60 So. 798 | Ala. | 1912
In the case of Driver et al. v. New, 175 Ala. 655, 57 South. 437, the appellee New filed a bill in equity to enjoin the appellants, Joseph B. Driver et al., from committing trespass upon lands of which the said New was in the actual possession. In that case the bill alleged that the trespass sought to be enjoined were of such a continuous character as to call for equitable relief. The case was submitted on its merits, the chancellor granted a decrée enjoining said Joseph B. Driver et al. from further trespassing upon the land until the title to the land could be “determined by a proceeding at law brought within a reasonable time.” This court, upon appeal, simply affirmed the decree of the chancellor without alteration or modification. In the above case the appellants, Joseph B. Driver et al., as a defense to the suit, set up title to the land, but this court, in terms as plain as the English language could make them, declined — as the chancellor,
The above being the situation, the appellee, Driver, brought an action of ejectment against the appellant, New, for the possession of said lands. Thereupon the appellant, New, filed this bill, praying, among other things, that the appellee, Driver, be enjoined from using as muniments of his title in said ejectment suit, two deeds which had been introduced in evidence in said case of Driver et al. v. New, supra, upon the ground that the decree of the chancery court and of this court in that case had established the invalidity of said deeds. While the chancery court and this court may have arrived at the conclusion that said deeds did not establish the possession of the said Driver et al. of the said lands, neither the chancery court nor this court undertook in any way to pass upon the validity of said deeds. In the case of Driver et al. v. New, supra, the question was not who had the right to the possession, but who had the actual possession of the lands, and, of course, the question as to the validity — the sufficiency — of the deeds in question was not before the court and was not passed upon. In the action of ejectment to which the present bill refers the legality of the deeds — -their validity and legal sufficiency — can be put in issue, and the court in which the action of ejectment has been brought has ample power to determine that question. In fact, that court is the proper forum for the determination of that issue.
Let the decree of the court below be affirmed.
Affirmed.