107 So. 908 | Ala. | 1926
By this bill complainants seek to have the title to certain lands therein described vested in them as next of kin and heirs at law of Nancy Derrick, nee Nancy Thomas. The demurrers of respondents taking the point that the bill was barred by laches having been sustained, complainants have prosecuted this appeal for a review of the decree on demurrer.
From the bill it appears the land was at one time a part of the estate of W. C. Thomas (the father of Nancy Derrick), and was sold by the administrator of said estate, W. W. Derrick, the husband of Nancy bidding in the lands for his wife, the purchase money therefor being paid by said Nancy Derrick giving credit to said administrator for such part of her distributive share of the estate of her father; that on June 12, 1893, said administrator, as such, executed this deed to the land to W. W. Derrick, the husband of Nancy, "by mistake or inadvertence, when the deed should have been executed to Nancy L. E. Derrick." A few months thereafter, on September 6, 1893, Nancy Derrick died leaving no lineal descendants, the complainants being next of kin as her nephews and nieces, and the husband continued to occupy the land to the time of his death in 1924. W. W. Derrick subsequently remarried, and his widow now claims her dower interest in the land. The deed was never recorded, and the bill, as amended, alleges ignorance on the part of complainants that the deed was executed in the name of the husband, or that he was holding the land otherwise than by his right of courtesy, and that the husband had told them at his death the land "would revert to them."
It is to be observed that relief is sought against a transaction occurring more than 30 years before the filing of this bill, placing the burden upon complainants by this bill to excuse so long a delay. Henley v. Masonic Temple Ass'n,
The equity of the bill rests upon the doctrine of a resulting trust. Its averments are consistent with the hypothesis that the wife had full knowledge as to the manner of the execution of the deed to the husband and acquiesced therein. On demurrer, in the absence of allegation to the contrary, it must be assumed that such was the case. Fowler v. Ala. I. S. Co., 51 So. 393,
"As a party is generally charged with the laches of his privies, * * * it follows that knowledge of an ancestor will be imputed to an heir. * * * The knowledge of others who might have sued, but did not, may raise the presumption of invalidity against plaintiff in spite of his own ignorance of the transaction. * * * A party, himself diligent, may be precluded from relief by the negligence of others, as a grantor, a personal representative by that of the decedent."
And in the Fowler Case, supra, the court said:
"The salutary rule of pleading * * * requires that, if the delay in asserting a right against adverse claim be great, a sufficient excuse be alleged. There is, of course, a corresponding rule in respect to the burden of proof. Nor is a stale claim freshened or relieved of this burden by passing from hand to hand."
The death of Nancy Derrick did not operate to stop the running of the statute of limitations or the application of the equitable principle of laches which then "began to gather strength to the detriment of the equitable title here asserted." Fowler v. Ala. I. . S. Co., supra.
The case of Haney v. Legg, 30 So. 34,
"The averment is not only that complainant had no knowledge that the deed to her husband was made to him, but that he never asserted any ownership of the land. On the contrary, he recognized the trust and asserted that the land belonged to her."
It thus appears that quite a different case was there presented than that here under consideration.
The case of Brackin v. Newman, 26 So. 3,
We are of the opinion the authorities herein noted fully support the ruling of the court below to the effect that the bill is subject to demurrer for laches, and the decree rendered will accordingly be here affirmed.
Affirmed.
ANDERSON, C. J., and SAYRE and MILLER, JJ., concur.