119 Ala. 320 | Ala. | 1898
The appellee filed the present hill to enforce specific performance of a verbal contract for the sale of land. The bill shows that Sarah Jackson and her husband, Jerry Jackson, jointly owned the land in controversy; that in the year 1892 they sold the same to the appellee, Bichard Knox, for an agreed consideration, and put the purchaser in possession, and that he subsequently paid the entire purchase money according to the contract of purchase. Before the filing of this hill, the husband died, and the wife, appellant, instituted a suit in ejectment which is now pending to recover possession of the land from their vendee. Whereupon t'he purchaser filed his bill, in which the heirs of the deceased vendor and his widow, who was a joint owner, are made parties defendant. The bill prays for a specific performance of the contract; that the legal title be divested out of the respondents and invested in complainant, and that appellant, plaintiff in ejectment, be perpetually enjoined. The heirs of the husband, Jerry Jackson, made no defense, and decrees pro confesso were taken against them. The appellant answered the bill, denied its averments as to the sale of the land, and asserted that she was the sole OAvner. After evidence, the cause was submitted for final decree, and the chancery court granted full relief against all the parties as prayed for in the bill. The appeal is from this decree.
There is no question in our minds that coinplainant established by the evidence the case made by the bill. The rule does not apply in a court of equity, that if issue is joined upon an immaterial plea without objection, and the plea is sustained by proof, that the party pleading it is entitled to the benefit of the plea. If there
If complainant’s bill had been filed against the heirs of Jerry Jackson alone, upon the proof, relief could not have been justly refused. As to Sarah Jackson, the question presented is, whether a parol sale of land by a married woman owning and holding the legal title is capable of enforcement, even in cases where she puts the purchaser in possession, and receives from him a part of the purchase money, and subsequently, the remainder of it. The facts predicated relieve the case from the statute of frauds, and if there was no other inhibition on the power of the wife to contract, she would be bound by such an agreement. Section 2346 of the Code of 1886, the law in force at t'he time of the agreement to sell the land was entered into, reads as follows: “The wife has full legal capacity to contract in writing as if she were sole, with the assent or concurrence of the husband expressed in writing.” This section has been construed to limit the contractual power of the wife in all cases to contracts made in writing, with the assent or concurrence of the husband expressed in writing. — Strauss, Pritz & Co. v. Glass, 108 Ala. 546. If the contract of the wife be in writing, with the assent of the husband expressed in writing, she has full caiiacity to make any contract or agreement that could be made by a man, or femme sole. There is no other limitation on her power to bind herself by contract. She could make a valid bond to make title upon the payment of the purchase money reserving in herself the legal title as security, by executing the bond in writing with the assent of the husband expressed in writing, and upon the payment of the purchase money, a court of equity would enforce its specific performance and divest the legal title and invest it in the purchaser, and that, too, without the concurrence of the husband, manifested by his joinder in the alienation as required by section 2348 of the Code of 1886, upon a bill filed by the purchaser for such relief. To hold otherwise would deny her that power to contract as a femme sole which is conferred by the statute,' supra. This was one conclusion in the case of Knox v. Childersburg Land Co., 86 Ala. 180. It being admitted that the agreement for the sale of the land was not in writing, and that the husband did not express his assent or con
In the case of Osborne v. Cooper, supra, the facts were that Mary A. Cooper sold and conveyed to her husband, A. P. Cooper, one hundred and twenty acres of land by deed of conveyance, but not in conformity to section 2348 of the Code of 1886, quoted supra, in that the husband did not join in the conveyance with his wife to himself. It was said in the opinion “that if the case rested on section 2348 of the Code the deed * * * would be void, and she would not be estopped to allege its invalidity in equity.” This deed was upheld on the ground that the sale to the husband being a contract authorized
Beversed and remanded.