Townley v. Corona Coal & Iron Co.

77 So. 1, 200 Ala. 627, 1917 Ala. LEXIS 581
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedNovember 15, 1917
Docket6 Div. 603.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 77 So. 1 (Townley v. Corona Coal & Iron Co.) 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
Townley v. Corona Coal & Iron Co., 77 So. 1, 200 Ala. 627, 1917 Ala. LEXIS 581 (Ala. 1917).

Opinion

THOMAS, J.

The primary object of the hill as amended was to sell for. division among joint owners the coal and mineral rights in the lands specifically described. As an incident to this relief, the bill sought the quieting of title as against the claims of certain parties respondent and the establishment of the extent of the complainant’s interest therein.

The averments of ownership made in the bill as last amended as to the respective interests of appellant, M. D. Townley, and appellee, Corona Coal & Iron Company, and the Birmingham Fuel Company, are:

“Complainant further alleges that it is the owner and in peaceable possession of the coal and other minerals in S. E. % of N. W. % of section 24, township 14, range 9, in Walker county, Ala., and defendants hereto claim, or are reputed to claim, some right, title, or interest in, or incumbrance upon, the said lands, and there is no suit pending to enforce or test the validity of such claim of right, title, or interest;” that if it “is mistaken in the averment that it owns the whole of said lands, then' this complainant and some of the defendants herein are joint owners or tenants in common thereof in the following proportions: That complainant is the legal or equitable owner of an undivided nine-twelfths interest in said land, and defendant Birmingham Fuel Company owns an undivided one-twelfth interest. The defendant M. D‘. Townley is the owner of an undivided one-twelfth interest and an undivided one-half of one-twelfth interest.”

Many parties are made respondents, and sought to he concluded by decrees pro confesso, or by their appearance and answer on full pleading and proof.

The bill was not demurred to on the ground of misjoinder, nor is it now questioned by appellant on that ground. We do not by this observation intimate or decide that there was a misjoinder of parties.

The right of the unknown heirs of a decedent, or that of nonresident joint owners, to due notice, was recently discussed, and authorities were collected, in Gill v. Moore, 76 South. 453. 1 it is not necessary to restate the same. So far as appears under the assignment of errors, no question is raised as to the sufficiency of service on any of the respondents against whom decrees pro confesso were taken and on which submission was had.

All parties to the suit trace their title to these lands to Thomas D. Lockhart, to whom patent therefor was issued on March 1, 1858. The evidence is without conflict that Thomas D. Lockhart died during the Civil War, leaving 12 children, viz. T. J. Lockhart, Charles *628 Lockhart, Mary Kies, Elizabeth NeSmith, A. J. Lockhart, S. M. Lockhart, O. P. Lockhart, W. H. Lockhart, Malinda Wright, A. L. Lock-hart, Synthia (Cynthia?) De Weese, and Julia Brand; that M. D. Wright and Malinda Wright were one and the same person; and that the lands cannot be equitably divided among the several joint owners without a sale.

The proof shows that the Birmingham Fuel Company is the owner of an undivided one-twelfth interest in said lands, notwithstanding the averment in its answer that it is the owner, either legal or equitable, of an undivided two-twelfths interest therein. That company began its chain of title with the deed of S. B. or Synthia De Weese (one of the 12 children of Thomas D. Lockhart, deceased), of date September 10, 1877, to James Sides; and said company, by successive warranty deeds from Sides and his respective successors in interest acquired whatever interest in said- lands that passed to the said Sides by the deed from S. E. or Synthia De Weese and her husband.

The decree of the court below was that each of the heirs, the 12 children of Thomas D. Lockhart, was originally entitled to a one-twelfth interest in the estate, and hence that these heirs were joint owners of the ’ lands described in the bill; that W. IT. Lock-hart acquired by purchase an equitable title to the one-twelfth undivided interest of his brother T. J. Lockhart, and thereafter by deed to J. R. Fike the said W. H. Lockhart conveyed his original interest together with that so acquired of T. J. Lockhart (aggregating a one-sixth undivided interest in said lands) to said Fike; that by said deed the said Kke also acquired either a legal or an equitable title to the respective interests of Malinda Wright, O. P. Lockhart, and A. L. Lockhart; and that complainant, the Corona Coal & Iron Company, succeeded to said title by mesne conveyances.

Appellee’s title consisted of warranty deeds from W. J. Duane, of date June 27, 1901, who received a warranty deed from H. B. Gray as receiver of Corona Coal & Iron Company, the latter from Penn-Mobile Coal Company, and it, from Burke and others as trustees, to whom the land had been conveyed by L. B. and J. C. Musgrove, and they from J. R. Fike, the aforesaid grantee, said land having been conveyed, or undertaken or contracted to be conveyed, to said J. R. Fike, on September 2, 1SS4, by J. D. Wright, W. IT, Lockhart, O. P. Lockhart, Dorcas Lockhart, M. D. Wright, S. C. Lockhart, E. C. Lockhart, and L. A. Lockhart. This last deed was for the recited valuable consideration, and purported to convey the whole interest in said lands. It was duly acknowledged by the grantors executing the same, and recorded on the 8th day of March, 1886. The foregoing conveyances or “chain of title” is duly noted-in the submission for final decree.

An agreement of counsel contains the admission:

That “whatever legal or equitable title^or interest in the lands involved which passed by the said deed [that of September 2, 1884, to J. R. Fike, executed by said Wrights and said Lock-harts] was later vested in the appellee company, the Corona Coal & Iron Company, by successive warranty deeds,” and that “appellant, M. B. Townley, received quitclaim deeds covering said lands, and acquired whatever interest was vested in the several grantors therein as at the time of the execution of the respective deeds to him, to wit: D. M. and J. D. Wright, on May 14, 1915; W. H. Lockhart on May 12, 1915 •; O. P. Lockhart on May 17, 1915; F. M. Lockhart -on May 10, 1915; T. J. Lockhart on May 4, 1915; Rufus Lockhart on May 15,1915; S. M. Lockhart on May 14, 1915;” and others:

The question for decision is the effect of the deed of date September 2, 1884, executed by J. D. Wright and W. H. Lockhart and others, purporting to convey the entire interest in the quarter section of land in question to J. R. Fike. That conveyance contained these 'recitals:

“Know all men by these presents that we, J. D. Wright and Malinda Wright, his wife, of Walker county and state of Alabama, for and in consideration of the sum of one hundred dollars to them in hand paid, the receipt whereof is hereby acknowledged, hath granted, bargained, and sold, and by these presents, grant, bargain, sell, and convey to J. R. Fike, his heirs and assigns [description of the lands, etc.]. To have and to hold, to the said J. R. Fike, his heirs and assigns forever, in fee simple. And the said J. D. Wright and Malinda Wright doth hereby covenant with the said J. R. Fike that at the time of the ensealing of these presents are seised and possessed of a good and indefeasible title to the afore-granted premises, and doth warrant and will forever defend the same against the claims of all and every person or persons whomsoever.”

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Related

Birmingham Waterworks Co. v. Edwards
80 So. 791 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1919)
Dinkins v. Latham
79 So. 493 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1918)
Townley v. Birmingham Fuel Co.
77 So. 28 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1917)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
77 So. 1, 200 Ala. 627, 1917 Ala. LEXIS 581, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/townley-v-corona-coal-iron-co-ala-1917.