51 So. 393 | Ala. | 1910
Appellant having in July, 1907, sued appellee in ejectment for the recovery of “the following-tract of land, the mineral interest and mining rights in and to” the tract described in the complaint, the appellee filed the bill in this case to enjoin that suit and to have its ownership of the land decreed. The decree of
The facts, some of which are averred in an alternative way, are peculiar, and may be fairly'stated, for the purpose of the consideration of the main question raised by this appeal, as follows: In the year 1882 A. J. Crawford, acting through one Beers, employed S. T. Fowler to purchase mineral interests in lands in Etowah and St. Clair counties, furnishing money for that purpose. Fowler was to have the surface of the lands so purchased in part compensation for his services. The land in question, surface and mineral right, was purchased under that agreement and paid for out of' Crawford’s money. S. T. Fowler fraudulently or wrongfully, as the bill states it, procured the vendor to make a deed of the entire fee to his son, S. O. Fowler, then an infant of three or four years. Within a few weeks thereafter he made a.conveyance of the mineral interest to Beers, and Beers in turn conveyed the like interest to Crawford. In the year 1900 the mineral interest in question passed by conveyance through one Elliott to the appellee, complainant in the court below. On the day Elliott purchased from Crawford, the deed to S. O. Fowler was filed for record. At that time Crawford Beers, and the original vendor were all dead. The bill is silent as to whether the complainant, or any of its predecessors in interest, had knowledge or notice of the conveyance to S. O. Fowler prior to its filing for record, and this omission to speak is made the basis for appellant’s main insistence, which is that the complainant fails to discharge by appropriate averment the onus of rebutting the inference of laches, which must be drawn from the lapse of time since the breach of trust.
A further averment of the bill is that complainant was in possession of the mineral strata at the time of
Although infants are not generally bound by estoppels, (-ourts of equity hold to their power of dealing with .every form of fraud by going at once to the essential
It. is the settled rule of practice in this state that a demurrer ivill lie for laches, as well as for statutory limitation appearing on the face of the bill. — Greenlees v. Greenlees, 62 Ala. 330; Scruggs v. Decatur Mineral Co., 86 Ala. 173, 5 South. 440. It is faniiliar learning .that in the application of the doctrine of laches courts of equity act in accordance with the analogy furnished by the statute of limitation, so that if the corresponding legal right, asserted under similar conditions, Avould be
In the case at hand it appears on the face of the bill that complainant company acquired its rights by con.veyance 18 years after the fraud it now complains of, and that for about the same length of time the deed, the execution of which constituted the alleged fraud, was withheld from the record. The filing of the bill was delayed for yet 7 years longer. The complainant acquired no superior right to that of its immediate and several remote predecessors in interest. Assuming, for either of the sufficient reasons hereinafter noted, that complainant and those from whom it derives title were out of possession during the 20 and odd years which elapsed prior to defendant’s action of ejectment, no excuse for the great delay in asserting its rights being shown, it must be also assumed that complainant has no excuse. It is insisted in argument that an inference
It follows that the chancellor, in making his decree, was not governed in all respects by the principles we have noted, and that the decree overruling the demurrer to the complainant’s bill was in error. The decree will be reversed, and, in order that the complainant may be given such opportunity for amendment as may seem proper to the chancellor, the cause will be remanded.
Reversed and remanded.