Court Opinion

ID: 6515486
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-19 18:26:13.404266+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:55:00.528495
License: Public Domain

COLEMAN, J.
James Bottom, appellee, filed the present bill to enforce a vendor's lien for unpaid purchase money due for land sold to respondent. The bill describes the land sold as being the “S. W. i of N. E. |-and N. W. i of the S. E.‘i and the S. i of the N. E. i of section 29, township 7 range 25, containing one hundred and sixty acres, more or less, situated in the county of Dale,” &c. This description shows a sale of only one hundred acres. Three portions are mentioned, but the last forty acres, to-wit, the 8. £ of N. E. i, includes twenty acres described in the first forty, to-wit, the S. W. i of N. E. i of section 29. No objection seems to have been taken to this omission, and it may be a clerical error in the transcript. The defendant by his answer pleads usury, and also a deficiency in the quantity of land sold and purchased and that conveyed bj? the deed of conveyance with warranty of title. The answer prays for an abatement of the purchase price, both on account of usury and breach of warranty. The deficiency is claimed to consist of five acres, a part of section 29 conveyed, and six acres in section 28, which latter six acres is omitted entirely from the bill of complaint. The answer sets up as a fact that respondent has never been in possession of the eleven acres of land for which an abatement is claimed, and that he has not been able to acquire possession, by reason of the occupation by others, whose names are given, of said, eleven acres of land who aré in possession, and holding, the answer avers, under a title superior to that acquired by the purchase and deed received from complainant. There was no action by the court upon objections to testimony. The objections in many instances were not sufficiently specific and might have been disregarded. Section 1798 of the Code de*393dares when conveyances are self proving, and when a transcript may be admitted in evidence. Copies of conveyances not acknowledged and recorded are not admissible, without the proper predicate, accounting for the absence of the original. After the evidence was closed the court referred to the register to ascertain and report as to whether there was usury in the transaction, and whether there had been a breach of the warranty in the deed of conveyance to respondent. These were questions, under our practice, which should have been decided by the chancellor, and should not have been referred to the register.
Our conclusion from the evidence is, that the transaction was not usurious. It appears that there was a parol agreement for the sale and purchase of the land, at the purchase price of $900 or $950, for cash, and that under this agreement the respondent entered upon the possession. No part of the purchase money was paid. This agreement was void under the statute of frauds. After having been in possession some months the respondent informed the complainant that he could not pay for the land in cash. It was then agreed that respondent might purchase the land, by paying one part in cash, and by executing his two notes for the unpaid purchase money, at one and two years; and the difference in the value of the land, for cash, as was first agreed upon in parol, and when sold on a credit, and which latter agreement was concluded in writing, was fifteen per cent. The complainant executed his warranty deed to respondent, and the respondent executed his two promissory notes. This was not usury. Respondent owed no debt for the forbearance of which fifteen per cent, additional was charged, and the debt thus contracted was not a loan of money. There was a sale of land, the vendor willing to sell for so much at a cash valuation, or for so much on a credit, placing the difference between the cash and credit price at fifteen per cent.
There is some difficulty in arriving at a legal conclusion from the facts of the case upon which an abatement of the purchase money for a deficiency in .the land sold is claimed. The warranty deed of complainant to respondent, describes the land sold as follows : “~W. £ of N. E. £ and N. W. £ of S. E. £ and S. E. £ of N. E. £ of section 29, and a portion of the N, W. £ of N. W. £, and. *394apart of the S. W. i of N. W. £ of section 28, all in township 7, range 25,” &c., without specifying any number of acres. Now, it is clear that as to the lands lying in section 28, the deed is void, for want of definiteness in the description of the land. ITow much off, and in what part of, these quarter-sections lying in 28, was sold or intended to be sold, can not be ascertained — “there is no land mark to enable a surveyor to find the land.” It is not within the influence of the maxim, Id cerium est quod certum reddi — Black v. Tenn. Coal & Iron Co., 93 Ala. 109; 9 So. Rep. 537; Wilkinson v. Roper, 74 Ala. 140; L. & N. R. R. Co. v. Boykin, 76 Ala. 560; Humphries v. Huffman, 33 Ohio St. Rep. 395. The respondent does not seek a cancellation of the deed and return of the purchase money. Plis purpose is to hold on to the land for which he has received a valid deed, and his prayer is for an abatement of the purchase money. There is no possible criterion for ascertaining a proper abatement for the lands lying in section 28. Both parties in law must be held to know that the deed conveyed no part of the land lying in section 28, and the purchaser must be held to have contracted for, and to have executed his notes for, the land properly described, lying in section 29. It would seem that the deed under which the complainant held the land lying in section 28, described his interest in this section precisely as described in the deed by him to respondent. The proof .shows that complainant was never in actual possession of any of the land in section 28, and this fact was also known to the respondent.
There can be no difficulty in regard to the five acres of land lying in section 29. The complainant sold and by deed conveyed one hundred and sixty acres in this section to the respondent, and warranted the title to him. The proof shows that five acres of this land was valuable and belonged to other parties, who were living on it at the time of respondent’s purchase, and that respondent had never acquired possesion of it. So far as we are able to determine from the evidence in the record, the occupants of the five acres, hold by a title superior to that owned by complainant, and which he conveyed to respondent. For the five acres in section 29, the respondent was entitled to an abatement of the purchase ■price. The case will be reversed and remanded, that it may be referred to the register to restate the account, so *395as to allow the respondent an abatement according to the prayer of Ms bill, from the amount due upon Ms note, for the fair and reasonable value of the five acres of land lying in section 29, and which, from the evidence, seems to be the property of Ambrose Pelham.
Reversed and remanded.