69 So. 545 | Ala. | 1915
So far as presently important, Code, § 3386, provides: “Conveyances of personal property to secure debts, or to secure indemnity, are inoperative against creditors and purchasers without notice until recorded. * *5?
In the decision of Dudley v. Abner, 52 Ala. 582, this court construed the above section (then section 1561 of the Code of 1867) in respect of the term “purchaser”: the court saying:
This case was decided in 1875. The statute in question has been thrice re-enacted since the decision in Dudley v. Abner. Its readoption comprehended the construction put upon it by this court in that case. This construction does not, as is apparent, make a condition to one’s being a bona fide purchaser that he shall have paid, or shall have become irrevocably bound to pay, the whole purchase price he agreed to pay before notice of the outstanding claim or lien. The purpose of such statutes is, as said by Jones on Chattel Mortgages, at section 313, “to protect those who have acquired rights under circumstances which would render them liable to be defrauded unless so protected.” This object confirms the correctness of the announcement made in Dudley v. Abner, as before quoted. This conclusion does not conflict with the further rule that the protection accorded such a purchaser is limited, in degree, when the jurisdiction of a proper forum is invoked to ascertain and give effect to the proportionate degree of protection, to the extent he has parted, “with something of value,” incurred “some new obligation,” relinquished “some security,” or has done “some act on the faith of the purchase which cannot be retracted, and which would leave the buyer in a worse position if his purchase should be set aside; a mere agreement by the buyer, which he can avoid in case his title proves defective, being insufficient,” — Cyc. pp. 351, 352.
If the powers of a court of equity are to be invoked to apportion the proportionate protection to which the purchaser is entitled, the plaintiff (appellant) must become the actor. To impose that obligation on the purchaser (appellee) would be equivalent to affirming that he was not a purchaser, in contradiction of the definition of that term, as employed in that statute, long since established by Dudley v. Abner. Neither the decision in Hoyt v. Turner, 84 Ala. 526, 4 South. 658, nor that in First Nat. Bank v. Sproull, 105 Ala. 275, 16 South. 879, are authority in opposition to the ruling here made. In the former case, the defendants not only had not paid or parted with anything of value, but they had not assumed any new, irrevocable obligation in the premises. The statement as to payment of the purchase money, on page 526 of 84 Ala., and page 660 of 4 South., must be read and interpreted in the light of the subject and circumstances inviting the court’s expression. The latter case (105 Ala. 275, 16 South. 879) was an action for money had and received. It was brought by the bank against Sproull. It sought to recover of Sproull “one-half the amount received by the defendant from certain property sold to him, on which the plaintiff had a lien as assignee of a certain mortgage and notes secured thereby.” The property involved mere elements of an already laid railway, viz., rails, spikes, plates, bolts, etc. The railway was originally owned by Laney and Jackson, who in 1890 conveyed to Line and Wilson an undivided one-half (one-fourth
The judgment must therefore be affirmed.
Affirmed.