87 So. 368 | Ala. | 1921
Subdivision 5 of Code 1907, § 3052, reads:
"The powers and jurisdiction of courts of chancery extend — * * * 5. To establish and define uncertain or disputed boundary lines."
This subdivision is new to the Code of 1907. At the time this Code was adopted it had been pronounced, upon abundant authority, in Ashurst v. McKenzie,
Such was the definition of this phase of equity's powers when subdivision 5 of section 3052 of the Code of 1907 was incorporated in the body of our statutory laws; the Legislature phrasing the subdivision in practically the exact terms in which this ancient jurisdiction of equity had been expressed or defined. The principles of equity were and are, unless changed by statute or unsuited to our institutions, a part of the common law. Pennock's Estate,
Code 1907, § 12 — its provisions becoming for the first time a part of our statutory system coincidentally with the adoption of the provisions of subdivision 5 of section 3052 — provides:
"The common law of England, so far as it is not inconsistent with the Constitution, laws, and institutions of this state, shall, together with such institutions and laws, be the rule of decisions, and shall continue in force, except as from time to time it may be altered or repealed by the Legislature."
Among the accepted rules of statutory construction, here as well as generally elsewhere, are these:
The presumption is that "the Legislature does not intend to make any alteration in the law beyond what it explicitly declares, either in express terms or by unmistakable implication; * * * that it is in the last degree improbable that the Legislature would overthrow fundamental principles, infringe rights, or depart from the general system of law without expressing its intention with irresistible clearness. * * *" Cloverdale Homes v. Town of Cloverdale,
Statute which only affirms the common law is to be accorded the meaning and effect given the like rule by the common law. Baker v. Baker,
It appears from the simple terms in which subdivision 5 of section 3052 defines the jurisdiction there contemplated — a jurisdiction ancient and well understood when the statute was adopted — the Legislature did not express or otherwise indicate any intent to modify, contract, or expand the measure of the ancient jurisdiction under treatment in the subdivision, unless that intent is to be implied from the fact that the Legislature did not include the ancient definitive limitations thereon that are stated in Ashurst v. McKenzie,
Since it is ever presumed that the Legislature does not intend to cast an enactment into conflict with fundamental principles, particularly those established in the paramount form of constitutional guaranties, mandates, or prohibitions, the constitutional protection and preservation of the right of trial by jury (Const. 1901, § 11) requires a construction — entirely permissible without deflecting from or ignoring the effect of the terms in which the subdivision is written — that will avoid rendering the subdivision violative of the cited section of the organic law; and this is the judicial duty where the language employed does not conclude to the contrary.
In Norris' Appeal,
The bill to which the demurrer was overruled avers disputes or uncertainties as to boundaries between three distinct proprietors, along with this allegation:
"They aver that during the month of February, 1920, it was agreed between complainant and the said Mattie Goodman, or her agent, H. A. Goodman, that they would employ a surveyor and establish the true lines between the said lands of Mattie Goodman and these of complainants adjoining, and that a surveyor was employed jointly by said adjoining owners who made a survey and established the true lines, and that complainants were willing to abide by this survey, but said Mattie Goodman objected and refused to abide by such lines so established and now contends that the true lines run through the lands of complainants."
Under the stated proper construction of subdivision 5, the bill does not efficiently state a case within that jurisdiction. In the added allegations in reference to the survey it is not averred that either party either acquiesced in or acted upon the survey as a correct ascertainment of the line. On the contrary, the allegation is that the respondent repudiated the result of the survey. Hence no estoppel is asserted. The survey is not averred to have been made by an official surveyor. Hence the provisions of Code, § 6023, are not applicable.
It is not asserted in the bill that the action taken through the joint employment of the surveyor or his work or its result were intended or had the effect of a common-law arbitration. See Shaw v. State,
The appeal in Turner v. De Priest,
The demurrer to the bill was erroneously overruled.
Reversed and remanded.
ANDERSON, C. J., and SOMERVILLE and THOMAS, JJ., concur.