Smith v. Collier
Smith v. Collier
Opinion of the Court
This is a suit by J. H. Collier and others 'as trustee's of the Carolina Methodist Episcopal Church South against John A. Smith, Sr., and others; the several counts of the complaint claiming damages for willfully and knowingly, without their consent, cutting 40 trees or saplings on land owned by plaintiffs, for damages for cutting trees on their land, for damages for trespassing on the land and removing trees therefrom, and for converting the trees.
The jury returned a verdict in favor of plaintiffs, assessed their damages at $1, and the court rendered judgment thereon in favor of plaintiffs and against defendants for $1 damages, and $1 of the cost, and taxed' the balance of the court cost against plaintiffs. From this judgment the defendant John A. Smith, Sr., alone prosecuted this appeal.
This is the second appeal in this case. Smith v. Collier, 207 Ala. 635, 93 South. 648.
“That this property [the church property in •question] first came from Mr. Smith; that they first got possession of it from Mr. Smith’s father from an old deed; that the church has claimed possession for the past 45 years, and that it claimed its possession from the Smiths— first from Mr. Smith’s father, old man Alex Smith.”
This evidence on motion of plaintiff was excluded by the court on the ground the witness stated this was information received by him; he did not know of the deed of his own personal knowledge. In this the court erred; it was germane to the issue. He was a trustee of the church, party plaintiff to the suit as trustee. He was 67 years old, had known this property ever since he ■could recollect, having always lived within five miles of it. The evidence tended to show plaintiff and its officials had. notice of the deed, who made it, how they got possession of the property, and that it came through the deed from Alex Smith, that plaintiff was claiming possession under the deed, and that plaintiff was not claiming adversely to Smith. Witness further testified “that he never saw the old deed of Alex Smith to the church property until he saw it in court on the former trial of this cause.”' William Grier, witness for defendants, testified that he was a grandson of one Mc-Nealy, who was a local preacher of the Carolina Methodist Episcopal Church, a member of that church, and that he found this old deed of Alex Smith to the Methodist Episcopal Church dated April 9, 1857, in his grandfather’s papers; McNealy having died in 1886 or 1887. There was evidence that Mc-Nealy was a trustee of this church and also pastor of it, and that Alex Smith delivered the deed to him, which was duly recorded in 1857.
The old deed was dated April 9, 1857, and was filed and recorded in Book of Deeds lettered J, on page 106, on April 21, 1857, by A. A. McMillan, as judge. It was found in the papers of McNealy after his death in 1886 or 1887, by his grandson William Grier. When these trees were cut and when this suit commenced, the deed was in ihe possession of William Grier, the grandson o£ said McNealy. The evidence was clear that Alex Smith signed the deed; the signature being in his handwriting. Alex Smith died in 1871. He was a Presbyterian, and one of the elders of the Presbyterian Church located on this property, which church building burned prior to 1857. Alex Smith, his wife, and some of his children are buried in the cemetery near the church building. He has seven children still living, of whom the defendant John A. Smith is one. The deed was introduced in evidence, and, according to the record, is as follows:
“The State of Alabama, Coosa County.
“This is to certify that I, Alex Smith, do give the Methodist Episcopal Church the privilege to build a church on my land at the old Carolina Church formerly occupied by the Presbyterians, to have and to hold said church so long as they, said church, continue to use it as a church for said order, reserving the right to the Presbyterians to preach in said church. When they quit using said church as a Methodist Episcopal Church the said church reverts back to Alex Smith. Alex Smith.”
“Witness: P. Murphy.
“Alex Smith to M. E. Church.
“Received in office for record, April 21, 1857. A. A. McMillan, Judge.
“Recorded in Book of Deeds lettered J, on page 106, April 21, 1857.”
This instrument was construed by this court on former appeal (Smith v. Collier, *26 207 Ala. 635, 93 South. 648), and needs no repetition here.
It is clear and undisputed that the possession of the church of this land by plaintiffs was obtained from Alex Smith and held by them under that deed.
The defendants cut or caused to be cut about 25 pine trees from the 5-acre tract on which the church is located, had the trees manufactured into lumber, and the lumber sold under direction of defendant John A. Smith, one of the heirs of Alex Smith, deceased.
This court in Folmar v. Beall, 204 Ala. 302, 85 South. 543, wrote:
“Where the original possession by' the holder of land is in privity with the title of the rightful owner, in order to enable such holder to avail himself of the statute of limitations, nothing short of an open and explicit disavowal and disclaimer of holding under that title, and assertion of title in himself brought home to the other party, will satisfy the law.”
The cemetery near' the church on this 5-acre tract, was not disturbed; no trees were cut in or removed from it. The remains of the grantor, Alex Smith, his family, many members of the grantee, the church; and others rest therein; Presbyterians and Methodists being buried there. The titles to the graves where such bodies rest are not involved in this suit.
The defendants requested the court to give the jury in their favor the general affirmative charge, with hypothesis, which was in writing. The court committed error in its refusal, as it should have been given.
There are many other errors assigned and insisted on by appellant. Some of them probably are errors, reversible errors,, but this we ,need not decide. What we have written on this and the former appeal should be sufficient to guide the court on another trial.
Reversed and remanded.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- SMITH Et Al. v. COLLIER Et Al.
- Cited By
- 13 cases
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- Published