Tanner v. Thomas

SOMERYILLE, J.

The bill in this case is in the nature of a bill quia timet, the purpose of which is to quiet the title of a certain tract of land, the fee of which is alleged to be in the appellant, Tanner, who claims by purchase from one Catharine *234Adams, who derived ber title through the medium of certain, proceedings in the Probate Court of Jefferson county.

These proceedings are set out, as an exhibit to complainant’s bill, in hcec verba. They originated by petition to the court, which seems to have been filed in May, 1866, by Catharine Adams, praying to have a homestead set apart to her as exempt under the provisions of section 1738 of the. Code of 1852, afterwards amended so as to constitute in substance section 2061 of the Revised Code of 1867. The petitioner was averred to be the widow of one Richard Adams, deceased, and the lands were alleged to be under five hundred dollars in value.

These proceedings are full of defects which are utterly fatal to their validity, and render them unquestionably void.

Of these it is only necessary to mention one. There is no description whatever of the lands prayed to be allotted as a homestead anywhere throughout the whole proceedings, either in the original petition' to the Probate Court, or in the report of the three commissioners who were appointed to lay off and set apart the same, or in the final judgment of the court confirming the report.

The court for this reason, to say nothing of others equally fatal, had no ju/risdiction of the case, and.its judgment is a nullity.-Freeman on Judgments, §§ 117, 123, 264; Wilburn v. McCalley, 63 Ala. 436, and cases cited on page 445.

The judgment would also be void for 'uncertainty, owing to the blanh left in it, which was never filled by inserting a description of the lands. There was no method by which these lands could be legally identified, and a judgment or decree of this character can be regarded as possessing no more legal efficacy than so much waste paper.-Freeman on Judgments, §§ 50-52, 54; Spence v. Simmons, 16 Ala. 828; Gayle v. Singleton, 1 Stew. 566.

The demurrer was, without doubt, properly sustained, and there was no error in dismissing the bill of, appellants.

Affirmed.