Peters Mineral Land Co. v. Hooper
Peters Mineral Land Co. v. Hooper
Opinion of the Court
The trial court sustained demurrers to the bill, and complainant a.p-peals.
*327
Appellant’s counsel seek to avoid the application of the rule by asserting that in purchasing the land or interest therein from Shackelford and others Hooper was availing himself of knowledge obtained during the period of his agency, as to the nature, extent, and value of the land. As to this, the bill does not aver that any knowledge Hooper so obtained in any sense actuated or resulted in the purchase of the lands, or in any way affected the public sale thereof. It is averred that Shackelford and Brockman were “desirous of purchasing the lands” belonging to *328 Peters at the time of his death, and that Shackelford was the tactual purchaser; and there is a failure of averment that any information or knowledge of Hooper, acquired during the discharge of his duties as agent or the continuance of that relation, resulted in Shackelford’s becoming the'purchaser of the lands at its public sale and obtaining a deed therefor, or that it depreciated such sale. There is a lack of averment in the bill that through any intervention or information of Hooper, as a result of the latter’s knowledge as agent, etc., or by reason of the suppression of facts or of his failure of full disclosure to his principal, the sale to Shackelford resulted. Such are the deficiencies to be found in paragraphs 7 and 8 of the bill containing 'the charge of malfeasance against Hooper, which are held on demurrer insufficient in law.
Observation was made in Henley v. Rucker, supra, of the bill touching one phase of the question that the respondents acquired all property that he got from) the estate through decrees of the chancery court, and seeks to impeateh said decrees by charging, in general terms, a fraudulent collusion with the administrator in the procurement of same, and that general charges of fraud, conclusions of the pleader, cannot be considered sufficient upon demurrer to the bill; and that it was at least questionable If the bill, with the defects cured by proper amendment, “would square to the rule as set out in the decisions of this court.” De Soto Co. v. Hill, 194 Ala. 537, 69 South. 948; Hogan v. Scott, 186 Ala. 310, 65 South. 209; Hardeman v. Donaghey, 170 Ala. 362, 54 South. 172.
Some of the questions now urged by way of attack upon the validity of proceedings in the chancery court were determined in Ruck-er v. T. C. I. & R. Co., supra, where it was held that an attack, in essential contentions as made here with reference to the title to lands of same estate, was collateral in nature and could not be sustained.
The decree of January 23, 1S95, after passing the accounts of the administrator, recites in conclusion that the “said Johnston’s resignation be, and the same is hereby, accepted, and the said Johnston be, and he is hereby discharged from the said trust and from any further liability to account for his acts in respect to said administration.”
In one of the several litigations that have been prosecuted on this decree or involving this actioni in the probate and chancery courts (Henley v. Johnston, 134 Ala. 646, 650, 32 South. 1009, 1010, 92 Am. St. Rep. 48) —the matter of the instant petition for letters of administration de bonis non—it is recited:
“It is shown that the petitioner had been former administrator and had performed the duties of said administration, his final accounts •being audited, stated and approved on about the 12th day of February, 1894, and that there are assets belonging to said estate unadministered, that the estate is insolvent and that the debts have never been paid in full.”
Of this the court said:
“It is not shown by the averments i of this petition or otherwise whether the petitioner as former administrator had been discharged by an order from his office as administrator. If he had, the fact that he made a'final settlement and was discharged is entirely consistent with the presumption that he did so after resigning or his removal for cause from office. If he was not discharged by an order, then the order appointing him administrator de bonis non and his act of qualifying as such amounted to a relinquishment or resignation of his former letters. Turner v. Wilkins, 56 Ala. 173. So, then, in either aspect, the grant of letters is not void; and as administrator de bonis non he is the proper person to make application for the sale of the lands of the decedent to pay the debts of the estate.”
“In actions seeking relief on the ground of fraud where the statute has created a bar, the cause of action must not be considered as having accrued until the discovery by the aggrieved party of the facts constituting the fraud, after which he must have one year within which to prosecute his suit.”
