Wilson v. Carling

66 So. 188, 188 Ala. 543, 1914 Ala. LEXIS 284
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedFebruary 5, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 66 So. 188 (Wilson v. Carling) 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
Wilson v. Carling, 66 So. 188, 188 Ala. 543, 1914 Ala. LEXIS 284 (Ala. 1914).

Opinion

MAYFIELD, J.

The only question for decision is whether or not the description of land in a certain deed is void absolutely, for uncertainty. The description is in words and figures as follows:

“Twenty-five acres more or less in fractional sections 21 and 22, T. 19, R. 18, Elmore county, Alabama, on the West side of the Coosa river, bounded on the south as follmvs: By Cohn & Goldberg; on the north by lands OAvned by the state of Alabama; on the west by the undersigned, the west line to be established by survey, bounded on the east by the Coosa river.”

The geometrical proposition involved in the description in the deed in question, abstractly speaking, is this: Given, the length and direction of one side of a quadrangle containing “25 acres more or less,” and the direction of tAvo other sides which are parallel, each to the other, [547]*547construct the fourth side so that one of the parallel lines shall not exceed 396 feet, and the other shall not exceed one mile in length.

This we think can be easily done. In fact, we think an indefinite number of figures may be constructed, any one of which will equally meet the requirements of the proposition.

This is the second appeal in this case. The report of the former appeal may be found in 177 Ala. 85, 58 South, at page 417. The concrete question involved on the first appeal, and the only question involved on this appeal, is whether or not the deed under which appellant claims title was void for uncertainty of description of the lands attempted to be conveyed. It was decided on the former appeal that the deed was void. An application for a rehearing was made, on the hearing of which another full consideration of the case was had by the entire court; each judge giving it a thorough consideration, and the unanimous conclusion of the court, upon the application, was the same as that reached on the original hearing. The case has been twice fully and ably argued orally, as well as in a number of written and printed briefs, by able and eminent counsel for appellant, and, as strange as it may appear to counsel, we are yet of the opinion that the deed in question-is absolutely void on account of uncertainty in the description of the lands attempted to be conveyed.

But for the ability, the learning, and the eminence of counsel who represents the appellant on this appeal, and the earnestness with which he now insists that we were in error in the opinion and decision on the former appeal, we would merely affirm, upon the opinion rendered on the former appeal.

The opinion on the former appeal did not answer all the argument made on this appeal, for the all-sufficient [548]*548reason that some of the argument now made was not advanced on the first appeal, but a different argument was then made and a different reason assigned, by counsel, to show why the deed was not void. We do think, however, that the opinion did sufficiently answer the argument made on that appeal.

The body of land described in the former complaint, which was then alleged'and claimed to be the land described in the deed, is entirely different in area, and in every dimension except its eastern boundary, from that described in the present complaint, and now insisted to be the land described in the deed. The description in the present complaint is materially, if not entirely, changed. Indeed, no one reading the two complaints would ever suspect that they were intended to describe the same body of land, or that either described the identical body of land attempted to be described in the deed.

But, as was said in the opinion on the former appeal, the description in the deed is so uncertain that any number of bodies of land could be carved out of the fractions of sections 21 and 22, any one of which would, with equal certainty, answer to every call in the deed. It was for this reason that the deed was then, and is now, held to be void.

It appears from an inspection of the records on the two appeals that a number of surveyors have attempted to locate the land described in the deed, and that no two fix upon the same body. It also appears that the same surveyor, who made the surveys for the appellant, located different bodies of land on the two appeals. There were exhibited, on both of the trials in the lower court, maps, made by the appellant’s surveyor, designed and intended to locate and describe the same lands described in the deed; and the two bodies of land located by these ■ maps are greatly, if not entirely, different. It is true [549]*549that each contains some land embraced in the other, bnt each contains some land which the other did not.

These maps, together with the original and the amended complaints, the reporter will set ont, as near as may be, in the report of this decision.

Appellant has had a number of counsel engaged in the trial of this case, and all of his counsel have not agreed as to the particular body of land described in the deed; nor has each attorney always had the same opinion as to the exact body of land described in the deed. Counsel for appellant on this appeal attaches to his brief a diagram and plat of the body of land which he now claims is described in the deed, which is practically the same as that made by the engineer of surveyor, and attached to the transcript as an exhibit. The same counsel, on his application for a rehearing on the other appeal, not content with the diagram and plat made by the surveyor and attached to the transcript as an exhibit, made a map and plat entirely different from either of those made by the surveyor and attached the same to his brief. And this diagram is very different from the one he attaches to his brief on this hearing, as well as from the first maps and plats made by the engineer, contended by other counsel to correctly locate the land described in the deed.

The reporter will set out, as near as may be, a copy of the map or plat contained in counsel’s brief on his said application for a rehearing.

In the original brief filed on the first appeal in this case (page 8 of the printed copy), in attempting to distinguish this case from cases relied on by opposing counsel, and to describe the body of-land sued for, and described in the deed in question, counsel for appellant said:

[550]*550“In the case at bar the Coosa river is the east boundary line and the only line not definitely fixed by the evidence is the west line. Under the decisions above cited, the west line must be a line exactly parallel with the Coosa river following its meanders, and located at such a distance as to include twenty-five acres.”

It should be said that this was different counsel from the one who now insists that the west line is a straight line, without any regard to the meanders of the river. But while it is true that counsel, who now claims that the west line is a straight line, was counsel on the application for a rehearing and made the same claim, yet the straight line contended for on the application is not the same straight line he now insists upon. The two lines connected at different points, were of different lengths, and established different areas of land.

On the first appeal, this same counsel contended that the deed conveyed 25 acres exactly, if that area was to be had in fractions of sections 21 and 22, and there has never been any dispute that these fractions contain much more than 25 acres.

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Bluebook (online)
66 So. 188, 188 Ala. 543, 1914 Ala. LEXIS 284, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilson-v-carling-ala-1914.