Young v. Rice

196 So. 2d 698, 280 Ala. 581, 1967 Ala. LEXIS 835
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedMarch 16, 1967
Docket8 Div. 251
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 196 So. 2d 698 (Young v. Rice) 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
Young v. Rice, 196 So. 2d 698, 280 Ala. 581, 1967 Ala. LEXIS 835 (Ala. 1967).

Opinion

MERRILL, Justice.

The questions presented here are (1) whether an equity court in Alabama has the power arid authority to order a judicial sale of lands for reinvestment, under the supervision of the court, of the entire fee or title of the real property when there may be contingent interests in unborn contingent remaindermen, and (2) whether the equity court may conclude by judicial decree the property rights of the unborn contingent remaindermen.

We answer each question in the affirmative.

Frank M. Perry died June 16, 1948, leaving a last will and testament, which was duly probated. The administration of the estate was moved to the circuit court. Frank M. Perry was the holder of a marketable title in fee simple to the lands involved in this proceeding, some 1,059.65 acres.

Under the terms of his will, his widow, Margaret Perry, was devised one-half the income from his entire estate during her [583]*583life, with the other half being devised to his sister, Edna Perry Arnold, for life, with the survivor of the two receiving the entire income for life. During this time, the executors were directed to “keep my entire estate together and control and manage it.”

Upon the death of the life tenants, the entire estate was devised to the children of Perry’s deceased sister, Ella Perry Dabney, except John Perry Dabney (now deceased) who was excluded from any interest in the lands in lieu of a cash bequest. If any child of Ella Perry Dabney should predecease the life tenants or either of them, the children of that child would take their parents’ share.

The children of Ella Perry Dabney, other than John Perry Dabney (excluded) were Dorothy Dabney Smith, Elizabeth Gerber and Robert S. Dabney, III. Dorothy is dead and was survived by two children. Elizabeth is living and has three children. Robert is living, unmarried and has no children.

As of now, the two living children of Ella Perry Dabney each have a one-third remainder interest in the property, contingent upon their surviving the two life tenants who are still living. The two children of Dorothy Dabney Smith, Beverly Smith Bragg and Edna Smith Duer would receive the other third.

Among the respondents are the two living children of Ella Perry Dabney, all of her grandchildren and the only son of the excluded son who, under possible but not very probable conditions, could inherit under the law of descent and distribution. Thus, every class of unborn remaindermen are represented by a living member of that class who have or possibly might have some interest in the estate of Frank M. Perry.

James E. Rice, the surviving executor of Perry’s last will and testament, joined with Edna Perry Arnold, one of the life tenants, in petitioning the court to order a sale of the 1,059.65 acres to Monsanto Company for $857,313.00, pursuant to an option signed by all persons in esse having any interest under Perry’s will, including the life tenants. It was alleged that the purchase price is in excess of the price that might reasonably be expected at public sale, that the sale is to the benefit of the owners of all interests in the property, and that the money received from Monsanto, if invested in government bonds, would produce more than the yearly income presently derived from the lands.

The proof was that the net average income from the property for the years 1960 through 1965 was slightly more than $15,000 per year. Investment of the purchase price in five per cent government bonds would realize $43,865 per year. Three appraisers had appraised the property at $350 to $375 per acre, while Monsanto’s offer was approximately $809 per acre.

The trial court ordered the sale of all interests in the said property described in the bill of complaint to the said Monsanto Company for the said sum of $857,313.00, including all right, title and interest of the heirs of Frank M. Perry, deceased, including all reversionary interests in the said property, and decreed that the register should reinvest the proceeds of said sale for the benefit of all the parties and classes of parties having any interest or expectancy or possibility of any interest in and to the said lands described in the bill of complaint, in U. S. Treasury bills, notes or bonds, and the said interests, expectancies of interest and the possibilities of interests of all of such parties and classes of parties in and to the lands described in the bill of complaint were terminated and invested in said Monsanto Company, and the said interests of said parties were attached, in substitution, to the proceeds of the said sale of said lands in accordance with the terms of the will of Frank M. Perry, deceased.

The cause was contested in the lowcr court by the guardian ad litem for the unborn children of the children of Ella Perry Dabney, deceased, and he is the appellant here. We quote from his brief:

[584]*584“Appellant does not deny the assertion that the substitution of the proceeds of the sale for the land conveyed is advantageous to all parties and interests, including those unborn remaindermen whom appellant was appointed to represent as guardian ad litem. However, the. lack of precedent'in Alabama for a decree of this nature, the value of the estate involved, and the fact that the interests of unborn remaindermen will be bound if this decree is allowed to stand compel appellant to insist that the Circuit Court of Lauderdale County, Alabama, in Equity, erred in the rendering of its final decree and its decree confirming sale.”

Appellant also states that he “has no argument with the interpretation of this will as set out in the decree of the lower court.” He does contend that the equity court does not have the power or “jurisdiction” to order the sale.

It is agreed that this exact situation has not been before this court in the past. But it has been before other courts.

An excellent statement appears in 33 Am. Jur., Life Estates, Remainders, etc., § 265, p. 743:

“There has grown up in the last century in a group of American cases a doctrine, the boundaries of which are not yet completely defined, under which a court of equity, in the exercise of inherent equity powers, will order a judicial sale under supervision of the court, of the entire fee or title of real property in which present interests such as life estates and future interests such as vested or contingent remainders, executory limitations, etc., have been created, with subsequent reinvestment of the proceeds of such sale for the benefit of the holders of the respective interests in the property sold. This exercise of equity power is independent of statute, and has been exercised, thus far, in cases where'at least some of the holders of future interests either lack capacity or are as yet unborn, are amply represented in the; proceedings, and will be benefited by such sale and reinvestment. The power of equity to direct a sale of land and reinvestment of the proceeds will be exercised in the case of legal life estates and remainders just as in the case of trusts. * * *
“The reasons for the development of the peculiarly American doctrine of non-statutory equitable judicial sale of entire interests or the fee in property given to various holders of present and future interests are typical of the causes of general development of equitable jurisprudence, and are stated with equal emphasis not only in the very recent decisions espousing the principle, but in its first progenitors.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Richardson v. Richardson
417 So. 2d 158 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1982)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
196 So. 2d 698, 280 Ala. 581, 1967 Ala. LEXIS 835, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/young-v-rice-ala-1967.