May v. Chiles
May v. Chiles
Opinion of the Court
An examination of the statement of the case will disclose that the sole contest in this cause arises over the claim of title asserted by respondent Mary E. May, appellant here, to a portion of the land involved in the suit. It is without dispute that in 1893 the respondent M. H. May 'executed a deed to his wife, Mary E. May, conveying the property to which she asserts ownership, and that said conveyance contained covenants of warranty as to the title, and that at the time of the execution the grantor did not have the title to the same, but was in possession of the lands, and in subsequent years secured warranty deeds thereto.
Some of the argument of counsel for appellee is devoted to a consideration of the question as to whether or not the instrument of October, 1893, executed to the said Mary E. May by M. H. May, is a will or a deed; but we are of the opinion that .it so clearly appears that this instrument is a deed that this question requires no specific treatment. The original complainant was a simple contract creditor, the said M. H. May becoming indebted to him upon an open account which began in 1894.
We cannot read the testimony of the original complainant and be persuaded that in the extension of credit to the said M. I-I. May he rested reliance upon the apparent ownership of the land here involved. Speaking to this question, the said Chiles testified:
“I never took a mortgage on any land from the defendant M. H. May. I have trusted him on his face. I sold him the goods for which he became indebted to me, and which indebtedness is the basis of the judgment which I recovered against him, on which was issued the execution levied on the lands described in the bill, on his face.”
The witness further testified that he had no occasion to investigate or ascertain whether the property belonged to Mr. or Mrs. May. As to whether or not, therefore, the principle of equitable estoppel, insisted upon by counsel for appellee (aside from the question just discussed), would have application under the facts as found in this record, need not be here determined, in view of the conclusion which we have reached that the original complainant did not extend credit to the husband upon his apparent ownership of the property here involved.
We do not therefore find any principle of law, under the findings of fact above indicated, which would, in our opinion, justify an annulment of the title acquired by respondent Mary E. May under her warranty deed.
The conclusion which we have reached is not in harmony with that of the court below, and the decree of the trial court will therefore he reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings in accordance with the views here expressed.
Reversed and remanded.
201 Ala. App. 451.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- MAY Et Al. v. CHILES
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