109 Ala. 478 | Ala. | 1895
Only such facts will be stated as are deemed necessary for a proper understanding of the questions raised by the demurrer to the bill. The Mineral Land Company sold and conveyed by deed to Or-man A. Duke a tract of land, and took from him his three promissory notes evidencing the debt due for the purchase money, and a mortgage on the lands to secure their payment. The mortgagee, the Mineral Land Company, sold and conveyed “a one-half undivided interest in the within 'mortgage and the notes described therein,”
Under these circumstances, The Alabama Mineral Land Company filed the present bill, the purpose of which is to obtain partition of the land, a lien declared upon such portion as may be partitioned and allotted to Ehrman and Merritt, and an accounting by them for timber which lias been cut and sold off the premises. The theory upon which the bill is filed is that by the foreclosure of the mortgage upon a half undivided interest in the land, and its purchase by complainant, a co-tenancy was created ; that, by assuming to pay the balance of the mortgage debt to complainant, a vendor’s lien was created in favor of Duke, which enures to the benefit of complainant, and may be enforced for its benefit.
In determining the demurrer we will ascertain and declare the legal and equitable effect of the several transactions we have stated. At the time of the purchase of the land from Duke, Ehrman and Merritt were the owners of a one-half undivided interest of the mortgage and of the debt secured by the mortgage. A mere purchase by a mortgagee, or by the transferee of a mortgagee, of the mortgaged property does not necessarily produce a merger and an extinguishment of the mortgage lien. Under-some circumstances it may be necessary to preserve the mortgage lien as a protection against intervening liens. But the rule is different where there is an assignment of the mortgage to the grantee of- a mortga
Affirmed.