122 Ala. 297 | Ala. | 1898
— Tlie bill in this case ivas filed by appellant to cancel a deed executed by her to the appellee on the 27 th of June, 1895, as a cloud upon her title to certain lands of which, it is averred, she is in the possession. The chancellor dismissed the bill for want of equity, and it is from this decree that this appeal is prosecuted. The facts averred may be fairly collated, notwithstanding they are not tersely and concisely stated, as follows: That the defendant on May 1, 1895, commenced a criminal prosecution against the husband of complainant for obtaining from him $800 under false pretenses, which was wholly unfounded and fraudulent, and for the purpose of procuring the execution of this deed; that befort and after her husband’s arrest the defendant represented to her that her husband had committed the said offense, and that he Avas liable to be imprisoned therefor in the penitentiary; and that it Avould be necessary for complainant in order to secure his release and avoid his conviction and sentence, to execute the deed which she here seeks to have cancelled; that the charge brought by defendant against her husband Avas false, malicious and “trumped up,” and that defendant knew it to be false, but resorted to it for the purpose of inducing complainant to execute the said deed; and that there Avas no other consideration for said deed.
.These facts must be taken as true on the motion to dismiss the bill for Avánt of equity, and, indeed, every averment of the bill, though defective, but capable of being cured by amendment, must Ik1 so taken and treated. They constitute a fraud upon complainant against which a court of equity will grant relief. It Avould be unconscionable, and would encourage a resort to dishonest artifices and practices to acquire property, to alloAV the defendant to retain the fruits of this transaction, obtained under the circumstances alleged in this bill.
The record contains no opinion of the chancellor, and we are Avitheut data, by whicli we could be informed, as to the considerations that influenced him in reaching the conclusion, that the bill contained no equity. Doubtless the contention Avas insisted upon before him by the defendant, that is here relied upon. It is, that the facts
The contention of appellee that the decree dismissing the bill should be affirmed, because it appears that more than three years have elapsed since the matters complained of arose and the filing of the bill, is untenable. Even if this doctrine had any application to this case, Ave would treat the bill as amended so as to relieve the complainant of the imputation of laches. But, it is distinctly averred that she is in the possession of the lands, and, for aught that appears, has never surrendered the possession to defendant under the deed, or recognized his claim or title to them. Staleness or laches is founded-upon acquiescence in the assertion of adverse rights and unreasonable delay on complainant’s part in not asserting her OAvn to the prejudice of the adverse party. — Pom. Eq. Jur., § 419; 12 Am. & Eng. Encyc. of LaAV, 533; 3 Brick. Dig., 366, § 463.
The decree must he reversed and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.