78 Ala. 213 | Ala. | 1884
It is not controverted that the plaintiffs in the present action, which is one of ejectment under the statute, have the legal title to the land sued for, and that the
Nor is it denied that the settled rule in this State, in ordinary cases, is, that in actions of ejectment the legal title must always prevail, and that a court of law can take no cognizance of a mere equitable title. It has been uniformly held by this court, that “ a court of law will not look to, or consider the equity of a party, in opposition of the legal title of the other,” and that a court of equity was the only proper forum in which the purchaser of an equitable title could protect himself by invoking the doctrine of equitable estoppel. — McPherson v. Walters, 16 Ala. 714; Smith v. Mundy, 18 Ala. 182; Kelly v. Hendricks, 57 Ala. 193; Lehman v. Bryan, 67 Ala. 558; Tutwiler v. Munford, 73 Ala. 308.
The only question then is, whether there are any circumstances under which the courts can except railroad companies from the operation of this rule, by reason of the interest which the public has in them, or on any principle of public policy originating in the peculiar nature and use of such public highways. Whore the plaintiff has the legal title to a strip' of land, through which he has permitted a railroad company to construct its line of road for many miles, can the company, when sued in ejectment at law, preclude the plaintiff from a recovery on the ground of estoppel? Will ejectment, in other words, lie for the fractional part of the road-bed of an extended line of railroad, over and through which the defendant is exercising the right of way, having constructed the road-bed and other improvements thereon by the consent of the plaintiff ?
There are cases which support the view, contended for by appellee’s counsel, that an equitable title can be set up by estoppel at law in cases of this character, where the plaintiff, having knowledge of the fact that a company is proceeding to construct a line of railroad over his land, allows them to expend large sums of money in such an improvement, without objection. Wo admit there is much force in the reasoning upon which these cases are based, and a dictum occurs in the case of New Orleans & Selma R. R. Co. v. Jones, 68 Ala. 48, where some countenance was given by us, a/rguendo, to this doctrine. So, in Pollard v. Maddox, 28 Ala. 321, where the •plaintiff’s deed to a railroad company failed to convey the legal title to land, it was so far construed to operate as a covenant granting^ the right of way, as to bar the plaintiff by estoppel from claiming damages in an action of trespass at law.
We have re-examined the authorities on this question, with some doubts as to which is the sounder and better rule in such
In the present case, the plaintiffs have by contract retained the title of the property for their own security, as they had the lawful right to do. If an individual were the defendant in an ordinary case, the law would hold that the plaintiffs could recover upon the strength of their legal title. So likewise, as we have seen, were the defendant an officer or agent of the General Government, holding the property in the name of the sovereign for public uses; this does not preclude the legal title from prevailing, according to the better opinion. It is difficult to perceive that the public can claim an estoppel upon any other principles than au individual, for the public is but an aggregate of individuals. Its rights, therefore, where the sover
We can not see, moreover, that the public would be any more inconvenienced by the action of ejectment in this case at law, than they would by the enforcement of the vendor’s lien by a court of chancery, which would result in a sale of the land by order of that court, and, in the event of its purchase by the plaintiff or any other vendee, in the placing of such purchaser in the actual possession.' — 2 Story’s Eq. Jur. (12th Ed.), § 12315.
It would be no hardship on the defendant to compel a resort to a court of equity in this case, where a bill could be maintained, if at all, only by tendering payment of the balance due by them to the plaintiffs for the land, and which they had failed to pay. — Trenton Co. v. Chambers, 9 N. J. (Eq.) 471; Goodin v. Cincinnati Canal Co., 18 Ohio St. 169 ; Evans v. Missouri Railway Co., 64 Mo. 453.
The judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded.