Court Opinion

ID: 3221179
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 15:57:56.621458+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:39:52.935355
License: Public Domain

Omitting mention of items of property, judgment as to which is not now contested, appellee, claiming in the right of her husband, deceased, brought this statutory action of detinue against appellant to recover 100 bushels of corn, 250 bales of hay, one cow and her calf.
Corn and hay: Defendant was the mother of the deceased husband of plaintiff. Deceased, a young man of 26 years, had lived on the land with his mother from birth. The land belonged to his mother. It was shown without dispute that corn and hay — except about 30 bushels of the corn which deceased had raised on another place — was produced by the joint efforts of deceased and his mother, and was stored in her barn. There had been no contract between them in respect of the ownership or division of the crops raised by their joint efforts; deceased had continued to work on the farm in the same general way ever since he was big enough to work. Our judgment is that the hay and so much of the corn as was raised by the joint efforts of deceased and his mother was owned by them — plaintiff in the right of her deceased husband — as tenants in common. The 30 bushels of corn belonged, of course, to plaintiff; but her husband had commingled it with the other corn in the barn — without any fault on any part, so far as appears (38 Cyc. 11, 12) — thus creating a tenancy in common in the mass. Plaintiff is entitled to one-half the hay and her just proportion of the corn, but we are unable to see how her rights can be made effectual by an action for the recovery of specific property. Smith v. Rice, 56 Ala. 417.
Cow and calf: The evidence as to their ownership was in conflict, though the weight of it, perhaps, inclined to the claim of defendant. The testimony of Moore as to the self-serving declaration of ownership *Page 363 
by deceased should have been rejected. Barfield v. Evans,187 Ala. 579, 65 So. 928.
Reversed and remanded.
ANDERSON, C. J., and GARDNER and MILLER, JJ., concur.