122 Ala. 630 | Ala. | 1898
— Upon the trial in the circuit court the plaintiff claimed the land in suit through a mortgage to him made by the defendant W. J. Wilson on April 27th, 1894, and afterwards foreclosed under the power it contained. To show the mortgagor had title when he conveyed he introduced evidence of the mortgagor’s possession at that time and also a deed to the mortgagor from James and Nancy Hill dated July 31st, 1874. The defendants sought to claim through and defend under deed from James and Nancy Hill who were the common source of title to their daughter Grace E. Wilson, the deceased wife of W. J. Wilson and the mother of the other defendants. The deed purports to have been executed and duly acknowledged on the 5th day of March, 1874, and was filed for record April 5th, 1874, and it was, therefore, prima facie self-proving. The original deed is sent here for inspection, and upon ex-
The defendants contend that either the grant is to Mrs. Wilson and her children jointly, or if not so, then the terms of the conveyance are such as would at common law have brought the grant within the influence of the rule in Shelley’s case, and that by the statute abolishing that rule the whole estate vested in .the children at their mother’s death.
The.granting clause of the deed is as follows: “We do grant, bargain, sell and convey to the said Grace E. Wilson of the 1st part and to the heirs of her body after her death, the following described real estate, to-wit.” Next following the description is the habendvm clause, “to have and to hold to the said Grace E. Wilson of the first part and to the heirs of her body after her death.”
The words “heirs of the body” by a long course of legal interpretation acquired a settled meaning whereby they impute to the grantor the intention to create an estate of inheritance restricted in the course of descent to the lineal heirs of the ancestor named. — May v.
The remaining consideration is whether- the operation of the deed is controlled by section 1021 or by section 1025 of the Code of 1896. Section 1021 is the older enactment, dating from 1812; and until the passage of the later statute, affecting conveyances by their terms falling within the rule in Shelley’s case, it had effect to convert into absolute fees all estates in fee-tail. The statute now section 1025 first appeared as section 1304 of the Code of 1852. The later statute operates as imported by its title to abolish the rule in Shelley’s case, the abolition being not in express terms, but by altering the effect of conveyances falling within that rule so that estates granted by them should vest by purchase in the persons, who on the termination of the life estate, answer the description of the descendants named in the conveyance. It is not retroactive and has no application to conveyances made before its enactment. A test by which to determine whether a grant made since this statute has been in force is of the class mentioned and controlled by it is, whether in the absence of the statute it would have fallen within the rule which the statute abolished. Where the grant is such as to import merely an estate tail in the first taker, as “to A and the heirs of his body,” the rule had no application. — Mason v.
The decisions in Holt v. Pickett, 111 Ala. 362, Campbell v. Noble, 110 Ala. 383, and McQueen v. Logan, 80 Ala. 304, also relied on by appellee, were each'based upon instruments antedating the Code of 1852, and that fact is referred to in the opinions. The cases of May v. Richie, 65 Ala. 602, Campbell v. Noble, supra, and Wikle v. McGraw, 91 Ala. 631, were determined upon the consideration that the class of persons named in the grants took as purchasers by force of the terms employed in the grants. In the last named case the date of the conveyance does not appear from the report. To bring a conveyance within the class which was governed by the rule in Shelley’s case, and within the class mentioned in section 1025, a life estate and a remainder must be imported by the terms of the grant. It is not necessary, however, that such interests be expressly named. They may sufficiently appear by implication as the legal result of the terms employed.
In Mason v. Pate’s Extr., supra, this court had under consideration a will containing this clause: “I will and desire that the property which my daughter obtains from this my will at her death to descend to her bodily heirs;” and in determining whether the grant would have been within the rule in Shelley’s case it was said : “An examination of the authorities will show, that no particular or technical import was attached to the Avords remainder, after his or her death, &c.; or to the language by which the estate in the first taker was created. The rule Avas applied to all cases, Avhere an estate for life was given to the first taker, and an attempt made, after its termination, without more specific
We think it sufficient to rest the construction of the deed here in question upon the authority of that case which was well considered and has long stood as a rule of property. This grant, being to Mrs. Wilson and to the heirs of her body after her death, naturally imports that her interest is for life and that class named to succeed to the estate are to take an estate tail in remainder. It results from such construction that the deed offered in evidence by defendants took effect under the provision of section 1025 of the Code, and at the death of Grace E. Wilson vested in her children the fee simple title to the land it conveyed, and that W. J. Wilson had no estate by the courtesy therein which could pass by his mortgage. But the exclusion of the deed by the trial court is not a matter of which the appellant W. J. Wilson can complain. It appears from the judgment entry in this case that upon the trial issue was joined upon the plea of not guilty alone. The plea of not guilty appearing of record was not joined in by W. J. Wilson. But whether or not we shall presume that the case was tried upon the plea of not guilty as to him, still he is not in a situation to complain of the exclusion of the deed. Being the mortgagor he is estopped to deny the
There was no severance in the assignments of error, and the established rule in such case is that to be available to reverse a judgment or decree the error must be prejudicial to all who join in the assignment.- — Rudulph v. Brewer, 96 Ala. 189.
As the result of a single action of this character is not conclusive upon the rights of either of the parties, avc have thought best to define those rights as they appear from the record, though finding no error of which appellants can jointly complain, the judgment appealed from must be affirmed. t