51 Ala. 397 | Ala. | 1874
This action is in the nature of a special action on the case at common law, by a reversioner of personal property, for an injury to the reversion, pending the continuance of the particular or preceding estate. The right to maintain such action is well settled, on principle and authority; the test of its propriety being, whether the injury complained of is permanent, affecting the reversion; or temporary only, affecting tbe tenant of the particular estate. A sale of the absolute interest, by tbe tenant of the particular estate, or by a stranger, instead of the qualified interest, is an injury affecting the reversion, for which the reversioner may maintain this action. Arthur v. Gayle, 38 Ala. 259.
To the action, two special pleas were interposed, which were demurred to; the demurrers were sustained, and the judgment thereon is the matter now assigned as error. The first of these
The remaining special plea avers, that the plaintiff, at the sale of the property by the defendant, purchased it, and accepted possession thereof from the defendant. The matter of this plea certainly forms no defence to this action. The plaintiff may have preferred purchasing the property, rather than permit it to pass into the possession of a stranger, asserting an adverse right to him. Such purchase does not legalize or ratify the wrongful act of defendant in making sale of the property. It may diminish the plaintiff’s right of recovery, to the amount he paid on such unauthorized sale; but it does not absolve the
The circuit court correctly sustained the demurrers to the pleas, and the judgment is affirmed.