Sullivan v. McLaughlin

99 Ala. 60
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedNovember 15, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 99 Ala. 60 (Sullivan v. McLaughlin) 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
Sullivan v. McLaughlin, 99 Ala. 60 (Ala. 1891).

Opinion

THOBINGTON, J.

The bill in this case seeks to charge mortgagees in possession with rents, which it is alleged are equal in amount to the mortgage debt, and to have the mortgage satisfied from such rents, and cancelled as a cloud on complainants’ title ; and there is an offer in the bill to -pay any balance of the mortgage debt, if the rents should prove insufficient for that purpose.

The principal question for the decision of this court involves the construction of a deed made by Wesley Goodwin, January 11, 1881, to his wife and children, who are the complainants, and filed the bill after his death. The deed, in consideration of natural love and affection, conveys unto “the said Melissa Goodwin and the heirs of her body by [64]*64myself as husband the following described property,” being the same set forth in the bill. The habendum and tenendum clause of the deed is as follows, to-wit: “To have and to hold to the said Melissa D. Goodwin and the heirs of her body by myself as husband, and to her assigns, in the right and for the interest of her said heirs as aforesaid, hereby specially excluding all and every right of inheritance or other rights of the heirs of Melissa D. Goodwin by any person or persons other than myself.”

By an amendment to the bill it is averred that "Wesley Goodwin, the grantor, was at the date of the deed in declining health; that the property conveyed constituted substantially all the property he then owned; that his wife, one of the grantees, then had living children by a former husband; that Wesley Goodwin’s desire and intention in executing the deed was to provide for his wife and his own children by her; and that the words in the deed, “heirs of her body by myself as husband,” were so used “to show that all other heirs and children of his said wife were excluded from taking or holding any interest in said lands under or by virtue of said.deed;” that it was the grantor’s intention to convey said property by said deed to his wife and children jointly, and “the draughtsman thereof inadvertently used in said deed the term heirs of her body by him as husband, instead of her children by him;” that said grantor was illiterate and unlearned in legal terms, and, not knowing the effect of the technical terms used in the deed, supposed and believed he was conveying the lands to his wife and her children by him as husband, who are complainants in the bill, and were living when the deed was made.

Demurrers to the bill, before and after the amendment thereto, were filed by respondents, on the ground of misjoinder of parties complainant, and also on other grounds that will be briefly noticed hereinafter.

The decree of the Chancery Court on the demurrers can only be sustained on the theory that the deed in question creates in Mrs. Goodwin an estate-tail, which, by the statute (Code 1886, § 1825), is converted into, an absolute fee-simple estate; that her children, therefore, having no interest in the land, are improperly joined with her as complainants in the suit.

The controlling inquiry is as to the intention of the grantor. What estate and interest did he intend to create by the deed ? In ascertaining such intent, the deed is to be interpreted as a whole, and the subject-matter and surrounding circumstances are to be considered. In looking to the [65]*65whole structure of the deed, if it is found to bear on its face evidence that the draughtsman was not skilled in drawing such instrument, that he was unacquainted with the technical meaning and force of the terms used, greater latitude of construction must be indulged, than in cases where the instrument appears to have been skillfully drawn by one acquainted with the force and meaning of the technical expressions employed.

Wesley Goodwin, the grantor in this deed, had married a widow with children by a former husband; there were also children of her marriage with him, and children of each class were living at the time of the execution of the deed. The property conveyed constituted substantially all the grantor’s estate; he was in failing health, was illiterate, and unacquainted with the meaning and effect of technical terms in conveyances; and in some particulars the deed is inartificially drawn. Whatever technical, legal operation and effect the language employed in the deed may have in and of itself, when subjected to the light of these surrounding or attendant circumstances, it can have but one meaning. It is obvious that the intention of the grantor was to make provision to the extent of his means, and in his life-time, for his wife and his own children by her, to the exclusion of her children by a former husband. The consideration of the deed is mutual love and affection, and, under the circumstances, this was the most natural direction and expression of the grantor’s bounty; and we think the deed may be so construed as to render it effectual to carry out that purpose.

The language in the deed, “heirs of her body by myself as husband,” unrestricted by any other terms of the deed; and in the absence of living children of the wife by the grantor, would create an estate-tail special at the common law, upon which our statute (Code, 1886, § 1825), would operate.—1 Wash. on Real Prop., (5 Ed.), p. 108, § 33; May v. Ritchie, 65 Ala. 602. But, it being evident that the word “heirs” is used as the equivalent of children, and there being living children of the grantor by his wife Melissa, at the time the deed was executed, the terms employed in the deed, and quoted above, must be construed, not as words of limitation and inheritance, but as a description of a class of persons to take under the deed as purchasers, and the language is sufficiently definite and certain to be operative for that purpose.—Slayton v. Blount, 93 Ala. 575; Hamilton v. Pitcher, 53 Mo. 334; 1 Devlin on Deeds, § 184. The deed, therefore, did not create an estate-tail in Mrs. Goodwin, but it vested [66]*66the property in her and her children by the grantor, then living; and there being nothing in the deed from which it can be inferred that the grantor intended to postpone the interest of the children, the title to the property vested in them immédiately, jointly and equally with their mother ; but whether subject to diminution by the subsequent birth of. other children of her marriage with the grantor, we do not decide, as it is not a question in this case.—Wikle v. McGraw, 91 Ala. 631; May v. Ritchie, 65 Ala. 602; Varner v. Young’s Executor, 56 Ala. 260; Robertson v. Pettibone & Johnson, 36 Ala. 197; Vangant v. Morris, 25 Ala. 285; Powell v. Glenn, 21 Ala. 459; Mims v. Stewart, 21 Ala. 682.

In the case of Varner v. Young’s Executor, supra, the language of the deed construed is substantially the same as in the deed we are now considering, and there was a living child of the grantee at the time the deed was executed. The court said: “The words by which the slaves are conveyed, if employed in a conveyance of title to land, would have created an estate-tail at common law.” This was intended simply as a declaration of the legal effect and operation of the words or terms then under consideration, when employed in conveyances of land generally, unrestricted or unexplained by other portions of the instrument, and without reference to whether there were or not living children of the grantee at the date of the conveyance. The case is, therefore, not to be considered as asserting a doctrine contrary to that herein announced.

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Bluebook (online)
99 Ala. 60, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sullivan-v-mclaughlin-ala-1891.