Zundel v. Baldwin

114 Ala. 328
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedNovember 15, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 114 Ala. 328 (Zundel v. Baldwin) 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
Zundel v. Baldwin, 114 Ala. 328 (Ala. 1896).

Opinion

HEAD, J. —

This is an action of trespass quare clausum fregit, the locus in quo laid in the complaint, being the south half of the northwest quarter of section 33, township 6, range two east, in Baldwin county. The plaintiff proved that the defendant, in July or August, 1895, plowed and fenced about two acres of the land described in the complaint, and cut one pine tree thereon, and 17 pine trees on the outside of the fence, each tree being worth about twenty-five cents. He also introduced a warranty deed executed to himself on the 6th day of November, 1876, by James B. Malone and others, in form, conveying the land in controversy and 520 acres of adjoining land in section 32, and 80 other acres in section 33 located one-fourth of a mile from the loms in quo; describing the land by sectional subdivisions and concluding the description by the following qualifying words : “excepting three acres deeded to Mary Gyon, and three acres deeded to Thomas Collins by J. L. King as per said King and others deeded to us dated June 21st, 1869.” The deed was acknowledged and recorded in the proper county, on April 30, 1877. It does not appear what title to, or connection with, the land these grantors had, if any ; hence the deed is insufficient as evidence of title in the plaintiff, and can only be regarded, at most, as color of title, in connection with any proven possession by him under it. He also introduced a tax deed to himself to these same and other lands, in the form, and executed and acknowledged, in substantial conformity to the statute, on December 8, 1883, in pursuance of a sale for the taxes for the years 1875 and 1876, made on the 4th day of June, 1877, which deed was recorded in the proper county on December 8, 1883. [332]*332The description of the lands in this deed is also followed by qualifying words, as follows : ‘ ‘excepting 30 acres sold to Mary Gyon and 30 acres sold to Tom Collins by J. L. King.” There was no evidence to show what particular three acres or thirty acress had been sold, to Gyon or Collins. The testimony touching plaintiff’s possession of the land tended to show that about fourteen years before the trial he gave one Hecht permission to build a house on an adjoining quarter in section 32, embraced in his said deeds ; that Hecht did not remain there long and then Manuel Nettles went in the house as plaintiff’s tenant, agreeing at the time to pay rent by cutting two cords of wood per month; that he did pay such rent for about a year, at first, and since that had not paid any. Plaintiff had not bothered him, and allowed him to remain there. Pie continued to live in the house up to the time of the trial, and in 1890 offered to purchase the place he was living on from plaintiff. Plis possession included also about nine acres enclosed around his house. One Allen Bonner testified for plaintiff, that Nettles had lived there fourteen or fifteen years ; that Hecht built the house and Nettles finished it; that he, witness, had been cutting wood and piles for plaintiff on plaintiff’s lands in sections 32 and 33, and on the lands that plaintiff and defendant are “lawing about,” for fifteen or sixteen years. On cross-examination, however, he testified that they were ‘ ‘lawing about section 33, but he doesn’t know what part of said section.” Plaintiff gave evidence tending to show that he had been claiming the lands mentioned in said deeds ever since the deeds were made, and paying taxes thereon ever since 1877 ; that he had been cutting timber on all the lands described in the deeds, in sections 32 and 33, that he knew defendant was trespassing on the land and forbade him to do so, but he persisted. Plaintiff’s evidence tended to show that the said land occupied by Hecht and Nettles was a part of the land conveyed by his said deeds and that he claimed the same under said deeds. The foregoing is the substance of plaintiff’s case.

The defendant introduced a quit-claim deed executed to one Joseph Nelson by Benjamin Grist on August 26, 1880, to said entire section 33, acknowledged same day, but not recorded until October 28, 1895. Pie also intro[333]*333duced a quit-claim deed to said section (except the northwest quarter of the southeast quarter) , from said Joseph Nelson and wife to himself, executed June 10, 1881, acknowledged September 3, 1881, and recorded December 4, 1891. There was no evidence to show what title to, or connection with, the land the said Grist had, if any; so these deeds can be regarded as no other than color of title. Fie introduced evidence tending to show that he had been claiming section 33 (except 40 acres he sold to Mrs. Hall and Mr. Nelson and 40 acres he sold to Mrs. Hall),and paid taxes on it for sixteen years before the trial; hauled wood on, and sold wood and timber on it for sixteen years continuously; cut and hauled on every inch of it except the two 40-acre pieces sold ; lived about four miles from the land ; was cutting on some part of the land nearly every day in the year for ten or twelve years, but sometimes a week or so, and sometimes longer would elapse when he did not so cut on it; two years before trial he notified plaintiff not to cut on this land. He introduced a number of witnesses who testified that they never heard of plaintiff claiming this land until about two years before. One testified that people around there generally understood the land belonged to the defendant.

The suit was instituted in a justice court, August 15, 1895, and carried by appeal to the circuit court, where it was tried November 6, 1895, resulting in a verdict and judgment for the defendant, from which the appeal is prosecuted.

The plaintiff prayed the following instructions :

1. The general affirmative charge.

2. That the plaintiff in this case has a good title at law to the 80 acres described in the complaint.

3. That if plaintiff was claiming the lands described in the complaint under a deed, and was exercising acts of ownership over said land, and that such acts were such as to show that he was claiming said lands adversely at the time the deed to the defendant was made, they must find for the plaintiff.

Each of these charges was refused, and the plaintiff duly excepted.

It is observed, first, that the plaintiff contends that the tax deed conferred upon him the title to the 80 acres in question. If it be conceded that this deed, aside from [334]*334the description of.the lands it intended to convey, was so executed in pursuance of the revenue law, as to be evidence of a legal conveyance of the title, without proof of other facts in support of it, yet there is such infirmity in the description, that it can not, under the evidence adduced, be adjudged by the court an operative conveyance. The 30 acres sold to Mary Gyon and the 30 acres sold to Tom Collins are neither, identified by the deed, nor by any evidence adduced in aid of it, except that there was evidence from which it might be inferred by the jury that certain parts of the land were not included in the exceptions. That inference was for the jury to draw and not the court. The deed furnishes the means of identification, but the plaintiff omitted to use them in a way to enable the court to declare the deed sufficient. The first and second charges were properly refused.

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Bluebook (online)
114 Ala. 328, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zundel-v-baldwin-ala-1896.