— This is a common laAV action of ejectment. . The record shows that.the cause was tried at the October term '3896 of the circuit court of St. Clair county. On the 34th day of October, the day of the trial of the. cause, a written agreement was entered into by counsel, bv which it was agreed that the defendant should have sixtv davs “from the expiration of this term of the court iu which to preñare and have signed a bill of executions.” On the dav following, the 15th, being a dnv of the term, the defendant put upon the motion docket a motion for a new trial, At a subsequent day,
A motion for a new trial seasonably made suspends the judgment in the cause, and it does not become final for purposes of an appeal until such motion is disposed of. “The cause is said to be in fieri by reason of the motion; and the court may make any order afterwards that maA'- be jumper.” — Florence Cotton & Iron Co. v. Field, 104 Ala. 471; Pratt v. Keils, 28 Ala. 396; Walker v. Hale, 16 Ala. 27. The adjourned term of a court is but a continuation of the regular term. — Keith v. State. 91 Ala. 2 ; Hundley v. Yonge, 69 Ala. 89; Van Dyke v. State, 22 Ala. 57. The court had the right and authority at the adjourned term to fix the time for the bill of exceptions to be signed in vacation; the motion for a new trial having been made at the regular term and not disposed of until at the adjourned term. The motion to strike the bill of exceptions must, therefore, be overruled.'
On the trial the defendants filed a plea in abatement, to the effect that there had been a former trial in ejectment as to the land in question in which costs had been adjudged against Jesse Barron, through whom plaintiff here claimed title, and that such costs had not been paid. The plea disclosed that the title relied on here by plaintiff Asms under a mortgage executed by Jesse Barron long prior to the institution of the suit in which it is alleged the costs Avere adjudged that remain unpaid. The present plaintiff was in nowise connected with that suit, nor Avas the title here relied on by him, derived from Jesse
The plaintiff based his right of recovery of the land on his title under the mortgage executed by Jesse H. Barron to one W. G. Moore/bearing date January 14, 1884, and also upon the adverse possession of said land for ten years by said Jesse I-I. Barron and his vendor, Mary Clements. Upon the trial the plaintiff introduced evidence which tended to support his theory of the case, showing an adverse possession of the land beginning with Mary Clements about the year 1872 and by Jesse H. Barron who purchased the same from said Mary in 1873, on down to 1887, when the former ejectment suit was begun by Rebecca Barron and Ben F. Clements against said Jesse H. Barron.
The court admitted in evidence against the objection of defendants, a certificate of redemption of the land in question, given by the probate judge of St. Clair county to Mary Clements in.1873, which described the lands according to government survey and numbers. The said certificate recites the assessment of the land to the estate of J. S. Clements, deceased, (the husband of Mary), the sale for the taxes, purchase, etc., and then purports to invest the said Mary with the title, as being a person in interest, and having a right to redeem. The certificate was offered in connection with other evidence tending to show an adverse holding by Mary Clements. As a muniment of title it was inadmissible, but as color of title, to show and define the boundaries of an actual possession it was admissible. — Doe ex dem. Hooper v. Clayton et al., 81 Ala. 391; Dillingham v. Brown, 38 Ala. 311.
One of the issues in the case being as to adverse possession of the land, the objection to the question put by plaintiff to the witness Thompson, “If he (witness') did not buy a nortion of said land from the said Jesse H. Barron in the year 1879?” was properly overruled by the court; the bill of exceptions reciting that no objection was made for failure to produce the deed. The testiraojiv sought by the question was clearly relevant as tendin0’ to show the nature and character of Jesse H. Barron’s possession, -whether he was claiming the same
The defendants introduced evidence tending to show that the adverse possession of the land by plaintiff’s grantor, Jesse 1-1. Barron, had been interrupted and broken by the entry thereon of B. B. Barron and Ben. F. Clements. This rendered the record in the unlawful detainer suits brought by the said Jesse H. Barron against these parties, and which he prosecuted to a successful issue, putting them off the land, clearly relevant in rebuttal of the theory of the defendants as to a gap or chasm in the continuity of the adverse possession by 3 esse H. Barron.
