62 Ala. 145 | Ala. | 1878
Under the general statute, when a resident of this State dies, no matter in what part of the State his property may be, only the court of probate of the county in which he had his last residence has jurisdiction to grant administration of his estate. — Code of 1876, § 2349. This, however, is the result of statute, and may be changed by
A second reason urged why the decree of the chancellor should be affirmed is, that inasmuch as the assent of the sureties of the administrator to the removal of the administration from Winston to Lawrence county was required to be in writing, and filed in each of the probate courts of Winston and Lawrence, the record contains nothing which we can consider evidence of this material fact. The oral testimony of witnesses, unrebutted as it is, is sufficient to raise the presumption that such written assent was filed in said courts; but the objection is, that this is a record fact, which can be proved only by the record; and if the record has been lost or ■ destroyed, then the record should have been first reestablished according to the statute, and a certified copy of such re-established record produced in evidence. We think the proof in this record establishes the fact that the records of both Winston and Lawrence counties were destroyed between the time of the removal of the administration and the taking of the testimony in this cause. There was' no objection, however, iu the. court below, to this or any other
Under our statutes, lands as well as personal property of a decedent ai e charged with the payment of the debts of the estate. And when a sale of lands becomes necessary for the payment of debts, the assertion, by the personal representative, of his right to bring the lands of his testator or intestate into administration, intercepts the descent to the heir; and, to this end, the personal representative may maintain ejectment for the recovery of possession of lands owned by decedent at the time of his death, even against the heir himself. The legal title, it is true, is cast on the heir; but in such case, he holds it only in trust for the benefit of creditors, whose claims are paramount. The executor or administrator, that he may hold the lands in readiness to meet debts, either by leasing or selling the same, should it become necessary, has a right to the possession, which will prevail over, the legal title descended to the heir; and hence he may maintain ejectment against the heir, or any intruder into the possession. — 1 Brick. Dig. 625, § 6; McCullough v. Wise, 57 Ala. 623. Of course, we do not gainsay the widow’s quarantine rights. Such is the law, where decedent dies the owner of lands, and has made no agreement for the sale thereof.
In the present case, Greene, the intestate, made an-executory agreement, in his life time, with Thaxton, by which he agreed to sell the lands in controversy at the agreed price of eight thousand dollars. Thaxton gave his notes for the purchase money, and Greene executed to him a bond to make him title, and put him in possession. When Greene died, no part of the purchase money had been paid, and no title had been made to Thaxton. Thus the title remained, with only seven hundred dollars of the purchase money paid, when Burdett and Motheral commenced negotiations with Thaxton for the purchase of the lands. The record informs us that they, Burdett and Motheral, had full knowledge of the condition of the title. In fact, they do not, in their answers, deny such knowledge, but impliedly admit it. They state in their answers, “ that when the said Thomas Greene sold the said tract of land to said Thaxton, he made him no deed, but executed a bond for titles, of which these defendants were informed by said Thaxton, before they purchased said lands from him. But they do not know that the said Thomas Greene, at the time of his sale of said lands to said Thaxton, retained his vendor’s lien on said land for the payment of the purchase money, other than the fact that Thaxton had
Before the death of Thomas Greene, as we have shown, he had contracted to sell the lands to Thaxton, received his notes for the purchase money, given him a bond to make him title, and put him in possession. This did not change the legal title to the land, but left it in Thomas Greene; and when he died, the title descended to his heirs. It was, however, an equitable conversion of the land into personal property ; and, in equity, the descent of the land to the heir was intercepted thereby. Speaking of such contracts, and the rights growing out of them, Story, in his work on equity jurisprudence, vol. 1, § 790, says : “In the view of courts of law, contracts respecting lands, or other things of which a specific execution will be decreed in equity, are considered as simple executory agreements, and as not attaching to the property in any manner, as an incident, or as a present or future charge. But courts of equity regard them in a very different light. They treat them, .for most purposes, precisely as if they had been specifically executed. Thus, if a man has entered into a valid contract for the purchase of land, he is treated in equity as the equitable owner of the land, and the vendor is treated as the owner of the money. The purchaser may devise it as land, even before the conveyance is made, and it passes by descent to his heir as land. The vendor is deemed in equity to stand seized of it for the benefit of the purchaser; and the trust attaches to the land, so as to bind the heir of the vendor, and every one claiming
It is claimed for appellees, that inasmuch as the administrator himself surrendered the purchase money notes, and united in the deed of conveyance, this devested the right of the estate to pursue the lands in the hands of the vendees from Thaxton. The administrator, however, held the notes in trust, for the creditors of the estate primarily, and next for the distributees of the estate. He may have estopped himself from afterwards enforcing the payment of the surrendered notes, by the conveyance he made. — Hopper v. Steele, 18 Ala. 828, and authorities cited. The estate, however, owed large debts, ard, without this claim, has not assets for their payment. The administrator de bonis non is not affected by this estoppel, but may enforce the lien for the benefit of the estate.
Pullen, the sub-purchaser from Burdett and Motheral, does not show himself a bona fide purchaser. He neither proves nor avers that he has paid the purchase money, or any part thereof. — 2 Brick. Dig. 518, §§ 171-2.
The decree of the Chancellor is reversed, and this court, proceeding to render the decree the Chancellor should have rendered, doth order and decree that the complainant is entitled to the relief he seeks. It is referred to the register to
Reversed and rendered.