Court Opinion

ID: 3237955
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 16:12:00.006534+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:40:27.724615
License: Public Domain

[EDITORS' NOTE:  THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 624 
Detinue by Delphie Warren against W.M. Mitchell for a bale of cotton and certain cotton seed. Defendant Mitchell interposed a sworn affidavit denying any claim to the property, and setting up that it was owned and claimed by the Consolidated Mercantile Company. During the progress of the cause Mrs. Delphie Warren died, and the cause was revived in the name of R.L. Warren as administrator. Judgment for plaintiff, and defendant appeals. Affirmed.
Plaintiff claimed under a mortgage given by J.M. Dansey, to Delphie Warren, and that the cotton in controversy was conveyed by the mortgage. The other facts sufficiently appear.
(1) The manifest purpose of section 2803, Code 1907, providing, "No suit must be commenced against an executor or administrator, as such, until six months, and no judgment rendered against him, as such, until twelve months after the grant of letters testamentary or of administration," is to protect the estate and to prevent claims being established against it by judicial proceedings until the personal representative has had ample opportunity to ascertain the condition of the estate and the true status of the claims against it; and suits by the personal representative to recover the assets of the estate are not within the influence of this statute. — Alabama State Bank v. Glass, 82 Ala. 278, 2 So. 641. The defendant's insistence that this statute protected him from being forced to trial until the expiration of 12 months from the grant of letters of administration was without merit.
The plaintiff's theory of the case, as we gather it from the record, was that the cotton in controversy was grown by John Dansey, and that the alleged claim of Grady Dansey was a subterfuge designed to defeat the plaintiff's rights.
The theory of the defendant seems to have been that the debt secured by the mortgage had been paid, and that the plaintiff had no right in the cotton, and, further, that the relation between John Dansey and Grady Dansey was that of tenants in common, and, the relation having been established before the execution of the mortgage by an agreement between John and Grady Dansey, that the mortgage only covered the interest of John Dansey. *Page 625 
(2) These being the issues, any evidence tending to show that the claim of Grady Dansey was not in good faith, or the true relation between the parties, was relevant to the issues and admissible. On this theory the court properly allowed the plaintiff to show that Grady Dansey was under age, that he lived in the same house with his father as a member of the father's family, and such other circumstances having a tendency to support the plaintiff's theory.
(3) The evidence offered by the appellant shows that the agreement between John and Grady Dansey, father and son, was made in December, 1911; that the agreement was that the father rented Grady a crop on the place he had rented from Warren; that the father was to furnish the land, the team, and one-half the fertilizer for the crop, while the son was to furnish the labor, and the time for the cultivation of the crop, the crop to be equally divided between them. This agreement (having been made in 1911, and before the amendment of Code 1907, § 4743, by Acts 1915, p. 112) fixed the relation between the parties as that of tenants in common in the crop. — Hendricks v.Clemmons, 147 Ala. 590, 41 So. 306; Haynes Mere. Co. v.Bell, 163 Ala. 326, 50 So. 311.
(4) The plaintiff's mortgage, as some of the evidence tends to show, was not given until April, 1912, after the relation between the Danseys, if that phase of the evidence is to be believed, became fixed, and therefore Grady Dansey's interest in the crop, if the relation of tenants in common existed between the Danseys, was superior to that of the mortgagee. — Hairslip v. Brannum, 73 So. 464; Kilgore v. Jones, infra,73 So. 832; Mayer v. Taylor, 69 Ala. 403, 44 Am. Rep. 522.
(5) The only theory on which the evidence of payment of the mortgage debt could be material is that the mortgage vested in the mortgagee the title to the cotton in controversy, and if the suit was against the mortgagor instead of his vendee, if defendant was a vendee of the mortgagor — and this was for the jury — the mortgagor would, beyond question, be incompetent to testify that he paid the mortgage debt to the deceased mortgagee. This being true, he cannot, by assigning his interest in the property, remove his incompetency. — Moore v.Williams, 129 Ala. 329, 29 So. 795; Glover v. Gentry Moore, 104 Ala. 222, 16 So. 38.
(6) The testimony of the plaintiff, Warren, to the effect that Grady Dansey never laid any claim to the crops until "the cotton *Page 626 
began to move" was competent to rebut the testimony offered by the defendant that John Dansey had no interest in the crops raised by Grady Dansey. — Humes v. O'Bryan  Washington,74 Ala. 64.
(7) The bill of exceptions will be construed most strongly against the appellant. — Massey v. Smith, 73 Ala. 173; Dudleyv. Chilton County, 66 Ala. 593; McGehee v. State, 52 Ala. 224. While the mortgage is not set out in the bill of exceptions, it sufficiently appears from the record that it was offered and received in evidence.
The contested questions in the case were properly left to the jury.
Affirmed.