102 Ala. 582 | Ala. | 1893
This case was here on a former appeal. The bill was filed to have a vendor’s lien on land declared and enforced. The entire defense was to have
When the cause, on reversal, returned to the chancery court, the court allowed the respondent to file an amended answer in the nature of a cross-bill, in which he undertook to identify the particular six acres of land in said section 28, which he understood to be conveyed to him by said deed, and thereby to make an attempt to make that certain, which we held could not be done.
The learned chancellor evidently overlooked, for the time, the fact, that the respondent did not seek a cancellation of the deed and a return of the purchase money, or a reformation of the deed, but his purpose was to hold the land under a deed recognized by him to be valid, and claim simply an abatement of the purchase money, and that under a clause of the deed declared by this court to be void. It is unnecessary to repeat here what we said on this question in our former opinion. No amount of averment and proof could make said deed certain to that six acres, and the effort to do so should have fallen on the objections interposed by the complainant .
The decree of the.conrt below would have been correct if no mistake was made in the calculations, except for the
In the record before us, it is stated that there are 160 acres of land, whereas, the land numbers given show only 120. The answer admits 160 acres. Lest some injustice maybe done by rendering a decree here, we will reverse and remand the cause.
Reversed and remanded.