102 Ala. 635 | Ala. | 1893
The bill was filed to vacate a sale of lands made by the sheriff of Mobile county, under executions which were issued from the circuit court of that county, founded on judgments rendered against the appellee . It seeks a cancellation of the conveyance made by the sheriff to the purchaser, and of subsequent conveyances dependent on it, and prays an injunction to prevent alleged trespasses on the lands. The validity of the sale by the sheriff is impeached on the ground of al
Prior to the issue of the executions under which the sales were made, the judgments had been assigned. The assignments were not made in the mode prescribed by the statute; (Code, § 2927) ; and the mandate of the executions was, that the moneys made should be accounted for to the assignee of the judgments. In all other respects the executions corresponded to the judgments. Judgments have the assignable qualities of choses in action, and may be transferred by parol or in writing. If a statutory mode of assignment is provided, it is cumulative, in the absence of express words inhibiting other modes of assignment. — 2 Freeman on Judgments, § 422. The assignment, however made, passes an equity which courts will recognize and protect. It entitles the assignee to sue on the judgment or to issue execution thereon in the name of the assignor, and is beyond his control or interference. — 2 Brick. Dig. 153, §§ 308-17. The statute to which we have referred does not lessen the assignable quality of judgments, nor limit the mode of assignment. It is cumulative, entitling the assignee, if the assignment is made in the mode provided, to sue on the judgment, or to the issue of execution thereon for his use, in the name of the plaintiff whether living or dead. It in this way dispenses with the necessity of revivor in the event of the death of the plaintiff; and, under the operation of section 2595 of the Code, he may make himself the sole party on the record. The error in the mandate of the executions is, at most, a mere irregularity, incapable of injury to the appellee, and because of such irregularity, a court of equity will not interfere to vacate a sale made by the sheriff. — 2 Freeman on Executions, § 310; Ray v. Womble, 56 Ala. 32; Lockett v. Hurt, 57 Ala. 198.
One of the judgments, the one, it is asserted, that was paid prior to the issue of execution thereon, seems to have been assigned'by the attorney of the plaintiff therein. Without special authority, an attorney at law can not assign a judgment he may have obtained for his client. The authority, or a ratification by the client,
The other judgment, rendered in favor of Burgess, prior to the issue of the execution under which the levy and sale were made, had become dormant; more than ten years having elapsed after the test of the last preceding execution. The execution was irregularly issued and was voidable, but it was not void. — 1 Freeman on Executions, § 2830; Sandlin v. Anderson, 76 Ala. 405; Steele v. Tutwiler, 68 Ala. 107. On a proper application, seasonably made, the court of law would have quashed it. — McCall v. Rickarby, 85 Ala. 152. Such an application must have been made with reasonable diligence; unexplained laches would have been fatal to it. — Bank of Genesee v. Spencer, 18 N. Y. 150; Cowan v. Sapp, 74 Ala. 44; Ponder v. Cheeves, 90 Ala. 117.
More than two years elapsed after the issue of the execution and the levy and sale, before the filing of the present bill. Whether the court of law would, at that day, have entertained an application to vacate the sale, because of the irregularity in the issue of the execution, it is not necessary to consider. Conceding that court would have intervened, the jurisdiction was exclusive. The rule is very general, that a court of equity will not interfere to vacate a sale under legal process, on account of irregularity in the issue of process, or in its execution; but, as is properly said, “the application ought to be made to the court issuing the writ, and if made elsewhere ought not to be entertained.” There must be accident, surprise, mistake, or fraud, or some fact or circumstance affecting the sale itself, and not resting on the irregularity of the process, or irregularity in its execution, before a court of equity will take jurisdiction to vacate it. There is not in this case averment or evidence of either of these conditions. — 2 Freeman on Executions, § 310; Ray v. Womble, 56 Ala. 32; Lockett v. Hurt, 57 Ala. 198; Cowan v. Sapp, 74 Ala. 44.
