25 Ala. 424 | Ala. | 1854
The complainant in the court below, George Any, filed his bill against the appellants and oneHocut. The bill charges, that the appellee purchased of Hocut a tract of land, which is particularly described, and received from him
There was a demurrer to the bill, which was overruled; and on the whole case a decree was made in favor of the complainant. The rulings of the chancellor on the demurrer, and in the final decree, are here assigned for error.
The bill makes out a clear case for relief, and there is no ground whatever for the demurrer. Dickinson and Winn are the trustees of the legal title to the land in controversy, for the benefit of Any, who has a perfect equity of which they had notice when they took the assignment of the title bond from Hocut, and the conveyance from Trawick. The naked legal title is in them, but they have no right to withhold it from him who has the perfect equity, and whose equity was fully known to them before they accepted that title. They are his trustees, and must be made to convey to him, when they refuse to do so on request.
The proof fully sustains the allegations of the bill, and it only remains to add that the decree of the chancellor is in all things affirmed, at the cost of Dickinson and Winn.