104 Ala. 554 | Ala. | 1894
S. T. Nelms and others, heirs of Sarah A. Pitts, their sister, who died intestate, filed the present bill to have a resulting trust declared in two hundred and twenty-five acres of land, particularly described, the legal title to which was vested in her husband, Sterling H. Pitts, in his lifetime, through whom the defendants claimed title as devisees under his last will and testament. The equity of complainants’ bill is rested upon the averment that the money and lands of Sarah A. Pitts constituted the sole consideration for the purchase of the lands in controversy, and that her husband Sterling H. Pitts, took the legal title in his own name. Sarah A. Pitts died in March,- 1884, and Sterling H. Pitts, her husband, died in May, 1891. It is conceded on both sides, that C. D. Nelms, brother of Sarah A. Pitts, at one time owned the lands in litigation, and by’ deed of conveyance for an express consideration of eight hundred dollars, on the 20th December, 1870, conveyed them to Sterling H. Pitts. To entitle the plaintiffs to the relief prayed for, the evidence should be very clear and satisfactory. Some time prior to September, 1868, Hiram Nelms, the father of complainants and C. D. Nelms and Sarah A. Pitts, died, leaving an estate in reality, which later in the year 1868 was partitioned equally between complainants and C. D. Nelms and Sarah A. Pitts, each receiving' one hundred and
Affirmed.