The general law providing for the creation and regulation of railroad corporations, approved December 29, 1868, under which the appellee was incorporated and organized, contains the grant from the State of the franchises and powers it claims to have acquired. It did not confer the power of acquiring lands by proceedings in condemnation, or otherwise than by gift or purchase; and did not limit the estate or interest which could be acquired. The act of March 1, 1871, passed after the creation and organization of the appellee, conferred the power to resort to compulsory proceedings in condemnation for the taking of lands. — Acts, 1870-71, pp. 55-60.
There is no written evidence of the title of the appellee introduced; no other than vague and indefinite parol evidence, which seems to have been received without objection, indicating that parts of the lands were acquired by condemnation, and other parts by gift or purchase, not distinguishing between them. The grant of power to acquire, hold and convey lands for a right-of-way, or other uses, by the law of 1868, is general and extensive. The third section confers power to “acquire and convey at pleasure, all such real and personal estate, as may bo necessary and convenient to carry into effect the objects for which it was created;” and the 15th section provides for the acquisition, bj»' purchase or gift, of any lands in the vicinity of the road, or through which it may pass, so far as may be deemed convenient or necessary to secure the right-of-way, or such as may be granted to aid in the construction of the road, and to hold and convey the same in such manner as the board of directors may prescribe. Acts, 1868, pp. 462 — 466.
It is an incidental power of every corporation, unless restrained by statute, to purchase and alien lands necessary for the exercise of its corporate powers-, and this, “independent of.positive law” conferring such power. Says Oh. Kent: “All corporations have an absolute jus disponendi of lands and chattels, neither limited as to
What was the quantity and quality of the estate the appellee had in the lauds? The power to acquire an estate in fee, by purchase or gift, for a right-of-way, or for other uses, was very broad and general, and, according to the allegations of the bill and the scant evidence introduced, the lands were acquired, certainly in part, by the exercise of this power. If an easement only — the right to construct, maintain and operate a railroad in and upon them — was acquired, it is not possible to ascertain the parts subject to the easement, distinguished from the parts in which a fee was acquired. As the case is presented, the more probable inference is, that the appellee had an estate in fee in the lands, and not a mere easement. If the latter is the nature or character of its estate or interest, entitling it to hold in exemption from levy and sale, the fact should have been shown by certainty of pleading and satisfactory evidence.
As a general rule, the property of all private corporations is as subject to legal process for the satisfaction of debt as is the property of natural persons. An exception obtains, however, when the corporation is created to serve public purposes charged with public duties, and is in the exercise of its franchise and in the performance of its duties, Then, on considerations of public policy, without regard to the nature or quality of the estate or interest of the corporation, according to the weight of authority, such property as is necessary to enable it to discharge its duties to the public, and effectuate the objects of its incorporation, is not subject to execution at law. The only remedy of a judgment creditor is to obtain the appointment of a receiver, and the sequestration of its income or earnings. — 1 Freeman on Executions, §179, and authorities collected in notes; 2 Morawetz Corp., § 1125; Gue v. Tidewater Co. 24 How. 257; Overton Bridge Co. v. Means, 33 Neb. 857; s. c. 29 Am. St. 514, and authorities cited.
The exemption from levy is maintainable, however, only upon the theory that the corporation is created for
In Benedict v. Heinberger, 43 Vt. 231, a railroad com
Tho question we have considered, the right to levy an execution at law, on lands owned and held in fee, as the right-of-way of a railroad corporation, the corporation having become inert and having ceased all user of its franchises and all performance of its public duties, was not considered in East Ala. Railway Co. v. Visscher, 114 U. S. 340. All that was considered and decided in that case was, whether the mere right-of-way of a railroad company, i!a mere easement in the land, to enable it to discharge its'functions of making and maintaining a public highway, the fee of the soil remaining in the grantor,” was the subject of levy and sale under execution at law. The court expressly declared that it was “not necessary to discuss the general question as to the right to levy an execution at law on prop
The assignments of error are numerous, presenting many questions which have been discussed by the respective counsel. The conclusion we have reached renders it unnecessary to consider them in detail. The result is, the decree of the chancellor must be reversed, the injunction dissolved, and the bill dismissed at the' cost of the appellee in this court and in the court of chancery.
Reversed and rendered.