Wilkerson v. Moorer

101 So. 2d 287, 267 Ala. 296, 1958 Ala. LEXIS 316
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedMarch 6, 1958
Docket1 Div. 727
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 101 So. 2d 287 (Wilkerson v. Moorer) 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
Wilkerson v. Moorer, 101 So. 2d 287, 267 Ala. 296, 1958 Ala. LEXIS 316 (Ala. 1958).

Opinion

LAWSON, Justice.

This is an appeal from a final decree of the circuit court of Washington County, in equity.

The 75-acre tract of land situated in Washington County, which is the subject of this litigation and to which we will sometime refer hereafter as the suit property, was sold to M. C. Stallworth, Jr., in April, 1941, at a sale for division of proceeds between the alleged joint owners, F. L. Wilkerson and his brother, Albert Wilkerson. The bill or petition seeking the sale of the suit property for division was filed in the probate court of Washington County by F. L. Wilkerson against Albert Wilkerson and the latter’s wife, Emma. At the time the suit property was sold for division Albert Wilkerson was serving a life sentence in a penitentiary of this state. He received one half of the sale price, less expenses. The property sold for $150.

After cutting some of the timber Stall-worth, on July 25, 1942, executed a quitclaim deed wherein he conveyed the suit property other than the gas, oil and mineral rights to one Tillman Weaver. Weaver conveyed the property to Marvin and Anna Rivers on October 16, 1945, who in turn conveyed to M. L. Moorer on November 13, 1945. The deed from Weaver to Marvin and Anna Rivers and their deed to Moorer excepted the gas, oil and mineral rights.

On May 27, 1946, the tract of land was sold for taxes as the property of Tillman Weaver. W. D. Wood was the purchaser at the tax sale. Wood received a tax deed from the judge of probate of Washington County on May 28, 1949. W. D. Wood and wife conveyed the property, other than an interest in the mineral rights, to Bob Everett on July 5, 1949.

On February 5, 1952, the original bill in this case was filed in the circuit court of Washington County, in equity, by the wife and children of Albert Wilkerson', against Bob Everett, M. L. Moorer and' M. C. Stallworth, Jr.

The complainants sought to have the trial court decree in effect that they are. the owners of the suit property on the theory that Albert Wilkerson was the sole owner of the property prior to his. civil death, which occurred on April 11,. 1939, and that upon his civil death the property descended to complainants and. since they were not parties to the sale for division, the purchaser at the sale, M. C. Stallworth, Jr., and M. L. Moorer, who claims under Stallworth, acquired no title to the suit property. The complainants, also set up the invalidity of the tax sale at which W. D. Wood was the purchaser.

Within a few weeks after the original bill was filed, the respondent Bob Everett conveyed his interest in the suit property to W. D. Wood. The bill was thereafter amended so as to make Wood a party respondent

Demurrers interposed by the respond*ents were overruled in August of 1952.

On September 3, 1952, Everett and Wood filed a joint answer which they' made a cross bill as to the complainants in the original bill. They averred Wood’s purchase at the tax sale, his conveyance to Everett and the latter’s reconveyance to Wood; that Wood and his predecessor in title, Everett, had been in the “open, notorious, adverse, and peaceable possession” of the property under color of title for more than ten years; that Albert Wilkerson was pardoned and his civil and political rights restored prior to the time the original bill was filed; and that at the time of the sale for division Albert Wilkerson received a reasonable consideration for any interest he may have had in the suit property. The prayer of the cross bill was substantially that the court decree that W. D. Wood is the owner of the suit property.

[298]*298On September 5, 1952, the respondent Stallworth filed an answer wherein he denied the material averments of the complaint and averred that Albert Wilkerson never had any title to the suit property; that he and “his associates in title have been in possession under claim of ownership openly, notoriously, adversely, and exclusively for more than ten years prior to the filing of this bill of complaint”; that although he conveyed the surface rights to the property he retained title to the 'gas, oil and mineral rights, which he still claims “adversely, against all the world.”

Shortly after the original bill was filed the respondent Moorer filed his “plea in abatement” in which the other respondents later joined. Final action on this so-called “plea in abatement” was not taken until September 24,' 1954, and Moorer did not answer the original bill until February 2, 1955, when he filed a pleading which purports to be (1) an answer to the bill as amended; (2) an answer to the cross bill filed by Everett and Wood, although Moorer was not made a cross respondent to that cross bill; and (3) a “cross bill of complaint” wherein the ■ complainants in the original bill and Everett and Wood were named as cross respondents.

The effect of that part of the pleading filed on February 2, 1955, which Moorer describes as his answer to the original bill is in effect nothing more than a denial of the bill’s material averments. Inasmuch as Moorer was not a party to the cross bill filed by Everett and Wood, we see no occasion to refer to the averments of his so-called answer to that cross bill. In the part of the pleading filed on February 2, 1955, which Moorer designated his “cross bill of complaint” he set out his source of paper title, that is, the sale for division wherein Stallworth was the purchaser, the conveyances from Stall-worth to Weaver, from Weaver to the Riverses, and from the Riverses to himself. He alleged that he and his predecessors in title “have been in the actual, peaceable, adverse possession of the above described land [suit property] under color of title as above dersigned (sic) and claiming to own the same for more than ten years next before the filing of the complaint in this cause”; and that he was in the peaceable possession of the property “pending this suit.” In his “cross bill of complaint” Moorer also alleged that the tax sale at which Wood was the purchaser was invalid for certain reasons not necessary to set out here. He offered to redeem from the tax sale. Moorer further alleged in his “cross bill of complaint” that the complainants’ right “to recover the above described lands, if any they had, is barred by laches.” Moorer offered to do equity and prayed that the trial court decree that he is the owner of the suit property and that he be permitted to redeem from the tax sale.

A demurrer filed by Wood to Moorer’s cross bill was overruled on September 21, 1955, on which day the following events also occurred. Wood answered Moorer’s cross bill by denying its material averments. Although he had previously answered the original bill as amended, Stall-worth filed another “plea and answer” wherein he denied the allegations of that bill. He also asked that he be permitted to join “with the other respondents in their answer and cross bill.” We assume Stallworth intended to join only in the cross bill of Moorer, for his interests and those of Everett and Wood were opposed. The complainants in the original bill filed the following answer: “Comes the Complainants by their Attorney, Wallace P. Pruitt, and for plea and answer to the Cross-Bill filed by the Respondents denies the allegation of the Cross-Bill, and demands strict proof of the same.” The taking of testimony before the trial court was begun.

Testimony was taken orally before the trial court on at least seven different oc[299]*299casions, the last being on September 19, 1956. During the course of the taking of testimony the bill was amended so as to claim damages for the cutting of timber.

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Related

Wilkerson v. Moorer
126 So. 2d 199 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1961)

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Bluebook (online)
101 So. 2d 287, 267 Ala. 296, 1958 Ala. LEXIS 316, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilkerson-v-moorer-ala-1958.