120 Ala. 242 | Ala. | 1897
When this case was here on a former ap-peal (Simmons v. Richardson, 107 Ala. 697), in construing the deed from L. L. Simmons to Thos. J. Foster, trustee, set out in this transcript, we held, that the trustee therein was not a mere naked trustee, but one with active duties to perform; that the grantor, L. L. .Simmons, was making provision in said deed, not alone for the benefit of his wife, the plaintiff in that case— who was suing for the same lands as are here sued for by her daughter’s trustee — but as well for his then only-child and daughter, and-such children as might be born-
Prior to the execution of said trust deed, the grantor, the said L. L. Simmons, was indebted by promissory note to J.T. Jones and G. B. Johnston, in thesum of $350, and to enforce the collection of said note, they filed a bill against said L. L. Simmons and others, to subject the lands conveyed in said deed of trust by him'' to said Thos. J. Foster, trustee. The result of that litigation was, that a decree was rendered in favor of the complainants and the lands were ordered sold, and they were sold, but the sale was afterwards set aside, and by an arrangement between the parties, the camse was dropped from the docket.'
, It was admitted, that on the 13th October, 1888, said Sallie J. Simmons and her said husband, L. L. Simmons, duly and legally executed to John C. Webb a mortgage on 720 acres of the land sued for, which mortgage was duly recorded in the probate office of Marengo county; that the same was afterwards foreclosed, and said Jno. C. executed to Sallie C. Webb, a deed, of date February 20, 1890, conveying to her said land sued for in this action, and that in March, 1890, the said Sallie C. and John C. Webb by deed duly executed and recorded, conveyed said lands to the defendant Richardson. In the former suit it appeared, and is impliedly admitted by counsel here, that L. L. Simmons applied to said John C. Webb to raise the money to pay off the incumbrances on his lands conveyed to said trustóe, and Webb would not lend him the money, but agreed to lend it to Mrs. Simmons upon her executing a note and mortgage on the lands to secure it, and did so ; the husband, L. L. Simmons, giving his written consent for his wife to execute the papers, and joining with her in the execution of the mortgage. As we held before, whatever interest she had in the lands passed in equity by ’ the mortgage as a security for the loan.
It was further shown, that on the 15th January; 1894, the said Sallie J. Simmons executed and delivered to'the defendant, Richardson, for the sum of $1,600, which was
It now appears, that said Sallie J. Simmons died on the 6th of June, 1896; that the said trustee, Thos. J. Foster, died on the 11th June, 1895, and that S. A. Cherry, the husband of the only child and daughter of said L. L. Simmons and his wife, Sallie J., was appointed trustee in said deed of trust as successor of said Thos. J. Foster, deceased, by the register in chancery of Marengo county, on the 26th October, 1896, and this suit was instituted the same day. The said L. L. Simmons, the grantor in said trust deed, still survives.
It serves our purpose now, to quote what we said in reference to this trust deed in our opinion in the case of Simmons v. Richardson, 107 Ala., supra. We there said : “It is provided in the deed, that he (the trustee) shall apply all the rents, proceeds, issues and profits of the property to the sole use, benefit and behoof of the plaintiff, the wife of the grantor, for and during the term of her natural life free from the control, disposal, debts and liabilities of her husband, the grantor, permitting the plaintiff to control and manage said property and its proceeds, as to her may seem best, and hire, rent, lease or sell any or all of it in any manner she may deem best. Here she is given the privilege of controlling the property by renting or selling, but if she should not exercise the power to do so, it remained with the trustee. Again, it was clearly within the contemplation of the grantor, that in case of sale of any of the property by the wife, she would re-invest the proceeds in other property, in order that his design in reference to his daughter and any after born children, might be carried out. The
It is further provided in said deed of trust, that said Sallie J. Simmons “may, at her own election, make advancements of any portion of said property to my said daughter, and such other children as may be hereafter born as aforesaid, provided, also, that my said wife may, at her own election, make advancements of any portion of said property to my said daughter, and such other children as may be hereafter born, as she or they may arrive at age or marry, without the same being considered a sale by her; but should the said Sallie Simmons survive me and marry another husband, then it is my desire, that the said trustee shall cause to be divided between her, the said Sallie J. Simmons and my said daughter, and such other children as may be hereafter born as aforesaid, or their heirs, if any, all my property, which then remains undisposed of according to the statutes of distribution of the State which shall then be in force.”
Following this is another provision, that “in the event my said'daughter, Sallie R, Simmons, or any children to
Said deed of trust contained still this further condition : “And on the further trust that in the event my said wife, Sallie J. Simmons, shall depart this life, leaving me surviving, that the property hereinbefore conveyed, or so much as has not been advanced to or distributed among my said daughter, Sallie R. Simmons, and such other children as may be born to me by my said wife, shall, on the death of my said wife, Sallie J. Simmons, be transferred and conveyed back to me by-the said Thos. J. Poster, trustee, as aforesaid, or his successor in office.”
It is to be observed, that this condition extends to all the property covered by said deed, without condition, except such portion of it as may have been given off by his wife to his children.
It will appear from all this, if the said Sallie J. Simmons during her life had the absolute right of disposition by sale of this property, as counsel for appellee suggests she may have had, but which we do not now decide, and her conveyances thereof transferred the legal title thereto, without the consent of, or the joining therein by the said trustee, then the sale by her to the defendant of the 120 acres of land, and the sale to him through the mortgage she gave to said Jno. C. Webb, passed the legal title to defendant, and plaintiff is not entitled to recover. If she only had a life estate and could convey no more than such an interest in the property, then, on her death, the trust would have been fully executed, and the legal title to the property passed,—under the provisions of the clause of the deed last quoted,—to the grantor, L. L. Simmons ; and in that event, the plaintiff would not be entitled to maintain this action. “The extent and duration of the estate (of a trustee) are determined by the object and
These two cases were submitted as one, the decision of one being decisive of the other.
In any view of the case, it appears the plaintiff could not maintain the suit.
Affirmed.