Ballard v. Johns
Ballard v. Johns
Opinion of the Court
Section 3512 of the Code of 1876, being a section of the chapter relating to the partition of property held by joint owners, declares: “No division or allotment can be made under this chapter, where an adverse .claim or title is asserted by any one, or brought to the knowledge of the commissioners, or Judge of Probate.” Under the statute, as construed when this case was before us on a former appeal, the assertion of an adverse claim or possession must be bona fide, and a false or unsupported assertion is not sufficient to oust the jurisdiction of the probate court. It was held that the Probate Court did not err in holding that there had been no sufficient adverse possession by Ballard, who set up a claim to a part of the land. — Ballard v. Johns, 80 Ala. 32.
On the remandment of the cause, the adverse possession s of Ballard was not set up in the answer to the petition as amended, but the adverse claim and possession of Ellen . Johns was duly pleaded. The petition, as amended, seeks the sale for partition of the east half of the north-east quarter of section 17, township 13, range 18, and five acres
The statute in terms denies to the probate court the power and jurisdiction to adjudicate, on a petition for the partition of lands, adverse claims and titles. It is immaterial by whom the adverse claim or title is asserted, so it is brought to the knowledge of the judge of probate. If during the pendency or trial of the petition, it is made known to him that there is a substantial adverse claim asserted by any one, the statute makes it obligatory upon him to decline further jurisdiction of the matter. In order to ascertain whether the assertion is substantial and bona fide, he must necessarily investigate, not the validity of either of the opposing claims or titles, but the grounds on which they are based; and, as was said on the former appeal, “If it is clear that there has been in reality no such adverse possession, as to have’ constituted a disseizen or ouster of the petitioner — destroying the holding together of the joint owners — and that the com! plainant’s title is good, or that the court can entertain, on the facts presented, no serious doubts as to such title, it may proceed to hear the application.” But, when it does not clearly appear that there has been no such adverse possession, or if the court entertains serious doubt as to the title, it can proceed no further.
If there was in fact, a sale of the land in 1848 under a valid order of the Circuit Court as the property of Zephaniah Johns the title to the land passed out of him and was vested in the purchaser. It is true, no order of the court is shown by the record, on which the venditioni exponas was issued; but after the lapse of twenty years, such order may be presumed for the purpose of determining whether there
Eeversed and remanded.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.