140 Ala. 633 | Ala. | 1903
This is a statutory action in the nature of ejectment brought by appellants (plaintiffs in the court below) to recover possession of certain real estate described in the complaint. The plaintiffs based their right of recovery on title descent to them as heirs at law of Janette Mudd, deceased, their mother. In support of this, they introduced in evidence, in connection with proof of heirship, a deed to the land in question from Alberto Martin and wife to the said Janette Mudd, executed March 4, 1873. They also introduced further evidence tending to show that the said Janette Mudd went into possession of said land under said deed, and continued in possession up and and until her death, in January, 1876; that at the time of the death of said Janette the plaintiff Carrie Bradford, then Carrie Mudd, and her brother and sister, children of Janette Mudd, all of whom were minors, were living with their mother. The origin of the legal title was not disputed; that is, that Alberto Martin, grantor of Janette Mudd, was formerly the owner of the land. The defendants introduced in evidence a deed of gift from Alberto Martin to the defendant Martha Wilson, of date November 30,1877, with a relinquishment of dower by the wife of date June 16, 1880, indorsed on said deed, which described the land conveyed as one and one-fourth acres of land near Enon, “on which she [Martha Wilson, the grantee] is now and' has been living for several years.” The defendants, however, did not rely hpon this deed as a muniment of title, but as color of title in connection with the claim of adverse possession, which they set up as a defense. In support of their claim to the land by adverse possession, the defendants offered evidence which tended to show that Martha Wilson went into possession of the land in 1874 or 1875, and continued in the possession thereof, claim
The plaintiffs offered in evidence the record of a judgment in favor of plaintiffs on a former trial between the same parties, which, on objection of the defendants, the court excluded, and to which ruling exception was reserved. The judgment alone, without a writ, and the dispossession of the defendants under it, was not sufficient to create a break in the continuity of the defendants' holding, and this was the purpose for which it was offered. There was no offer to show that defendants were ever dispossessed under the judgment. The court committed no error in sustaining the objection.
If the claim of ownership to the land by Martha Wilson was never set up by her until after the death of Janette Mudd, in January, 1876, and at which time the plaintiffs were minors, then there was a phase of the evidence introduced on which the question of infancy becomes material. There was evidence from which the jury might have found an adverse holding and possession for a period of ten years by the defendants after the death of Janette Mudd, and before the time of the abandonment, if there was an abandonment, as some of the witnesses testified that the defendants abandoned the possession during the pendency of the former suit, or just after its termination. The former suit was begun in
For the error pointed out, the judgment will be reversed and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.