Swindall v. Ford

63 So. 651, 184 Ala. 137, 1913 Ala. LEXIS 601
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedNovember 13, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 63 So. 651 (Swindall v. Ford) 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
Swindall v. Ford, 63 So. 651, 184 Ala. 137, 1913 Ala. LEXIS 601 (Ala. 1913).

Opinion

DOWDELL, C. J.

— Statutory ejectment, brought by George W. White, appellee, against O. R. Swindall and wife, appellants, for the recovery of certain lands in Etowah county, Ala. From a verdict and judgment for the plaintiff, the present appeal is prosecuted. After the appeal was taken, and before its submission, the appellee White and O. R. Swindall, one of the appellants, died. Thereupon, in this court, the deaths of said parties were suggested, and the cause, as to appellee White, was revived in the name of Morris Ford, as his administrator, and, as to the appellant O: R. Swindall, was revived in the names of his heirs at law.

The defendants entered the plea of not guilty as to part of the lands sued for, and disclaimed as to the [142]*142balance. The plaintiff saw proper not to ask for judgment, as he might have done, on this disclaimer, for the lands as to which the defendants disclaimed possession, but took issue with defendants both on the plea and the disclaimer. Some of the exceptions reserved on the trial related to rulings on the issue presented by the disclaimer, and, while there was verdict for plaintiff on both issues, the record fails to disclose a judgment against the defendants for the lands on the issue presented by the disclaimer, and hence defendants cannot complain in this court of such adverse rulings on that issue, and besides, under the views we entertain in the cause, it is unnecessary to discuss the same.

The plaintiff asserted title to the lands under three certain deeds of conveyance, executed by W. B. Ford and others as heirs at law of one I. N. Ford. There was no attempt on the part of either side to trace their respective titles back to the government. On the part of the plaintiff, there was evidence tending to show that W. B. Ford, one of the plaintiff’s grantors, was in possession of the lands sued for, as far back as 1884, and that this grantor had entered into possession under a conveyance from J. R. Corley and wife, made to L. M. Ford and to the heirs of I. N. Ford, and which deed was executed on the 6th day of May, 1883.- W. B. Ford was one of the heirs of I. N. Ford, deceased. The testimony of the plaintiff further tended to show that, while W. B. Ford was in the possession of the land, he made an arrangement with one C. H. Self, in the year 1897 or 1898, by which the latter was allowed to enter on the lands, or a part of the same, and to clear up and use it, and that Self’s possession thereafter was permissive. It does not appear that the plaintiff was ever in the actual possession of any of the lands embraced in this suit; on the contrary, it does not appear that this man [143]*143Self was in the possession at the time the plaintiff purchased the lands from the Fords’, and that this man Self continued to occupy the lands until he sold and conveyed the same to S. T. Swindall, the defendants’ immediate grantor. There was no testimony offered by the plaintiff that either Corley or his wife was ever in the possession of the land which they conveyed to the Fords, other than such as might be implied from the testimony of W. B. Ford to the effect that he entered upon the land under the Corley deed.

On the part of the defendants, there was testimony tending to show that one J. P. McCartney was in the actual possession of these lands in 1879, under claim of ownership, and that McCartney acquired his possession and ownership from the Aubrey heirs in 1879, and that he continued in possession until he sold and conveyed the same to C. H. Self in 1889. The defendants’ testimony tended to show that McCartney, Self, S. T. Swindall, and O. R. Swindall had been in the continuous possession of the lands, under claim of ownership, from 1879 down to. the time of the institution of the present suit.

In the conveyance from C. H. Self and wife to S. T. Swindall, and from S. T. Swindall and wife to O. R. Swindall, the lands covered by the defendants’ plea are described as fractional part of S. E. 14 °f S. W. % of section 10, township 13, range 5, lying on the west side of the Gadsden and Guntersville road, in Etowah county; while in the conveyances made to plaintiff the lands are described as E. % of S. W. % of section 10, township 13, range 5, except five acres on west side of the Gadsden and Pine Swamp road, in same county.

Under the evidence, it would appear that the Gadsden and Guntersville road and the Gadsden and Pine Swamp road are one and the same. The testimony on [144]*144the part of the defendants further tended to show that Self never held the lands by permission of W. B. Ford, but held the same in his own right.

Against the objection and exception of defendants, the court permitted plaintiff to read in evidence a deed from J. R. Corley and wife to L. M. Ford and the heirs of I. N. Ford. There was no merit in the objection interposed to the introduction of this deed. It was admissible to show color of title, taken and considered in connection with the testimony of W. B. Ford, that he was one of the heirs of I. N. Ford, and that under this deed he entered upon and took possession of a part of the lands sued for, in the year 1884. The fact, if it were a fact, that this deed was acknowledged before one of the grantees, as a justice of the peace, did not render the instrument inadmissible, when offered for the limited purpose of showing color of title; for, assuming that this deed was neither acknowledged nor attested, this defect or omission would not affect its quality as evidence of color of title, for it would still be operative to give color of title to the lands described in it, and draw to the party to whom it was given possession of the whole tract, upon his taking possession of a part, unless the remainder of the tract was, at the time, in the actual, adverse possession of another. — Dorlan v. Westervitch, 140 Ala. 283, 37 South. 382, 103 Am. St. Rep. 35; Reddick v. Long, 124 Ala. 261, 27 South. 402; National Bank of Augusta v. Baker Hill Iron Co., 108 Ala. 635, 19 South. 47. Nor was there any merit in the objection .'.that this deed did not include the lands sued for. It conveyed all of the S. E. % of the S. W. % of the section, except about five acres off the west side of the Gadsden and Pine Swamp road. It may be that the exception is void for uncertainty, for there was evidence that there were between eight and ten acres west [145]*145of this road, but, if the exception was void, this would only affect the exception, and in that event the conveyance would be of the entire tract. — Bromberg v. Smee, 130 Ala. 601, 30 South. 483; Morris v. Giddens, 101 Ala. 571, 14 South. 406.

Against the objection and exception of defendants, the court permitted plaintiff to read in evidence a deed from D. L. Loyd and others, calling themselves, in the body of the deed, “as heirs of the estate of I. N. Ford,” to George W. White, the plaintiff. This deed was executed on the 1st day of February, 1900. Apart from the recitals of the deed, there was no evidence to show that any of the grantors were in fact the heirs of I. N. Ford, nor was there any evidence tending to show that any of these grantors were ever in possession of the lands. The recitals of this deed, to the effect that the grantors were the heirs at law of I. N. Ford, deceased, were not evidence as against the defendants, who were not parties to, or privies under it. On proper objection, doubtless the court would have excluded this deed. The defendants objected to the introduction of this deed on other grounds, however, and which were without merit.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
63 So. 651, 184 Ala. 137, 1913 Ala. LEXIS 601, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/swindall-v-ford-ala-1913.