Stewart Bros. v. Ransom

87 So. 89, 204 Ala. 589, 1920 Ala. LEXIS 287
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedOctober 28, 1920
Docket8 Div. 318.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 87 So. 89 (Stewart Bros. v. Ransom) 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
Stewart Bros. v. Ransom, 87 So. 89, 204 Ala. 589, 1920 Ala. LEXIS 287 (Ala. 1920).

Opinion

SAYRE, J.

Statutory action in the nature of ejectment; second appeal. Stewart v. Ransom, 200 Ala. 304, 76 South. 70.

Plaintiffs, appellants, traced their title,, through a mortgage and foreclosure, back toW. M. Lynn, and introduced evidence tending to show that the mortgagor Lynn had been in possession at the date of the mortgage, April, 1913. Defendant introduced a certified copy of a list of lands, which included the land in suit, granted by the federal government to the state of Alabama, May 23,. 1828, known as the Muscle Shoals List of Lands; a copy of the tract book certified by the Secretary of State of the state of Alabama and showing a grant to H. D. Morrow (to whom the opinion on former appeal refers as “Moore”) in 1858; and a deed, dated April, 1914, from/ Sarah L. Morrow and others, purporting to be the deed of the widow and “the only heirs and distributees of the late Henry S. Morrow, deceased,” it having been-shown that Henry S. Morrow was one of seven children of Hugh D. Morrow, deceased. Thereupon plaintiffs offered in evidence a judgment in favor of defendant against Lynn-aforesaid, execution dated December 9, 1913, levy, sale, and a deed by the sheriff to defendant of the land in suit, dated January-24, 1914; the purpose of this evidence being; to show that defendant claimed title under the same Lynn through whom plaintiffs hadderaigned title, and so to estop defendant to-show a different title.

[1 -3] Defendant was not to be so estopped,. “When the plaintiff has proved that he and. the defendant claim title to the land in controversy from a common source, and that of the two titles emanating from that source his-is the superior, he shows a prima facie right to recover.” Warvelle on Ejectment, § 265. and “where the defendant denies that he-claims from the same source as the plaintiff, the latter may show that he does so claim by introducing in evidence the various deeds: ocnmeeting him with such alleged common-source" (italics supplied). Id. To the same effect, we think, may be cited Vidmer v.. *591 Lloyd, 184 Ala. 153, 63 South. 943, the leading case on appellants’ (plaintiffs’) brief. But the defendant in ejéctment may avail himself of any legal defense, and has the undoubted right to purchase as many outstanding claims of title as he may see fit (Id., § 266), and it would seem that authority hardly need be cited to the further proposition of the same text that—

“Notwithstanding the proof of the insufficiency of his title under the common source, the defendant may still defeat the action by showing that there is a title superior to that of the person or persons under whom both parties claim, and that he is the holder of this title.” Id.

Certainly no case of ours denies the proposition. In Birmingham Fuel Co. v. Boshell, 190 Ala. 597, 67 South. 403, cited by appellants, the title of each of the parties was traced back to a common source, but there was no acquisition of an outstanding title. So, generally, in the other cases. But that defendant had the right to acquire as many outstanding titles as he saw fit, and avail himself- of any one of them shown to be superior to that of the plaintiffs, is commonly recognized in our cases. Cooper v. Watson, 73 Ala. 252; Harris v. Stevenson, 147 Ala. 537, 41 South. 1008; Francis v. Sheats, 153 Ala. 468, 45 South. 241, 127 Am. St. Rep. 61; Monfee v. Hagan, 201 Ala. 627, 79 South. 189. This will suffice to dispose of several of the assignments of error argued in the brief for appellants.

[4] There was nothing objectionable in the form in which the court gave the general charge for defendant. The instruction was with hypothesis that the jury believed the ■evidence, and was not a categorical instruction such as was considered in Sherrill v. Merchants’ & Mechanics’ Bank, 195 Ala. 175, 70 South. 723, and Shipp v. Shelton, 193 Ala. 658, 69 South. 102, cases cited by appellants.

[5] The certified copy of the entry in the tract book relating to the land in suit and showing its grant to H. D. Morrow was properly admitted in evidence. True, the statute (Code, § 3984) provides, in effect, that copies of any evidences of title to lands, furnished by the Secretary of State to the judge of probate, when certified by such judge, are admissible in this state; but this section provides an additional and more convenient method of proof; it is not exclusive; and in our judgment the certificate was admissible under section 3983 of the Code. It was the duty of the Secretary of State to keep a record of all grants and patents issued by the state (Code, § 573), and 3983 provides that all transcripts of books or papers, or parts thereof required by law to be kept in the office of any public officer, when certified by the proper custodian thereof, must be received in evidence in all courts. The same results would be attained on common-law principles even though there were' no such statute as section 3983. Hines v. Greenlee, 3 Ala. 73.

certified copy of the tract book having been properly admitted, thus tracing defendant’s title back to the state and the United States, proof of possession by the Morrows was not necessary to the title which he acquired from them.

[7,8] Appellants offered in evidence an affidavit of W. M. Lynn, dated nearly five years after the commencement of this suit, and purporting to have been sworn to and subscribed in the county of Tishomingo, state of Mississippi, containing a statement as to how he acquired his title to the land in controversy, showing sporadic acts of ownership insufficient in themselves to establish a title by adverse possession (200 Ala. 304, 76 South. 70), affirming that for more than ten years prior to 1914 he had been in “the actual, open, continuous, uninterrupted possession of the same, claiming the absolute title thereto” under the deed to him, and that his deed had been lost and could not be found. This affidavit was recorded in the office of the judge of probate of Morgan county June 10, 1919. As we understand the bill of exceptions, the trial court admitted this affidavit “only upon the question of the adverse possession of Lynn.” Counsellor appellee say in brief that by the act of September 28,1915 (Acts, p. 919) “it was not intended that an absconding fugitive” (Lynn had absconded from Morgan county in December, 1913) “should hie him hence and send back a Parthian shot, in the form of an ex parte affidavit from a one-night stand in a distant state, setting forth that he had a deed, that he bought the land, that he remained in possession, and thereby sweep away the title to a vast domain.” Our opinion is that counsel has very well described one purpose for which this act was not adopted by the Legislature and at the same time the only effect its application to the case at bar could have, if construed as comprehensively as appellants would have it.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
87 So. 89, 204 Ala. 589, 1920 Ala. LEXIS 287, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stewart-bros-v-ransom-ala-1920.