50 So. 896 | Ala. | 1909
This is a statutory action of ejectment to recover possession of certain real estate described in the complaint and situate in the city of Mobile. Both parties claim to derive title from the same source — from one Mary Rodrigues. The appellee, plaintiff in the court below, claims title as devisee under the will of said Mary Rodrigues, made in 1879, and admitted to probate in April, 1907, seven years after the death of said Mary, which occurred on August 25, 1900. The appellant, defendant below, claims title under two conveyances purporting to have been made by said Mary Rodrigues, both bearing date, August 23, 1900, and recorded in the office of the probate judge of Mobile county on August '24, 1900, one being made to W. J. Wall for one piece of land, and the other to Margaret Wall for the remaining land sued for, a deed of conveyance by said Margaret Wall and W. J. Wall to Louis Touart, bearing date in March, 1903, and the will of said Louis Touart, duly probated, devising the
¡There is no dispute that the land in.question belonged to Mary Rodrigues on August 23d, the date of the several mentioned deeds. The validity of the two deeds of August 23, introduced in evidence, was a controverted question. These two deeds, as shown upon their face, were executed by the grantor’s making her mark, and were attested by two witnesses, J. M. Henderson and J. G. Thomas, who subscribed their names as such. An acknowledgment of the grantor (in statutory form) before J. M. Henderson as a notary public, with notarial seal affixed, was also attached, of date of the execution of the deeds. The deeds were self-proving under the statute, and hence were introduced in evidence without further proof of their execution. Both of the attesting witnesses, Henderson and Thomas, the former being also the notary public who took the acknowledgment, were dead at the time of the trial. The validity of the deeds was attacked upon the- ground of fraud. The only two witnesses who testified as to the execution of the deeds were the appellee and her husband. They both testified that at the time of the signing of the deeds Mary Rodrigues, the grantor, was lying upon her bed in a state of coma, unconscious and recognizing no one; that J. M. Henderson, the notary public, went to her bedside, and after having read over the deed to her, placed the pen in her hand, and, 'taking her hand in his, made her mark to the deed and then gently laid her hand down. They testified as to who were present-in the room at- the time, and that among those present
On the theory that the testimony of these two witnesses was undisputed by the testimony of any other witness, the trial court, upon request in writing, gave the general affirmative charge in favor of the appellee, the plaintiff, which in effect instructed the jury that the deeds introduced in evidence were invalid, and consequently passed no title, and that for the reason that at the time of their execution the grantor was in a state of coma and not conscious of what was being done. If as a matter of fact the alleged grantor was at the time unconscious, being in a state of coma, then as a matter of law there was no execution by her. Rut whether or not she was in such state or condition was a question for the determination of the jury, not solely upon the testimony of the appellee and her husband, but upon the whole evidence:
Under the rulé laid down in the recent case of Russell v. Hollman, 156 Ala. 432, 47 South. 205, the certificate of the notary public, attached to the deeds, “was entitled to be considered by the jury as evidence of the facts recited therein.” The facts recited in the certificate were unquestionably contradictory of the testimony of the appellee and her husband as to the unconscious state or condition of the grantor in the deeds, and if that case is to be followed there is no escape from the conclusion that the trial court in the present case committed error in instructing the jury affirmatively in favor of the plaintiff.- Moreover, the testimony of the appellee and her husband involved the charge of fraud against the grantee, Margaret Wall, and J. M. Henderson, the certifying officer. In repelí
In this case the will under which the appellee claimed title was not probated until seven years after the death of Mary Rodrigues, the testatrix. Nevertheless the interest devised by the will to the appellee took effect immediately upon the death of the testatrix. This principle is clearly settled by the case of Goodman v. Winter, 64 Ala. 410, 38 Am. Rep. 13. Section 1008 of the Code of 1896, which is the same as section 3385 of our present Code, affords no protection to a purchaser from the life tenant in possession under a will, as against the remainderman, before the expiration of five years of possession by such tenant. Whether a purchaser, as contradistinguished from a creditor, comes within the meaning and protection of the statute, it is not necessary to decide in this case. Here the life tenant had been in possession only three years at the time defendant’s testator, Louis Touart, deceased, under whose will she claims as devisee, purchased from the life tenant. The statute certainly could not apply to him, and he took no greater interest by his purchase than the life tenant possessed.—Sheridan v. Schimpf, 120 Ala. 475, 24 South. 940. Nor is the statute a statute of limitations, where the doctrine of a tacking of possessions to complete a bar would apply.
There is no merit in the contention of an estoppel growing out of the conduct of the plaintiff in accepting a deed from Margaret Wall to a distinct piece of
Por tbe error in giving tbe affirmative charge at the request of plaintiff, the judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.