84 Ala. 305 | Ala. | 1887
A bill to redeem land sold under an execution must allege that possession was delivered to the pur
At the time of the sale by the sheriff, the complainant, who was the defendant in execution, was in possession claiming the entire estate in all the lands, and was living in a house situated on that part of the land, of which only an undivided half interest was levied on and sold. Complainant delivered possession of that part of land, the entire estate in which was sold, and offered to admit the defendant, who was the purchaser, into joint possession of the part of which an undivided half interest was sold; but defendant demanded that complainant should move out of the house, and deliver sole possession of the entire lands. There was a controversy between complainant and defendant as to the title to the half interest not levied on and sold. A purchaser at an execution sale of land, acquires no greater or other interest therein, than is levied on. If the levy is general upon the entire estate all the right and title of the defendant in execution passes to the purchaser by the sale and the sheriff’s deed; but if the levy is upon a partial, or limited and defined interest — an undivided half interest — this is an equivalent of a negation that the entire estate and interest is levied on; and in such case, the purchaser only acquires the undivided half interest. If the complainant had title or estate in the other half interest, he was not divested thereof by the levy, sale and sheriff’s conveyance. — Carrington v. Richardson, 79 Ala. 101.
The defendant as purchaser was only entitled to the possession of the estate or interest which was levied on and sold, which is all he could recover in an action of ejectment. It was not intended by the statute to require the debtor, as a precedent condition to redemption, to deliver possession of any land, or interest in land, not levied on. On a bill by a debtor to redeem, a court of equity will not suffer itself to be made an instrument to try and determine disputed and controverted titles or claims; nor will it require the debtor
Affirmed.