55 So. 906 | Ala. | 1911
The bill in this case was filed by the appellees for a sale of lands for division, and also to cancel a deed made to the ancestor of appellant. The lands in question, being certain lots in Citronelle, were originally the property of one Loper. About 1888 the possession of said property passed from Loper to George
Gartman took possession of the land under a verbal contract of purchase, and the witnesses for the respondent testify that he had paid the purchase money, but he never received any deed to the land, and, after his death, to wit, on October 21, 1898, his said widow paid Loper $50, and received from him and his wife a deed conveying to her said property, she still continuing to reside thereon. On the 6th day of August, 1903, R. M. Sendd, as administrator of the estate of said George W. Gartman, filed in the probate office of the county a petition for the sale of the lots in question and the land in the country for the payment of debts of the estate and for distribution, making, as parties defendant, a number of heirs, and the said widow, Susannah J. Gartman. Said widow filed an answer to said petition, denying that said George W. Gartman owned said property, stating that he had entered under a verbal contract ■ of purchase, that he had paid no part of the purchase money, at the time of his death, and that she had acquired the title to the same by the purchase from Loper, if he had acquired any interest in the property, it was his homestead, and, as said property and all other land owned by him at the time of his death was of less value than $2,000, the lots vested in her and her minor children as a homestead. Said probate court decreed that the land in the country constituted the homestead of George W. Gartman at the time of his death; that he had the equitable title to the lots involved in this suit;
The contention of the appellant is that said E. H. Johnson, being the purchaser of the legal title, as it appeared of record, and having no notice of any other claim to the property, was an innocent purchaser, without notice, as claimed in the cross-bill of respondents, and they are entitled to have their title to said lots declared to be valid and free from all incumbrance. The appellees claim that the proceedings in the probate court operated as notice to said Johnson, under the doctrine of lis pendens, and that all the interest which the Johnsons are entitled to claim is the dower interest of said Susannah J. Lightner in the property in question.
This case was before this court at a previous term on an appeal from an order of the probate court, setting aside and vacating the decree of sale of August 2,, 1904, and it was held that said original decree was valid, and that said probate court could not, a£ a subsequent term-, vacate the same. — Gartman et al. v. Lightner et al., 160 Ala. 202, 209, 49 South. 412.
As preliminary to the main issues in this case, the amendments to the bill made by interlineations in red ink did not require that a.n additional footnote be made. • — 3 Mayfield’s Digest, p. 301. •
The submission had really ceased to be effective.
The appellant insists that the doctrine of lis pendens does not apply to proceedings in the probate court, partly because the deceased, George W. Gartman, did not hold the legal title to the land in question, and partly because, under our statutes, the administrator does not make any inventory of the lands, nor assume to dispose o!f them except in certain cases. It is nevertheless true that the lands of the deceased can he, and often are, disposed of by proceedings in the probate court, in which the title and interest of the various parties must necessarily he determined. Hence no good reason' appéars why the doctrine does not apply- as fully to proceedings in the probate court as to any other. . , -
While it is true as a general proposition that the probate court is not a proper tribunal in which to litigate questions as to title to lands, yet it necessarily results from its functions in selling lands, making distribution of the proceeds, setting apart homesteads, etc., that it must ascertain whether the lands belong to the decedent, what the interests of the various parties are, etc. This court has said: “It is obliged to receive the ordinary evidence of a claimant’s right to his property, otherwise every proceeding of this sort would be defeated by a simple denial of his title, on the part of the contestant.” — Guilford v. Madden, 45 Ala. 290, 293; Ford v. Garner, 49 Ala. 601, 602, 603; Hillens v. Brinsfield, 108 Ala. 605, 615, 616, 18 South. 604; Layton v. Campbell, 155 Ala. 220, 222, 223, 46 South. 774, 130 Am. St. Rep. 17.
The provisions of section 3176 of the Code of 1896 have no application to sales under section 3178.- — Sherer v. Garrison, 111 Ala. 228, 231, 19 South. 988; Layton v. Campbell, supra. In the case of Greenwood v. Warren et al., 120 Ala. 71, 76, 23 South. 686, this court recognized the application of the doctrine of lis pendens in proceedings in the probate court, but it was held not applicable in the case only because the matter being tried in the subsequent equity case, to wit, undue influence in the execution of a mortgage, was not and could not be before the probate court. One who purchases property from one of the parties pending a bill filed (in chancery) for sale and division takes it subject to the hazard of the pending litigation, and the decree against the parties
There is a case in which the Kentucky Court of Appeals held that a proceeding by the heirs of an estate for a sale of lands for division among themselves was not such a lis pendens as would authorize the chancellor to entertain jurisdiction to turn out one who entered, claiming the land as his own, pending the litigation.— Clarkson v. Barnett’s Heirs, 14 B. Mon. (Ky.) 164, 165; but, without deciding whether that case is not contrary to our own decisions above cited, the facts are entirely different from the case now under consideration, in that the intruder did not claim by purchase from one of the parties to the suit, and the court differentiates it from a case “where a suit is brought to subject it to sale for the payment of a debt, and, pending the suit, a person has gained the possession by purchasing the right of the original defendant.”
In the present case the proceedings in the probate court were to subject the lands for the payment of debts, and the widow (the vendor of respondents), being a party to the proceedings, presented to the court for determination the very question upon which depends the title of the respondents, to wit, that the entire title to the land had been acquired by her and that the land did not belong to the estate of the decedent; also, the alternate proposition that, if the land did belong to the estate of the decedent, it constituted his homestead, and vested in her and children, at his death, both of which
In the present case the decree of sale was rendered August 2, 1904, the conveyance by Mrs. Lightner to Johnson was made on March. 30,- 1905, the original bill in this case was- filed May 10, 1905, and it alleges that the property was advertised to be sold under the decree on September 19, 1904, and that no bidders could be obtained on account of Mrs.- Lightner’s appearing on that day and- giving notice that she claimed the property. We hold that the facts of -this case do not authorize the invocation of the principle last referred to; nor was there such laches as to preclude the complainants from filing this bill. — Shorter et al. v. Smith et al., 56 Ala. 208, 210; First National Bank v. Nelson, 106 Ala. 535, 542, 18 South. 154; Pratt Land & Imp. Co. v. McClain, 135 Ala. 452, 459, 33 South. 185, 93 Am. St. Rep. 35.
Prom what has been said, it results that the probate court properly. directed the- equitable interest in said lots to be sold, yet the legal title remained in Mrs. Lightner and passed to Johnson by her conveyance, and as the evidence shows .that the purchase money was fully paid, by George W. Gartman, making a. “perfect
The decree of the court as corrected is affirmed.
Corrected and affirmed.