The cross-bill, or original bill in the nature of a cross-bill, here exhibited, designates no one as a party defendant, and contains no prayer for process. Section 6550 of the Code declares that:
"It shall not be necessary to issue a summons to any defendant in the cross-bill, except those who are not complainants in the original bill."
The heirs at law of W. W. Derrick are necessary parties to the cross-bill, and ought to be served with process, being defendants and not complainants in the original bill. The seventh ground of demurrer to the cross-bill is that it contains "no prayer for parties nor for process." This ground of the demurrer was well taken.
The first ground of the demurrer, setting up a former adjudication of the rights here presented which is not shown by the cross-bill, is a speaking demurrer, and of course not sustainable, a special plea being necessary. The other grounds of demurrer set up a bar by reason of laches, and of the operation of the statute of limitations, as being apparent upon the face of the cross-bill.
The trial court evidently sustained the demurrer on the theory of laches, as explained and applied by this court in the case of Chambless et al. v. Kennamer et al., 214 Ala. 293,107 So. 908, wherein one of these complainants, J. G. Chambless, jointly with several other heirs at law of Nancy Thomas Derrick, filed an original bill against this complainant, as administrator of the estate of W. W. Derrick, and several of his heirs at law, which was in substance the same as the instant bill in allegations and prayers, with a single exception to be presently stated.
In that case it was said (per Gardner, J.):
"The equity of the bill rests upon the doctrine of a resulting trust. Its averments are consistent with the hypothesis that the wife [Nancy] had full knowledge as to the manner of the execution of the deed to the husband and acquiesced therein. On demurrer, in the absence of allegation to the contrary, it must be assumed that such was the case. * * * The death of Nancy Derrick did not operate to stop the running of the statute of limitations or the application of the equitable principle of laches which then 'began to gather strength to the detriment of the equitable title here asserted.' Fowler v. Ala. I. S. Co., supra, 164 Ala. 414,51 So. 393."
It was held that the demurrer, as for laches, was properly sustained.
The vital defect noted in that bill of complaint has been carefully and thoroughly supplied in the averments of the cross-bill here. Under these averments, the wife Nancy did not know, and could not possibly have known or understood, that the land purchased for her with her money had been, by mistake or inadvertence, conveyed by her father's administrators to her husband instead of to herself. And the fact that he withheld the deed from record, coupled with the fact that he was entitled to hold and use the land as his own under his statutory estate in the nature of curtesy, and so held it till his death, fully excuses their ignorance of their right on the part of these cross-complainants, and, of course, their delay in its assertion.
Under the circumstances stated, neither the statute of limitations nor laches became operative against the wife, Nancy. Unless there was a denial of her right to this land by her husband, brought home to her, or unless, knowing of the conveyance to her husband, she acquiesced therein, she was under no compulsion, legal or equitable, to discover the situation and bring an action to enforce her right. Haney v. Legg, 129 Ala. 619, 30 So. 34, 87 Am. St. Rep. 81; Tillison v. Ewing, 91 Ala. 467, 468, 8 So. 404; Gayle v. Pennington,185 Ala. 53, 65, 66, 64 So. 572; 37 Corp. Jur. 908, § 269.
"Courts of equity ordinarily excluded the defense of the statute of limitations from litigations between husband and wife. They also recognize the fact that in ordinary cases the defense of laches in like manner must be excluded. But the authorities hold that the delay of one spouse in bringing his or her action against the other while the status of marriage exists may be fatal under the equitable doctrine of laches. The correct view is that a court of equity must look at all the circumstances of the case without being bound by the hard and fast rule of the statute of limitations imposed upon courts of law, and that the defense based upon undue delay will be sustained or rejected according to purely equitable considerations in view of the equitable doctrine of laches." Givernaud v. Givernaud, 81 N.J. Eq. 66, 77, 85 A. 830, 835. *Page 66
We think the allegations of the cross-bill sufficiently excuse the delay, whether of Nancy Thomas Derrick or of her heirs at law, in the enforcement of the resulting trust herein asserted, and that the demurrer as for limitations or laches should have been overruled.
As noted above, the seventh ground of the demurrer was well taken, and the decree sustaining the demurrer as a whole must be therefore sustained.
The appellants will be allowed a reasonable time for amendment of their cross-bill to meet the objection noted.
Affirmed.
ANDERSON, C. J., and THOMAS and BROWN, JJ., concur.