Moore v. Empire Land Co.

61 So. 940 | Ala. | 1913

ANDERSON, J.

The statute requires that a complainant, in order to maintain a bill thereunder to quiet title, must be in the possession of the land, actual or constructive, and while the present bill does not aver an actual possession, it does set up a constructive possession. Therefore the question that arises is whether or not the facts set up in said bill refute the claim of constructive possession, or are sufficient to show that the complainant did have the constructive possession when the bill was filed.

Title to land always gives constructive possession to the holder thereof, in the absence of the actual possession in another, and this complainant claims title to the mineral interest in the land in question, and constructive possession thereof by virtue of its said title. It seems that the remote grantor of the appellee, H. A. Key, went into possession of the land -under color of title in 1867, and held same until 1874, when he conveyed the surface to another, and that the said grantee, and his successive grantees, have* ever since been in the actual possession of the surface, with no one in the actual possessioh of the mineral. It would therefore seem that notwithstanding H. A. Key, in 1874, conveyed the surface, separate and apart from the mineral right, that this, as a severance, was a mere legal fiction, and in the absence of an actual physical possession of the mineral *347interest, distinct from the possession of the surface, did not operate to sever the possession of the mineral right from the one being held by the possessor of the surface. In other words, in the absence of a physical severance, the possession of the mineral right went with and followed the possession of the surface, and the holder of the surface, if the grantor of the mineral right, held for the benefit of his grantee of said mineral right; or if the holder of the surface was the grantee of the surface right, then he held the possession of the mineral right for the benefit of his grantor of the surface right, but who reserved the mineral right. This is the effect of the holding in the case of Black Warrior Co. v. West, 170 Ala. 346, 54 South. 200, and while there was division among the members of the court, the opinion of the majority must be, and is, accepted as the law. We therefore hold that the complainant has made out, under the averments of its bill, a title to the minerals by adverse possession, and which gives it the constructive possession of same.

The bill not only seeks a cancellation of the deed as a cloud upon complainant’s .title, but further charges that the deed acquired by Moore was in pursuance of a fraudulent conspiracy, and in violation of the duty of agent to principal, and upon false representations that the deed was being procured for this complainant, and asks that a trust be declared and that the complainant be entitle to the benefit of said purchase. Whether the bill be in the alternative or the relief be inconsistent, it relates to the same subject-matter or property, and is not multifarious under the terms of section 3095 of the Code of 1907. — Durr v. Hanover Bank, 170 Ala. 260, 53 South. 1012.

The bill is sufficient as a bill to quiet title under the . statute, independent of the last phase of same, and the *348general demurrer for want of equity was properly overruled.

We think that the bill utterly fails to make out a case which would cause the purchase of Moore from the Key heirs to inure to the benefit of this complainant. We do not gather from the averment that a breach of trust or fidelity has been committed, on the part of Gamble and Brotherton, as to this complainant, and the attempt to charge same is very remote and farfetched. It is questionable as to whether or not they occupied any fiduciary relationship with the Gulf Company, certainly none with this complainant. The Gulf Company employed Bankhead, an attorney, to abstract and pass upon its title to certain lands, not these respondents or the abstract company, and Bankhead employed the abstract company to furnish an abstract, and which seems to have been correct. There was no misrepresentation or concealment of any fact on the part of the abstract company, or by Bankhead, who pointed out in his report the infiirmity of the first Key deed, and which seems not to have deterred, the present complainant from purchasing the property. It would be a monstrous expansion of the rule, against agents and attorneys, to hold that the abstractor of a title was forever forbidden from purchasing property from the true owner because at some time he furnished a correct abstract of the title to some claimant thereto.

The complainant attempts to strengthen its far-fetched charge of bad faith and breach of trust by a further averment that these parties misrepresented' the facts when getting the deeds from the Key heirs. If this was true, then the Key heirs are the ones to seek relief, and not this complanant, and the bill was subject to the fourteenth ground of demurrer, which should have been sustained.

*349The bill charges that Gamble and Brotherton claim or are reputed to claim an interest in the land jointly with Moore and was not subject to demurrer for improper parties. Moreover, if they disclaim any interest or title to the land, they are discharged without cost. — Section 5448 of the Code.

Then, too, with the second phase of the bill in the case, charging fraud and a breach of trust, Gamble and Brotherton were at least proper, if not necessary, parties.

The decree of the court below is affirmed in part, and is reversed and remanded in part, with the cost of this appeal equally divided between the complainant and the respondents.

Affirmed in part and reversed and remanded.

Dowdell, O. J., and Mayfield and db Graffenuied, JJ., concur.
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