Fuller v. Yancey
Citation | 199 So.2d 666,281 Ala. 126 |
Decision Date | 16 June 1966 |
Docket Number | 1 Div. 211 |
Parties | George E. FULLER et al., Successor Trustees, v. C. J. YANCEY et al. |
Court | Supreme Court of Alabama |
J. B. Blackburn, Bay Minette, and McCorvey, Turner, Johnstone, Adams & May, Mobile, for appellants.
Wilters & Brantley, Bay Minette, for appellees.
This suit was filed in the Circuit Court of Baldwin County, Alabama, on the 31st day of December 1949, and is a statutory ejectment suit. Originally, the suit was filed by the Merchants National Bank of Mobile, a National Banking Association, as Trustee, and George E. Fuller and Patrice B. Fuller, as plaintiffs, against Claude J. Yancey and Ethel Yancey, defendants. After the suit was filed and before it was tried, the Merchants National Bank of Mobile, as Trustee, was removed and George E. Fuller and Patrice B. Fuller were appointed as successor trustees. They continued to prosecute this suit as successor trustees under Title 7, Sec. 81, Code of 1940. The complaint, as last amended in 1963, contained two counts: Count 1 embracing about 4 acres of land, Count 2 embracing about 60 acres of land. We will hereafter refer to the parties as plaintiffs and defendants as they appeared in the court below.
The defendants disclaimed as to a part of the land sued for in the complaint. The trial court entered a judgment as to the land disclaimed and it is no longer involved. As to the balance of the land sued for, the defendants entered a plea of the general issue. The case was tried before a jury who rendered a verdict for defendants, and upon which the trial court entered judgment. Plaintiffs here seek review of certain alleged errors, as pointed out by appropriate assignments of error occurring in the trial of the cause.
As somewhat of a background to the present litigation, we note that on October 10, 1927, the equity court of Baldwin County, Alabama, rendered a decree quieting title in Old Spanish Fort Development Company to certain-described lands in Baldwin County, Alabama. This decree is referred to in both briefs as being rendered in Case No. 666 ( ). We will hereafter sometimes refer to this as Case No. 666. The decree in Case No. 666 has been before this Court on several prior occasions. Merchants National Bank of Mobile v. Morris, 252 Ala. 566, 42 So.2d 240; Morris v. Merchants National Bank of Mobile, 267 Ala. 542, 543, 103 So.2d 310; Merchants National Bank of Mobile v. Morris, 273 Ala. 117, 136 So.2d 193. See also Morris v. Yancey, 266 Ala. 54, 94 So.2d 195; Morris v. Yancey, 267 Ala. 657, 104 So.2d 553.
As above stated, the defendants in the court below entered a plea of the general issue, which admitted possession by the defendants when suit was filed of the area described in the two counts of the complaint as amended; it denied title and plaintiffs' right of possession. Secs. 938--941, Title 7, Code 1940; Wetzel v. Hobbs, 247 Ala. 659, 25 So.2d 850.
The trial court, in its oral charge to the jury, instructed the jury that plaintiffs had connected their title to the land, the subject matter of this suit, with the final decree rendered in Case No. 666. The trial court instructed the jury that plaintiffs had traced their title
There was no exception to that portion of the oral charge quoted above and no cross assignments of error challenging the correctness of the oral charge. We conclude, therefore, that the trial court was free from error in so charging the jury as to the legal status of plaintiffs' alleged title.
As we view the record here on appeal, the jury was called on to determine, from the pleading and evidence, whether or not defendants acquired title to the land by possession of the same for a prescriptive period, namely 20 years or longer. As we view the record, defendants in no way connected themselves with any documentary title or color of title since the final decree in 1927, before mentioned. The defendants contend that since said decree they have possessively occupied the land described in the complaint, and by such occupancy for more than 20 years have acquired title to the area here in litigation; and, as we view the record, that is the only issue involved on this appeal.
We have held that when the land has never been occupied in the true sense, the possession is constructive and follows the title, since no one was in actual possession. Tensaw Land and Timber Co. v. Rivers, 244 Ala. 657, 15 So.2d 411.
Part of the land here involved, the 4 acres described in Count 1, is a high spot and suitable for limited cultivation and physical occupancy. The evidence as to the actual possession by defendants was quite lengthy. The high part of the land, namely the 4 acres, was used as a home place by defendants, with a garden and some buildings. The remainder of the land described in Count 2, as above stated, was wild, and in part subject to overflow.
Evidence was offered on behalf of the defendants that they had placed signs throughout the entire area warning against trespassing and hunting; that they cut timber and pilings on occasions, from 1927 to date of the suit 1949, or authorized the same to be done on all parts of the acreage here involved; that Claude Yancey had given hunting permits, and he and his wife endeavored to keep persons off the property who had not secured hunting permits. The evidence also shows that defendants had kept cows and hogs on the area of the land described in both Counts of the complaint that they collected rents for buildings on the home-4 acres, or high lands. But we do not attempt to detail all of the acts of the defendants tending to prove possession of the 60 acres, as well as the 4 acres, for the prescriptive period of 20 years. Suffice it to say, it appears from defendants' evidence that for more than 20 years (1927--1949) defendants have been in possession continuously of both tracts without any recognition of either the plaintiffs' rights or title or that of their predecessors in title, or, at least, there is evidence tending to fully support that contention.
As was said in Kidd v. Borum, 181 Ala. 144, 61 So. 100, 106:
'* * * This court has repeatedly held that the lapse of 20 years, without recognition of adversary right, or admission of liability, operates an absolute rule of repose. * * *'
We also held in Morris v. Yancey, 267 Ala. 657, 104 So.2d 553:
In Morris v. Yancey, supra, we quoted with approval from Stearnes v. Woodall, 218 Ala. 128, 117 So. 643, where it is said:
(citing cases.)
We also observed in Morris v. Yancey, supra:
The kind of possession, as we have observed, is determined by the condition of the land, not with reference to its being changed into another state, but its then present state. Here, a large part was swamp and overflow land unsuitable for cultivation, and unavailable to possessory acts that would apply to lands of a different character and surface conditions, or of a different topography. Kidd v. Browne, 200 Ala. 299, 76 So. 65.
It appears from the evidence that defendants treated the land in every respect as the owners thereof, or at least the jury could have so found from the evidence. This evidence tended to show openness, notoriety, and exclusiveness by acts which at the time, between 1927--49, could, considering the state of land, comport with ownership, such as would ordinarily be done by an owner for his own use to the exclusion of others.
Assignment of Error No. 1 is based on the trial court's refusal to give the affimative charge with hypothesis as to Count 2 of the complaint. From what we have already said, Assignment of Error No. 1 is without merit. Assignment of Error No. 2 has been waived.
Assignment of Error No. 3 charges that the trial court committed prejudicial error in permitting defendants, over plaintiffs' objection, to introduce a supplemental plat of Section 44, Township 4 South, Ranges 1 and 2 East, recorded in the office of the Probate Judge of ...
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