or not Fred Fincher could procure title by twenty years adverse possession immediately next preceding May 1, 1908. The court charged the jury that he could and refused plaintiff’s requested affirmative charges pertinent to this question.

The brief further argues, “Plaintiff’s respectful insistence was, and is, that the running of the statute of limitation was stopped from and after the passage of the Act of February 11, 1893 (as the evidence showed that no effort was made by the Finchers to comply with the requirements of the statute), and that, hence, it was necessary to show that ripening of title by 20 years adverse possession was completed before the 11th day of February, 1893.”

The appellant places much emphasis on the fact that Frederick Fincher, who executed his will on the 13th of May, 1942, disposed of property in paragraphs 2, 3 and 4, located in Section 21, to his daughters, but takes no notice of the fact that in paragraph 5 of the will he disposed of “All the rest and residue of my property, real, personal and mixed, I give, devise and bequeath to my four daughters, namely: Hattie F. Nicholas, Louise F. Martin, Anna Belle F. Spaulding and Bessie F.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
60 So. 2d 843, 257 Ala. 690, 1952 Ala. LEXIS 42, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-broos-ala-1952.