52 Ala. 520 | Ala. | 1875
The note for the purchase-money having matured, it was the legal right of the vendee to tender the purchase-money, and demand of the vendor a conveyance of the lands. If the conveyance was refused, the condition of the bond for title was broken, and the vendee could elect to proceed at law for
5. The demurrer to these pleas having been sustained, the ap-" pellant, by leave of the court, filed three additional pleas. To these pleas the appellees interposed a demurrer, assigning the same and additional causes of demurrer. One of the additional causes of demurrer is, “ that the pleas do not consist of such a succinct statement of the facts relied on, as that a material issue can be taken thereon,” pursuing in effect the language of the statute. B. C. § 2638. The first of these pleas, averring the consideration of the note sued on was the purchase-monejr of lands, to which the vendors by bonds covenanted to make the appellant a good title, proceeds to aver that a part of the lands were at the time of the purchase held adversely to the vendors, and that such adverse possession continued to the time of pleading. The value of the land is averred, accompanied with the averment that title had not been made to the appellant. The plea then claims as damages the value of the lands so adversely held, and proposes such damages as a set-off.
The general rule is, that a plea of set-off must disclose a state of facts, which would entitle the party pleading it to maintain an action, if he were the plaintiff in the prosecution of a suit. Crawford v. Simonton, 7 Porter, 110. The facts stated in this plea, if embodied in a complaint, would not disclose a substantial cause of action. The bond for title is not set out, nor is its substance. No fact is stated from which a breach of its stipulations can be legally deduced. It may or may not have covenanted for an immediate transfer of the possession of the lands to the vendee. Such must have been its legal effect before an adverse possession at the time of its execution could be assigned as its breach. The material issue which could be formed on this plea would involve the inquiry, whether an adverse possession existing at the time of the sale, and preventing the vendee from obtaining possession, was a breach of the bond for title. The plea does not state the facts on which such issue could be formed, and it is, of consequence, obnoxious to the cause of demurrer we have recited above.
It is insisted by the counsel for the appellees, that although the demurrer to one or more of the special pleas should not have been sustained, yet as, under pleas which were not demurred to, the appellant could have had the benefit of any defence they may present; sustaining the demurrer was error without injury. The decisions on this point are not very harmonious. The true rule we think is, that when error is shown the presumption of injury arises, compelling a reversal, unless the presumption is clearly repelled by the record. This presumption is not repelled, unless we can see that a party interposing a special plea, to which a demurrer is erroneously sustained, not only could have had, but that he did have, the benefit of the defence such plea presents, under some other plea. That is not apparent from this record, and we cannot withhold a reversal.
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.