One of tbe amendments avers generally that neither the complainant nor any of the preceding grantors in the complainant’s chain of title “had knowledge or notice of the contract of John DeB. Hooper with W. O. Shackelford and J. K. Brockman, * * * anci knew no facts which would put him on inquiry thereof at the time he conveyed his interest therein as herein stated.” This is insufficient. It was not the contract itself that constituted a fraud of complainant’s rights (if such was committed), but the fact that Hooper, while the agent of the administrator, became interested in his in *329 dividual capacity in the lands and their purchase with Shackelford and Brockman. The bill does not allege that the complainant or some of its predecessors did not know of the fact of Hooper’s interest in the lands before the bill was filed and within the bar of the foregoing statute. In Rucker v. T. G. I. & R. Co., 170 Ala. 456, 58 South. 465, it appeared that Hooper had been interested in the purchase of these lands (as well as other lands) in which the estate of Thomas Peters was interested,. In view of the litigation over the estate of Thomas Peters that has reached this court (Rucker v. T. C. I. & R. Co., supra; Henley v. Johnston, 134 Ala. 646, 32 South. 1009, 92 Am. St. Rep. 48), it could have hardly been'averred that Thomas P. Henley, a stockholder in appellant’s corporation, and litigant in this court and courts below over the Peters estate, was devoid of notice or knowledge of the interest of Hooper in the lands, of which interest it is sought to be made the basis of the instant bill. It is true these two cases did not disclose that Hooper had at any time acquired an interest in the land from Shackelford, yet the first of the litigations showed that Rucker and Henley were put upon notice of the exact status of the title to the lands, and the presumption was that they followed' all sources of knowledge or notice to -the end of a full understanding thereof. The complainant company did not receive a deed to the lands until 1920, or thereabouts, although the agreement in question between Hooper, Shackelford, and Brockman was placed on record in Walker county in the year 1913, where a large proportion of the lands was situated; and during the period that Rucker was engaged in litigation with ■the Tennessee Coal, Iron & Railroad Company, as to the Peters lands. It is not to be supposed that he, as one of the complainant’s predecessors in title, was not aware of the existence of the interests of Hooper, Brockman, and Shackelford in the lands. Moreover, appellant is claiming title by mesne conveyances from and through Rucker and Neely, the two men who were named as trustees in the will of Thomas Peters, and the heirs of Neely are averred in the bill itself to be stockholders in the appellant company.
“It appears from the evidence that plaintiffs were not informed of the issuance of a patent to the lands until March, 1887, about six months before the commencement of the suit. The patent was issued June 1, 1845, to William S. Tillison, one of the plaintiffs, and his brother, Frank M. Tillison, who died December 29, 1845, the plaintiffs deriving title to his interest as his heirs. The fact constituting the fraud is alleged to consist in the fraudulent concealment of the patent by Hollingsworth, of which it is claimed defendant had knowledge, and in which he participated or connived.
“Section 2630 being a statutory affirmation and application to legal remedies of the rule which previously prevailed in equity, where fraud had been concealed by a party against whom a cause of action existed, with the mere modification that the suit shall be prosecuted within a specified and limited time after discovery of the facts constituting the fraud, a proper construction of the statute requires that the character of the fraud sufficient in such eases shall be determined on the same principles applicable and established under the rule in equity. Accordingly, in Underhill v. Mo. Life Ins. Co., 67 Ala. 45, it is said: ‘Ignorance of right, there being no more than mere passiveness’, mere silence, on the part of his adversary, cannot be ingrafted as an exception on the statute of limitations, without a destruction of its wise policy, and without an encouragement of mere negligence.’. The ignorance must be superinduced by the fraud of defendant. In the absence of a fiduciary relation between the parties, imposing the moral and legal duty to disclose, there must be some act or conduct calculated to mislead, or deceive, or to lull inquiry. Porter v. Smith, 65 Ala. 169; Holt v. Wilson, 75 Ala. 58.” Duncan v. Watson, 198 Ala. 180, 73 South. 448; Corona Coal & Iron Co. v. Amerson, 201 Ala. 3, 75 South. 289; Veitch v. Woodward Iron Co., supra; Sims v. Riggins) 201 Ala. 99, 77 South. 393.
“Laches will not be imputed, until after discovery of their rights. But mere ignorance of right, without excusing or explaining, its reasonable continuance, is insufficient. ‘Ignorance of right in the party complaining, there being no more than passivenoss, mere silence on the part of his adversary, cannot be ingrafted as an exception on the statute of limitations, without a destruction of its wise policy, and without an encouragement of a mere negligence.’ Underhill v. Mo. Fire Dept., 67 Ala. 45; James v. James, supra. When the case stated is prima facie within the bar of the statute, or offensive to the rule against the enforcement of stale demands, the complainant must positively'and distinctly aver the facts and circumstances which constitute an exception to the statute, or which excuse or explain the long acquiescence and delay. Phillippi v. Phillippi, 61 Ala. 41.” _
“The statute of limitations may be set up in equity by demurrer where the bill shows that the cause of action stated in the bill is prima facie within the bar of limitations or offensive to the rules which courts of equity adopt for the discouragement of stale demands.” Henley v. Rucker (Ala. Sup.) 93 South. 879 ; 3 Veitch v. Woodward Iron Co., supra; Van Ingin v. Duffin, supra; Lovelace v. Hutchinson, 106 Ala. 417, 17 South. 623.
We may observe that it is not averred that complainant or its predecessors in title ever paid taxes or actively asserted any right or interest in the lands prior to filing the bill. We are of opinion that the demurrer was properly sustained.
The decree is affirmed.
Affirmed.
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Reference
- Full Case Name
- PETERS MINERAL LAND CO. v. HOOPER Et Al.
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