Tarver v. Smith

38 Ala. 135
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJune 15, 1861
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 38 Ala. 135 (Tarver v. Smith) 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
Tarver v. Smith, 38 Ala. 135 (Ala. 1861).

Opinion

STONE, J.

A question meets us at the threshold of this case, which is fatal to the plaintiffs’ right of recovery on their. present complaint. At the fall term, 1857, the plaintiff obtained leave to amend his complaint, by adding the names of the three devisees of the land in controversy, as plaintiffs in the cause. The suit had been commenced in the name of Elijah W. Tarver, as executor of Benjamin P. Tarver, deceased; and the names added were William Tarver, James M. Tarver; and the said Elijah W. Tarver in his own right. The amendment, then, makes the case of an action to recover the possession of land, in the nature of an action of ejectment, (Codo, § 2209,) prosecuted in the name of the only surviving executor, suing in his representative capacity, conjoined with the names of the devisees of the lands in controversy; the will not conferring the title of the lands upon the ■executor. It needs no argument to show, that the rights’of the executor, as such, in the lands of his testator, are entirely-unlike those of the devisees of the fee. The devisees have the absolute property in the estate, subject to be defeated, in a limited class of cases, by the assertion of certain specified powers with which the legislature has clothed the executor. The respective rights of the parties cover no grounds in common; the rights of the one yielding to the extent that the other can be asserted. True, each may maintain an action of ejectment, to recover the possession of the lands;'but their several rights over the lands when recovered are fundamentally unlike.

' Our decisions have placed the right of the personal representative to maintain ejectment for the recovery of lands of his testator or intestate, mainly on the ground that such personal representative is entitled to the rents in arrear at decedent’s death, and to the after-accruing rents, as assets of the estate until distribution is made. — See Harkins v. Pope, 10 Ala. 493 ; Golding v. Golding, 24 Ala. 122; Patton v. Crow, 26 Ala. 426 ; Boynton v. McEwen, 36 Ala. 348. [138]*138A moment’s reflection will satisfy anjr one, that the right of the devisees to maintain an action rests on their owners hip of the property. -The two classes of plaintiffs, having no interests in common, cannot maintain a joint action under the Code. — Doe v. Edrington, 3 Nev. & Man. 646, and note; Jackson v. Sidney, 12 Johns. 185 ; Walker v. Fenner, 25 Ala. 367; 1 Chitty’s Pleadings, 62, 64, 65.

This is an error, which, if the attention of the circuit court had been directed to it, would have justified the charge, that the plaintiffs could not maintain the action in their joint names. But the question was not made in the court below; and hence, the plaintiff has had no opportunity to perfect his pleadings by an amendment. — See Cox v. McKinney, 32 Ala. 466-7 ; Williams v. Agee, 30 Ala. 636. It thus becomes our duty to investigate the other questions in the record.

[2.] The circuit judge charged the jury, that the evidence of title adduced by the plaintiffs was not sufficient to prove title in their testator to .the premises in controversy. - By what claim of title.the defendant was in possession — whether under color of .title, or as a mere trespasser — we are not informed. In - the absence of all proof on this question, we can not presume he was in by virtue of any title, either valuable or ■„colorable. — Crommelin v. Minter, 9 Ala. 605. But, conceding that he may have been in possession under title colorable but not good, the executor, as the ease now appears to us., >)(and leaving .out of view the patent after-noticed,) was entitled to a partial recovery. The plaintiffs put in evidence a contract, or transfer, from areservee of the Creek tribe of Indians,, conveying the lands in controversy to E. Corley & Co., certified by the government agent appointed for the purpose ? and approved by the president of the United States. The Indian who thus conveyed to E. Corley & Co., was located on these lands. Benjamin P. Tarver, plaintiff’s testator, was a member, and, with five others, composed the firm of E. Corley & Co. Testator was, then, seized as a joint tenant, with five others, of an undivided sixth part of the [139]*139lands sued for. This, in the absence of other proof of title, authorized a recovery, at least to that extent, under the following well-settled principles of law :

First: The deed from the Indian reservee to E. Corley & Co., after it received the approval of the president of the United States, clothed the grantees with such title as that they could maintain ejectment upon it. — Jones v. Mardis, 5 Porter, 327 ; Crommelin v. Minter, 9 Ala. 594 ; Haden v. Ware, 35 Ala. 149.

Second: The owner of an undivided interest in lands, having a legal title, may maintain a separate action of ejectment against one wrongfully in possession, and may recover to the extent of his ownership in the premises. Sawyer v. Fitts, 2 Porter, 9 ; Hines v. Greenlee, 3 Ala. 73 ; Bonner v. Greenlee, 6 Ala. 411; Chastang v. Armstrong, 20 Ala. 609.

[3.] The defendants put in evidence a patent issued from the government of the United States to Benjamin P. Tarver, dated July 5th, 1844, conveying the lands in controversy to said testator. It is conceded for appellant that Benjamin P. Tarver died before July 5th, 1844; and on this account he contends, that the patent is void ; while on the other hand, the appellees, taking it for granted that the patent is void, contend that the appellant has shown no such title in his testator as that ejectment can be maintained upon it. The argument for appellees is as follows : The approved contract and conveyance from the Indian reservee to E. Corley & Co., vested the title jointly in the six members composing that firm; and the division by which the land which is the subject of this suit was assigned to testator, although in writing, and signed by the parties, is not evidenced by any instrument under their seals, and, hence, conveyed no legal title to Benjamin P. Tarver.

It must be conceded, that the instrument by which the division of the lands was evidenced, does not confer on Mr. Tarver, or his executor, such right to the interests thus conveyed as that ejectment can be maintained on such title. [140]*140Ansley v. Nolan, 6 Porter, 379 ; Thrash v. Johnson, ib. 458 Falkner v. Jones, 12 Ala. 165. And it follows from this, that if the present action were prosecuted by the executor • alone, and the patent to Benjamin P. Tarver had not been put in evidence, the plaintiff, in the absence of some valid-defense, would have been entitled to recover only one un-'~ divided sixth part of the lands.

[4.] But the issue of the patent to Benjamin P. Tarver,-., occurring, as it did, after the death of Mr¡ -Tarver, presents-"* this question in an entirely different aspect. Before the act of congress of 1836, a patent, issued in the name of a-person who was dead at the time it issued,- was void. — Galt v. Galloway, 4 Peters, 332 ; McDonald v. Smalley, 6 Peters, 261; Morcham v. Phelps, 21 How. (U. S.) 294; Wood v. Ferguson, 7 Ohio St. R. 288.

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Bluebook (online)
38 Ala. 135, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tarver-v-smith-ala-1861.