The record of the ejectment suit brought by Ben. F. Clements and Rebecca Barron against Mary Clements in 1872, and in which the plaintiffs took a voluntary non-suit in 1874, was relevant to the question of adverse possession of the land by Mary Clements, which was one of the issues involved in this case. — Ponder et al. v. Cheeves et al., 104 Ala. 307.
The description of the land in the mortgage of Jesse II. Barron to W. (t. Sí core, of January 14, 1884, which was offered in evidence by the plaintiff, being as follows: “The east half of the southeast fourth of section thirteen, township thirteen, range four, east,’’ without giving the State and county, or whether east of the St. Stephens or Huntsville meridian, Avas imperfect and insufficient, and Avithout aid of identification, would have rendered the mortgage inadmissible in evidence. — Goodwin v. Forman et al., 114 Ala. 489. But it was competent by parol evidence to identify the land and thus supply the deficiency in description in the mortgage. — Webb v. Elyton Land Co., 105 Ala. 471; DeJarnette v. McDaniel, 93 Ala. 215; Meyer Bros. v. Mitchell, 75 Ala. 475; Chambers v. Ringstaff, 69 Ala. 140.
There was evidence going to show that in 1881 B. B. Barron, the husband of Rebecca Barron, was moved upon the land by Jesse H. Barron, as the tenant of said Jesse under a lease contract, and that the said Rebecca Avent with her husband, the said B. B. Barron, and after thus moving upon the land with her husband, set up a claim to it in her own right, and some time thereafter the said B. B. Barron, also, set up a claim to the land in right of his wife, the said Rebecca, and repudiating the relation of landlord and tenant as between himself and said Jesse, and under which he entered into possession. As soon as this fact came to the knoAvledge of the said Jesse, he immediately brought his suit of unláwful detainer against the said B. B. and prosecuted the same to a successful termination, dispossessing the said B.' B. The said wife Rebecca went away with her husband upon his being put' out of possession under said suit. Under this state of the evidence, there was no error in that portion of the court’s oral charge relating to the going upon the land by the said wife, Rebecca Barron, and which was excepted to by the defendants. The undisputed evidence in the case shows that the payments made by the
The evidence without conflict shows that the undivided one-third interest in the land claimed by the defendant 1-Iood, was held and so claimed by him through a sheriff’s deed, under a levy and sale by the sheriff of such undivided one-third interest as the property of the said Jesse II. Barron, and that long subsequent to the execution of the mortgage by said Jesse to W. G. Moore, and under which the plaintiff ivas claiming title. This warranted the giving by the court of written charge numbered one requested by the plaintiff. The propositions of law asserted in the remaining written charges given at the plaintiff’s request are correct, and therefore were properly given. The written charges numbered one, two, four, five, six and eight, requested by defendants, were in effect the general affirmative charge as to the defendants named, and were not warranted under the evidence and properly refused. The charge No. 9 was properly refused, being not only misleading, but does not state the law correctly. There may be a claim of ownership, but when it comes to the question of possession, there must be something more than a mere claim- — must be an actual possession.
The uncontradicted testimony of John T. Barron is that he purchased from W. G. Moore, the mortgagee, in his lifetime the mortgage in question and which was executed and given by Jesse F. Barron, for an agreed sum i r price, and that he the said John T. paid said Moore during his life all of said purchase price but about sixty dollars, and this balance of sixty dollars, he paid to J. W. Moore, the executor of W. G. Moore, who thereupon transferred or assigned the mortgage to said John T. Barron. The assignment or transfer endorsed on the mortgage by J. AY. Moore was insufficient to pass the legal title to the lands contained in the mortgage. One of the demises in the complaint is laid in the heirs at law of AAr. G. Moore. It is contended by appellants that the payments made by John T. Barron operated to extin
We find no error in the record, and the judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.