16 Ala. 348 | Ala. | 1849
The petition in this case avers that Huds-peth, the petitioner; purchased the land from Vann, and received his title bond by which Vann covenanted to make title when the purchase money was paid, or when he should procure a patent from the United States. It is wanting in one essential averment, to wit, that Vann was the owner of the land, to which the party prays the court to order the administrator to make title. The act provides that “ when any person awning lands or tenements, shall sell the same, and enter into bond to make titles,” &c. — Clay’s Digest, 157, § 38. This statute confers upon the Orphans’ Court, a limited and special jurisdiction, and marks out the course to be pursued, and no one can successfully invoke this extraordinary remedy, unless he brings himself within the category for which provision is made. The Orphans’ Court has not, like the Court of
It will be unnecessary to notice the charges given to the jury, further than to remark that the statute evidently contemplates that the purchaser must have paid for the land, the title to which he prays may be decreed him, unless the bond otherwise provide, before the court can pass the decree that the administrator convey. True, the statute is general in its terms, and says nothing about the purchase money, but it is clear
As to the receipt of payment endorsed on the bond, it is prima fade evidence of the fact, but not conclusive, and the fact of payment which it recites may be contradicted by oral testimony. 1 Greenl. Ev. 446, § 305; 1 Stew. 529; 1 Ala. Rep. 303.
It results from what we have said, that there is error in the proceedings, .and the decree is consequently reversed, and the cause remanded.