Court Opinion

ID: 3254176
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 16:24:19.877696+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:52:46.503254
License: Public Domain

A statement of the bill in this cause may be found in the report of the former appeal. 208 Ala. 324, 94 So. 606. On that appeal this court held that the bill filed by the present appellee was defective, and the decree of the trial court sustaining the present appellants' demurrer was affirmed. On the return of the cause to the circuit court appellee amended paragraph 8 of its bill with a view to the correction of the deficiencies this court had found. Appellants' demurrer was overruled, and this appeal followed in due time.
As will be observed on reference to the former opinion, appellants Hooper and his associates, Shackelford and Brockman, acquired what title they have in the lands in controversy by and through an administrator's sale, and its confirmation by a decree of the chancery court, to which the administration of the estate of Thomas Peters, deceased, had been removed in due course. The bill in its then shape was construed as averring that Hooper assumed by his contract with the administrator no obligation except to "look up" lands that belonged to Peters at the time of his death, and report to him the results of his investigation, and that this relation of principal and agent between the administrator and Hooper "did not preclude Hooper from thereafter acquiring an interest in the lands of that estate at administrator's public sale in the absence of averment that Hooper fraudulently concealed from his principal any material fact as to same, or that he did not fully and faithfully discharge his duties in that behalf in relation to the subject and object of the employment, and according to the terms thereof." And it was noted that there was 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 [who bought for the joint account of himself, Hooper, and Brockman] resulted." It was ruled that mere general averments of fraud, though in the presence of these facts, did not suffice to give the bill equity.
As amended on its return to the circuit court the bill avers — to state its substance as briefly as may be — that Hooper entered into an agreement with the administrator to look up lands belonging to the estate of Peters which had escaped administration, to investigate the title to such lands, the value of the interest therein owned by Peters, report the facts to the administrator, and assist him *Page 348 
"in and about all matters pertaining to the sale and disposition of said property to the best advantage possible," for which services Hooper was to be compensated by the payment to him of one-fourth of the proceeds of said lands when sold; that Hooper then entered into an agreement with Shackelford and Brockman whereby the three were to look up lands of the estate and secretly agreed that, after they had investigated titles to the lands described in the bill, and found the same to be "reasonably good," and of value in excess of $30,000, Shackelford would buy the same at the administrator's sale for $400 for their joint account, and it is averred that Hooper falsely and fraudulently reported to the administrator that the title to said lands was not good, that the lands had but little value, and that Peters had "some kind of claim of title thereto"; that Hooper was related to the administrator, had great influence with him, so that he did not investigate the title to said land or the value thereof, but trusted Hooper's representations, and, after the bid of $400 had been accepted by the administrator, Hooper represented to him that $400 was the reasonable value of the lands, and induced administrator to report said sale and ask for the confirmation thereof, and assisted administrator to procure evidence to support the administrator's acts in the premises, and thereupon said sale — a private sale, it is averred — was confirmed; that in these matters Hooper acted in bad faith with the administrator, and not disclose to him the contract with Shackelford and Brockman, or the facts with reference to the title and value of the land, nor did he have knowledge thereof; that, November 25, 1903, Shackelford executed a deed of trust showing that he held the lands in dispute for the use and benefit of himself, Hooper, and Brockman, which deed of trust, of which the administrator knew nothing, was "secretly withheld from record" until January 4, 1913.
Appellants suggest that "no judgment can be collaterally impeached for fraud by any party to the judgment or any party in privity with one who was a party to the proceeding in which the judgment was rendered," citing Freeman on Judgments, §§ 334, 335. But at that point the author was speaking of the circumstances in which judgments may be "wholly or partly avoided when offered in evidence in an action or proceeding at law." In sections 484a to 516 the author states the principles on which relief may be had in equity against judgments and decrees. It there appears that relief will be granted against a judgment or decree if the party complaining was prevented from availing himself of a defense by fraud or accident or the act of the opposite party, unmixed with negligence or fraud on his part. In Watts v. Frazer, 80 Ala. 186, this court said:
"Fraud as to transactions antecedent to the judgment, such as would have constituted a good defense to the rendition of the judgment, but not connected with the proceedings by which itwas obtained [Italics supplied], is deemed insufficient to justify relief under the head of this equitable ground of jurisdiction."
This subject received great consideration in De Sota Coal Mining Co. v. Hill, 194 Ala. 537, 69 So. 948, and we would be excused from further statement at this time. However, we repeat statements of the law which were there quoted: The ground for the exercise of this jurisdiction is that there has been no fair adversary trial. It is only fraud in the management of the action or proceeding, and by which the complainant was prevented from properly presenting and establishing his cause of action or defense, which may be a ground for relief in equity. In order that fraudulent concealment shall be ground for any equitable relief, there must be a duty to disclose. The court here is of opinion that the relation between the administrator, with whom, for the purpose in hand, we assume that complainant, or its predecessor in title and interest, was in privity, and defendant Hooper was one of quasi trusteeship (Waller v. Jones, 107 Ala. 341,18 So. 277; Phillipps v. Birmingham Industrial Co., 161 Ala. 509,50 So. 77, 135 Am. St. Rep. 156; Glennon v. Touart,209 Ala. 437, 96 So. 336), and that Hooper was in duty bound (indeed, his contract, as alleged, bound him specifically) to report truly to his principal the information he had acquired concerning the titles and value of the land in controversy, and that he was also bound to disclose his interest in the purchase by Shackelford, and that his concealment of the facts, along with what else is averred, amounted to fraud in the concoction of the decree confirming the sale — amounted to fraud by means of which the decree was procured to be rendered — and hence, being proved as alleged, will suffice to impeach the decree. Watts v. Frazer, supra.
The remaining point argued in the brief is that the averments of the amended bill do not avoid the defense of laches and limitations. It is averred in both the original and amended bills that complainant is in peaceable possession of, and owns, the lands in controversy. The real purpose of the bill is to remove the cloud cast upon complainant's title by the proceeding and decree of sale in the chancery court. Rea v. Longstreet, 54 Ala. 291; Burt v. Cassety, 12 Ala. 734; 5 Pom. Eq. Jur. (4th Ed.) § 2149.
"It is settled in this state beyond further dispute that to maintain a bill to remove or prevent a cloud on title the complainant must be in the actual possession of the lands, and the bill, to be sufficient, must aver that fact." Thorington v. City Council, 82 Ala. 595, 2 So. 513; Tarwater v. Going,140 Ala. 273, 37 So. 330. *Page 349 
We take the averment of the bill to intend that complainant is in actual possession. No suggestion to the contrary is made. Such being the case, complainant and those under whom it claims were at liberty to wait until their right and title was attacked without being chargeable with laches or affected by the statute of limitations, which latter, by lapse of time, converts such possession into evidence of title. Fowler v. Alabama Iron  Steel Co., 164 Ala. 414, 51 So. 393; Laird v. Columbia Loan  Investment Co., 204 Ala. 247, 85 So. 521; Ruckman v. Cory, 129 U.S. 390, 9 Sup. Ct. 316, 32 L.Ed. 728; 4 Pom. Eq. Jur. (4th Ed.) § 1454.
It results that, as for any objection now urged against the bill, the trial court properly overruled defendants' demurrer.
Affirmed.
ANDERSON, C. J., and GARDNER and MILLER, JJ., concur.
                              On Rehearing.