70 So. 254 | Ala. | 1915
This bill was filed by appellants for a partition, or, in the alternative, for a sale for division of a tract of land in Cherokee county. Appellants claim that the land was the property of Sarah Tumlin, their grandmother, and that an undivided interest descended to them through their father. Appellees claim to own the entire fee under the will of their father, Thomas Tumlin, whose wife, Sarah Tumlin was. The will disposed of testator’s estate by a general devise to these appellees, his daughters. It excluded these appellants, who are the chil
In 1872, A. R. Wright, the then undisputed owner of this land, entered into an agreement for its sale to Thomas Tumlin and Reynolds Cantrell. Wright took notes for the entire purchase money, executing and delivering to the purchasers a bond for title. In 1876 Cantrell conveyed his interest to Tumlin. On March 15, 1881, Tumlin, to secure an account made and to be made with Ford, Glover & Hight, of Rome, Ga., executed and delivered to them a written transfer of his bond for title. At the same time Ford, Glover & Hight agreed in writing that, when such account or other indebtedness of Thomas Tumlin should be settled or paid off, then the bond was to be transferred back to him. On January 9, 1883, Ford, Glover & Hight, on Tumlin’s request, executed and delivered to him a paper writing in words and figures as follows: “On the 16th day of March, 1881, Thomas Tumlin transferred to us a certain bond for title, made by A. R. Wright to said Thos. Tumlin and Reynolds Cantrell, said bond dated on the 16th day of January, 1872. Now, so soon as pecuniary note made by Mrs. Sallie Tumlin to us on this day for the sum of twenty-five hundred and seventy-seven and 60-100 ($2,577.60) dollars to become due November 1, 1888, is paid, and when all accounts hereafter to be contracted by Mrs. Sallie Tumlin with us are paid, then we bind ourselves to reassign the
Afterwards Tumlin remained in possession of the land until February, 1906, when he died. During this period he paid the balance due to Wright, resided upon the property with his family, paying taxes, cultivating the land, receiving the proceeds of the crops grown, and in all respects managing it as his own, and it may be conceded that he intended that the land in suit, as well as other property he owned, should pass under the general devise in-his will. Within a few months after his death Mrs. Tumlin died, and since then appellees have been in possession claiming under his will. In the meantime — that is, in 1893 —the personal representatives of Wright, then deceased, recovered a judgment against Tumlin in the superior court of Floyd county, Ga., for the balance due on the purchase price of the land here in suit. Thereupon a suit was brought in Mrs. Tumlin’s name against said representatives on certain promissory notes made by Wright, payable to Berrys & Co., and assigned to Mrs. Tumlin. Wright’s representatives then filed a petition in the Georgia court against the Tumlins, representing that the Berrys & Co. notes had been credited on the purchase-money indebtedness, and praying an injunction against the further prosecution of Mrs. Tumlin’s suit. Answering the petition for an injunction in behalf of himself and wife, Tumlin set forth the history of his purchase from Wright, and averred that: “On the 15th day of March, 1881, said Thomas Tumlin transferred said bond to the firm of Ford, Glover & Hight, and on the 5th day of March, 1887, said Ford, Glover & Hight transferred said bond to the defendant Sarah Tumlin.”
To the answer was attached an exhibit'in the following language: “Rome, Ga., Mch. 5, 1887. We transfer the bond made by Augustus R. Wright to Thomas Tumlin, dated 16th day of January, 1872, to a tract of land in Cherokee county, Ala., to Mrs. Sarah Tumlin, for value received, without any recourse on us in any way whatever. This March 5, 1887. Ford, Glover & Hight.”
It appears from the transcript of the record that on March 4, 1887, one day before the transfer by Ford, Glover & Hight to Mrs. Tumlin, the firm executed the. following paper writing: “The transfer of the bond made by Judge A. R. Wright to Thomas Tumlin and Reynolds Cantrell on January 16, 1872, is canceled. Said transfer made the 15th March, 1881. All indebtedness of said Tumlin as principal and agent having been settled.”
Before that, on January 9, 1883, Ford, Glover & Hight, already having what title to the bond and the land Tumlin’s written transfer of the bond could vest in them, had given to him the agreement in writing which has been set out above, whereby they agreed that the bond for title, upon the payment of the obligation then assumed by Mrs. Tumlin, should be transferred to her. This was a contract for the benefit of Mrs. Tumlin, the consideration for which, as the contract shows, moved from her to Ford, Glover & Hight and to Tumlin as well. The contiguity in time of those two papers and the obligations of the parties would indicate that Ford, Glover & Hight’s cancellation of the transfer to Mrs. Tumlin were executed as parts of one transaction, the intention of which was to give Tumlin a receipt in full against the previous separate indebtednesses of himself and his wife, and transfer the bond to her, to whom in equity and good conscience it already belonged. But, whatever the real in
In order that a decree may be entered and executed in accordance with these views, the decree appealed from will be reversed, and the cause remanded to the chancery court for such further orders and decrees as may be necessary.
Reversed and remanded.