60 So. 874 | Ala. | 1913
This was a statutory action in the nature of ejectment. The parties claimed title through a common source, one Watson. Plaintiff (appellant here) claimed through a sheriffs deed, while defendant claimed through a deed from Watson. Plaintiff recovered a judgment against Watson in the law and equity court of Walker county. A certificate of this judgment was issued and recorded in the probate office of Cullman county on April 1, 1908. An execution was issued on the judgment from the Walker county court on the 20th of January, 1908, and was placed in the hands of the sheriff of Walker county on the 19th day of March, 1908, and forwarded to the sheriff of Cullman county, and was levied upon the land in question on the same day on which the certificate was recorded in the probate office; that is, on the .1st day of April, 1908. A sale was had under the execution on June 8, 1908, and deed executed on June 22, 1908, and recorded in Cullman county on the 12th of August, 1908.
The defendant claimed through a deed from Watson, executed the 18th day of April, 1908, subsequent to the filing of the certificate of judgment in Cullman county, and subsequent to the levy, but prior to the execution of the sheriff’s deed. The defendant also offered to show a parol contract of sale prior to the attaching of
We are of the opinion that the trial court erred in this matter, to the prejudice of plaintiff/ If the trial court had admitted all the evidence offered by the defendant, and the jury had believed it, the plaintiff would still have been entitled to the affirmative charge and to a verdict and judgment for the lands sued for. The defendant may have had a prior equitable title; but, if so, it was unavailing in this action of ejectment. This has been decided so often by this court that it would seem to be unnecessary to cite the cases.
It is stated in brief of counsel that the trial court relied upon the case of Milam v. Coley, 144 Ala. 535, 39 South. 511, in support of his action in granting the new trial. We do not think that case supports the ruling, but, as we shall show, that it holds the’ contrary — that an equitable title cannot be looked to in an action of ejectment. If the mortgage had been recorded and assigned to the defendant, so as to have passed the legal title, the rights, of course, would have been different; but the mortgage was not shown, and the defendant did not offer to show that it was recorded and assigned. It
The statutes as to the registration of judgments, and the effect of the liens created thereby, upon the legal title of the property of defendants, were construed by this court in the case of Goodbar v. Blackwell, 170 Ala. 232, 54- South. 532. It was there decided that: “Where a judgment is recorded as provided by section 4156, Code 1907, it operates to impose a lien on all the property-of the defendant, in the judgment in the county where filed (section 4157, Code 1907), and henc.e a purchaser of personal property from the judgment defendant, subsequent to the recordation of such judgment, takes its subject to the lien of such judgment, and cannot prevail against enforcement of same on execution issued on such recorded judgment. There is no conflict between sections 4093 and 4157, Code 1907, as the liens given by the two statutes, are separate and distinct.”
In the case of Street v. Duncan, 117 Ala. 573, 574, 23 South. 523, it is said: “The record of such judgment gives the plaintiff therein the right to enforce the same by an execution issued thereon, at any time within 10 years, just in the same manner and to the same extent as if executions had been regularly issued on the judgment without the lapse of a term, up to that time. The recorded judgment was intended, as we have held, to have the effect of an execution in the hands of the sheriff, ‘as an instrumentality of creating and preserving a lien.’ — Reynolds v. Collier, 103 Ala. 245, 248 [15 South. 603, 604]; Enslen v. Wheeler, 98 Ala. 200 [13 South. 473]; Decatur C. Works v. Moses, 89 Ala. 542 [7 South. 637]. “The lien of an execution,’ says Mr. Freeman, ‘does not transfer title. It does not change the right of property and vest it at once in the plaintiff in execution, nor in the officer charged with the execution of the
By virtue of the statutes as to recording and registration of judgments, plaintiff’s lien attached to the land in question on the 1st day of April, 1908; and, by virtue of the legal fiction, the. sheriff’s deed of June 22, 1908, related back and took effect as of April 1st, when the lien attached. So far as the litigants are concerned, the legal title to this land was in Watson; and, by virtue of the statute and the legal fiction above referred to, this legal title passed to the plaintiff by the sheriff’s deed as if Watson had conveyed to him on the 1st day of April. So, whatever right or title defendant had before this date, it Avas only an equitable one, which is unavailing in an action of ejectment. If the property in question had been personal, the title might have passed by virtue of the parol contract, and by the acts in pais offered to be. proven by the defendant; but this is not and cannot be true under the law of this state as to conveyances of land. If equitable titles could be tested in an action of ejectment in this state, as may be done in some other states, defendant’s proffered evidence
There was never any visible change of possession in this case, which would be binding on the judgment creditors of Watson; the mere fact that his tenant agreed to attorn to the defendant was not sufficient to affect the rights of such creditors. — Paulk v. King, 86 Ala. 332, 6 South. 612; Watt v. Parson, 73 Ala. 202. Although Watson executed the deed to the defendant before the sheriff made the deed, it was after the lien had attached, and of course was subject to this lien; and, by virtue of the statute and the fiction above referred to, the legal title had passed out of Watson on the 1st day of April, 18 days before Watson conveyed to the defendant.
For these reasons, we are of the opinion that the trial court erred in granting the new trial; and that judgment is here set aside and annulled.
Reversed and remanded.