23 Ala. 514 | Ala. | 1853
There was no error in the decree of the Chancellor, so far as Holt and wife and Jones and wife are concerned, for the reason that the assent of neither Mrs..Holt nor Mrs. Jones to the sale was established. T.he land .was theirs, and not their husbands’; and it is the policy of ■ the law, that the wife is not to part with her real estate, but by her own consent, freely and voluntarily given. — Clay’s Digest 155 § 27. It is said, however, that in this case the assent of the wife is to
These reasons, however, do not apply to the other defendant, E. W. Randall; but as he denies that he ever authorized or assented to the sale, or ever received any portion of the purchase money, arid as these denials are directly responsive to the bill, it is necessary, under the well established rule of evidence applicable to courts of chancery, that they should be outweighed by the testimony, that is, at least by one witness and corroborating circumstances. If we were at liberty to act upon the testimony of a single witness, we have it before us, full, clear and explicit, and in direct contradiction to the denials of this defendant; but we cannot disregard the rule; and the only question on this branch of the case is, whether the evidence of this witness is sustained by corroborating circumstances. As we have said, the witness proves clearly the assent of this defendant to the sale after he became of full age, and his receipt of his portion of the purchase money from his guardian, Edmond Randall, by whom the sale was originally made ; and to his answers is attached a copy of the account of such guardian, in which he charges himself with the amount of $138 33, on account of lands sold in Alabama, a copy of the receipt given by the defendant, Randall, in which he acknowledges that he has received from Edmond Randall the whole estate which he held as his guardian, and also a bond of indemnity executed by him to the same person, to save him harmless from delivering the property to the defendant before he was of age. It is urged, that these exhibits take the case out of the rule, but we do not think so. When the law speaks of corroborating circumstanr
The views we have taken upon the merits render it unnecessary to consider the action of the court upon the demurrer, and are decisive upon the question arising on the prayer of the bill, that, in the event the titles of the heirs of Willis Randall cannot be decreed to the complainants, then the lands bo sold and the purchase money refunded, as it is evident no decree can be rendered which, so far as Mrs. Jones and Mrs. Holt are concerned, might operate to divest them of their title ; and as to the other defendant, their is a failure of proof.
The decree of the Chacellor must, therefore, be affirmed, the plaintiffs in error paying the costs of this court.