87 Ala. 321 | Ala. | 1888
This is a bill by heirs, seeking to set aside and vacate the proceedings of the Probate Court, under which lands belonging to the estate of their ancestor were sold by his personal representative. As amended, the bill is presented in two aspects. In one, it is sought to vacate the order of sale and confirmation, on the ground of fraud in their rendition. In the other, the same result is attempted to be reached, on the ground that the probate proceedings are void on their face. A cause, if proper objection be interposed, can not thus be presented to a court of equity in a double aspect, unless the complainant is entitled to the same relief on each phase of his allegations.
There was a general demurrer to the bill; as amended, on the ground that it disclosed that complainants had an adequate remedy at law. This objection was well taken to only one of the two aspects in which relief was prayed. Under the allegations that the proceedings sought to be vacated were void on their face, it was disclosed that an adequate remedy at law existed. But the complainants had no such remedy under their claim for relief on the ground of fraud. The rule is of general application, that where the bill sets forth two or more claims for relief in equity, and a general demurrer is filed by respondents, it should be overruled, and the relief granted, if any of the grounds upon which relief is sought are of equitable cognizance. —1 Dan. Ch. Pr. & Pl. 550; Dimmock v. Bixby, 20 Pick. 374; Morton v. Grenada Acad., 8 Sm. & M. 773. In Alabama, this principle has been applied to a case very like the present one. A bill was filed to have a deed can-celled as a cloud on title. The allegations disclosed one state of facts on which the remedy was in chancery, and another on which the remedy was at law. There was a demurrer to the whole bill, on the ground that the complainant had an adequate legal remedy. The opinion of this court was, that “the bill contains two distinct independent grounds on which the claim for relief is based; and that, if either ground is sufficient, its force is not impaired by the fact that it is joined cumulatively with another alleged ground, which, of itself, will not maintain the equity of the bill;” and it was accordingly held, that the demurrer was properly overruled.—Shipman v. Furniss, 69 Ala. 563.
"We concur with the chancellor’s finding on the evidence,
We also concur with tbe chancellor, tbat tbe evidence sufficiently shows tbe mala fules of tbe respondent Burt in bis purchase of tbe lands from Tillman. It is in proof tbat be knew tbe lands belonged to tbe estate of Thomas, and so were being sold in a fiduciary capacity by Mrs. Kennedy. He admits tbat tbe uncle of tbe minor heirs, who was also a surety on tbe administration bond, bad told him tbat whoever bought this land would buy a law-suit. He swears that be bad reason to believe tbat Tillman bought tbe land in satisfaction of a mortgage be held on Kennedy and wife, and tbat be knew Tillman bad furnished them supplies, and tbat Kennedy told him tbat tbe land was to be sold to reimburse him, Kennedy, moneys be bad paid out for tbe estate. While it may be tbat no one of these facts would have been sufficient to put him on inquiry, yet all of them combined are adequate to tbat end. Holding him, as all men must be held, to know tbe law, be bad notice tbat a trust estate was being sold to pay tbe individual indebtedness of tbe agent of tbe trustee to bis vendor, and tbat objection was being made to this transaction by a near relative of tbe infant cestuis que trust, and in their bebalf. This should have put him on in
Had the inquiry been prosecuted, the legal presumption is, that the real facts would have been ascertained. Had he gone, for instance, to Mrs. Kennedy, who was the trustee thus converting the trust estate, the law presumes that she would have told him the whole truth, as she seems to have done in this case, and he would have been fully apprised of the infirmity of his vendor’s title; and had he gone to the records of the Probate Oourt, which contained the evidence of one link in the title he was about to buy, he would have found, indeed, that the proceedings were not void on their face; but at the same time, and as a part of the same record, he would have found the most solemn asseverations, on the part of the heirs and the sureties of the administratrix, of fraud and crime in the administration of the trust property. Equity will hold him to a knowledge of all the facts that these inquiries would have disclosed to him; to a knowledge in this case of no more or no less than that the title of his vendor was the issue of fraud and collusion, and was void.
The decree of the chancellor is, therefore, affirmed.