16 Ala. 423 | Ala. | 1849
This bill was filed by one tenant in common against liis co-tenant to have an account of the rent of a tract of land owned by the parties, and cultivated in the year 1842, by the defendant alone;.
The bill charges that the parties own the land as tenants in common, and that the defendant refused to consent to, a division, but excluded the complainant from a participation of the rents. That in the early part of 1842,' the parties having agreed upon the manner for dividing said tract,, the complainant called on the defendant to consummate the division, but he refused, and the said defendant retracted from the said
The answer of defendant denies the agreement to pay rent} and insists that he did not exclude the plaintiff from the land, but only cultivated fifty, of one hundred acres of cleared land, leaving the other fifty acres unoccupied.
The case being, submitted on bill; answer and proof, the chancellor dismissed the bill for want of equity. To reverse his decree,, the complainant brings the case to this- court.
The decree of the chancellor states,, that after the case was brought om to. be heard, and after the- bill, answer and depositions had been read, and the case in part argued, the complainant moved to- amend his bill,, but the chancellor o verruled- the motion,, for the reason that it came too late. What the character of the- amendments proposed to- be made was, we are not informed, and even conceding that the- refusal to-- allow the amendment is a matter reversable on error, we cannot pronounce in this case, that the party has been; injuriously affected by it. But it is insisted that the objection here urged against the bill, to wit, that it shows upon its face that the complainant has an adequate remedy at law,, is- in. the nature of a demurrer, and not having been taken before the trial and before the parties had incurred all the expense consequent upon the prosecutions of the cause,, should be considered as abandoned.
There is no question but that the objection was proper subject matter for demurrer;, but it shows at the same1 time that the Court of Chancery has no- jurisdictions of the Gauss,,if iiv
It is manifest the case above refered to, and to which we are cited as an authority to show that the defendant in this case could not take advantage of the defect in the bill at the final hearing, does not sustain that position. In the case at bar the defendant did raise the objection, and it was sustained by the chancellor. In the case of Andrews & Bro. v. McCoy, supra, the objection was considered as waived, nqt having been taken in the court below, and for that reason, Vas disallowed in this court. '
The authorities cited by the counsel for the plaintiff in error show very clearly, but for the 31st rule of chancery practice, which we have adopted, (Clay’s Digest, 616,) the defendant below, not having availed himself of the objection by demurrer, could not, upon the hearing, have insisted' upon it as ground for dismissing the bill — according to the generally received practice in courts of equity, if the defendant had demurred, and had embraced the same matter in his answer which is covered by his demurrer, the effect of the answer would have been to have overruled the demurrer. Story’s Eq. PI. § 465, ancl authorities cited. Our rules of practice Step very different.. In this State, the defendant may embrace
Concéding that the court of chancery has jurisdiction to compel an account and to decree compensation between tenants in common of real estate, where one has received of the . rents and profits more than his share, and refuses to account, still there cannot exist a doubt, where the parties contract for a several occupation of the land, and agree that the occupant shall pay therefor to his co-tenant a stipulated sum, that a court of law has ample jurisdiction to award damages for a breach of the contract, for this amounts to a temporary severance of their tenancy in common, and the party who disposes of his interest in the term to his co-tenant is-as much entitled to his action to recover the price, as he would have been had he sold the entire interest 1o him. In the case at bar, the complainant informed the defendant that he should pay him for the occupation during the year 1842, the sum of five dollars per acre, for one half the number of acres he, the defendant, should cultivate during that year, and complainant imclefstood
Our conclusion is, that the decree was, under the circum-stan&es, entirely correct, and it is therefore affirmed.