52 Ala. 597 | Ala. | 1875
A plaintiff in ejectment, claiming under a purchase at sheriff’s sale, must prove that the defendant in the judgment, to whose title he claims to have succeeded, had an interest or estate in the lands, on which the
The appellee, to show a legal title in Walker, the defendant in the judgments, proved that the premises in controversy were for some years in the quiet possession of Seawell and wife, who cultivated and occupied them, and during such occupancy, they were known as “ the Seawell tract of land.” He then offered in evidence the record in the court of' probate of Dallas county (in which county the lands are situate), of a conveyance from Seawell and wife to Walker, made prior to the judgment. This record the parties consented to receive as a certified transcript, and in lieu of such transcript. The appellants objected to the introduction of the deed, but their objection was overruled. In the body of the deed, Seawell and wife only are nominated as grantors, and by them it is signed and sealed, and properly acknowledged. The deed is also signed and sealed by one W. B. Seawell, but for what purpose, or in what capacity, is not disclosed. The execution of the deed is not acknowledged by bim. In support of the objection, the appellants insist the statutes contemplate an acknowledgment by all the grantors, before the deed can be received, without other evidence of , its execution than the certificate of acknowledgment. It is not necessary to inquire what is the relation of W. B. Seawell to this deed. It may be, that bjr signing aiffi sealing, he has adopted it, and rendered all its averments as obligatory on him as if in the body of the deed he had been nominated as a grantor ; or as the warrantor, that the grantors would keep and perform its covenants. However this may be, when the parties nominated in the body of the deed as grantors, and who only by express words grant and convey, properly acknowledge it, then the acknowledgment dispenses with all further evidence of execution by them. R.- C. § 1544. It is their deed operating a conveyance of their estate. Ayres v. McConnell, 2 Scam. 807 ; Bradford v. Dawson, 2 Ala. 203 ; Williams v. Jones, Ib. 314. The plaintiff had given primé facie evidence that the legal title resided in the grantors, who had acknowledged the conveyance. If this primé facie evidence did not disclose the fact, the burden of proving it rested on the appellants.
When the original of a conveyance, which has been properly acknowledged or proved, and recorded, is not in the custody, or under the control of a party compelled to use it as
Lands were not, at common law, subject to execution, or in any manner bound by a judgment. Morris v. Ellis, 3 Ala. 560 ; Erwin v. Dundas, 4 How. (U. S.) 77. The statutes existing prior to the Code, subjected them to the writ of elegit, and to the ordinary writ of fieri facias; and the operation of the statutes was, that the judgment created a lien on the lands from the day of its rendition. Morris v. Ellis, supra. As it was the judgment which operated the lien, it followed that after the death of the defendant therein, lands could not be levied on and sold for its satisfaction. By operation of law, on the death of the defendant, the title to lais lands was cast on his heirs, if he died intestate ; or if he died testate, devolved on his devisees. The judgment and execution would then affect new parties, who were entitled to a day in court, to show cause against charging the lands which had descended to, or devolved upon them. Lucas v. Price, 4 Ala. 679 ; Mansony v. U. S. Bank, Ib. 735; Abercrombie v. Hall, 6 Ala. 657; Burks v. Jones, 13 Ala. 167 ; Fry v. Br. Bank Mobile, 16 Ala. 282; Erwin v. Dundas, supra.
The statute of 1828 (Clay’s Dig. 197, § 27) gave judgment creditors a scire facias against the personal represéntative and heirs of the deceased debtor, to subject land descended to the satisfaction of the judgment, and authorized the award of execution for that purpose.
The Code repealed the statute authorizing the writ of elegit, or rather it was repealed because not reenacted therein. It prescribes the form of a writ of fieri facias, the mandate of which is directed as well against the lands and tenements, as the goods and chattels of the defendant. R. C. § 2837. The fieri facias is declared a lien only within the county in which it is received by the officer, on the lands and personal property of the defendant, subject to levy and sale, from the day it is received by the sheriff, and it continues only so long as the writ is regularly issued without the lapse of a term. R. C. § 2872. The lien of the judgment on lands, under the former statutes, was not confined to the county to which a writ of execution issued, nor to the county in which the judgment was rendered, but was coextensive with the State. Campbell v. Spence, 4 Ala. 543. Nor was the lien of the judgment lost,
Walker, the defendant in the judgments, on the 4th April, 1860, in consideration of natural love and affection, made an instrument in writing purporting to convey the lands to his daughter, Mrs. Spann, under whom the appellants claimed to hold possession. This instrument was not attested, nor was it acknowledged before any officer, authorized to take the acknowledgment of conveyances, until April 28, 1868, after the rendition of the judgments under which the appellee claims to have purchased, and while executions issuing thereon were in the hands of the sheriff of the county in which the lands were situate.
The Code declares conveyances for the alienation of lands must be attested by one, or where the grantor cannot write, by two witnesses. An acknowledgment of execution, before an officer authorized to take it, dispenses with the necessity of attestation. B. C. §§ 1535-6. By the common law, neither attesting witnesses nor an acknowledgment of execution before a public officer was necessary to the validity of a deed. These constituted only evidence of authenticity, which compelled a party relying on the deed to proof of a different character from that he would otherwise be required to produce. Robertson v. Kennedy, 1 Stew. 245; Dillingham v. Brown, 38 Ala. 311. Prior to the Code this rule of the common law obtained here. Robertson v. Kennedy, supra; Wiswall v. Ross, 4 Port. 321. By the ancient common law, a feoffment was the mode by which lands were conveyed. To its validity livery of seizin was indispensable, and the livery implied publicity and the presence of witnesses. The statute of uses introduced the modes of conveyance now prevailing, which of themselves operate a transnmtation of possession as effectually, in legal contemplation, as the livery of seizin at common law. In earlier days but few could write or sign their names, and it was in this time it became the rule of law, that witnesses were not essential to the validity of conveyances. The publicity and notoriety-attending livery of seizin were the only safeguards which could be practically required as a protection against fraudulent and clandestine conveyances. Since the statute of uses, even while the common law rule was prevailing, it was but seldom a conveyance was not executed in the presence of attesting witnesses, or after statutes were passed authorizing an acknowledgment of execution before officers of the law, that it was not acknowledged. ' Common prudence suggests to the parties the importance .and necessity of procuring such evidence of execution.
The Code is something more than a mere compilation and
In the case of French v. French (3 N. Hamp. 234), in which the conveyance was very similar to that made by Walker to his daughter, — a conveyance founded only on the consideration of love and affection, which was not attested by two witnesses as required by the statutes of that State, was declared invalid as a deed. A like decision, founded on a similar statute, was made by the supreme court of Connecticut, in Merwin v. Camp, 3 Conn. 35. A statute of Ohio, passed in 1805, declared that deeds for the conveyance of lands “ shall be signed and sealed by the grantor, in the presence of two witnesses, who shall subscribe the said deed of conveyance, attesting the acknowledgment of the signing and sealing thereof,” &c. A deed attested by one witness only, founded on a valuable consideration, was declared insufficient to pass the legal estate, and inadmissible as evidence of a conveyance, Courcier
It is insisted this acknowledgment must, by relation, be referred to the day of the signing and delivery of the instrument, and that thereby the instrument becomes effectual from that day. “ Relatio est fictio juris” and like all fictions of law, is designed to answer the purposes of justice, not to prejudice the right, or work injustice to any one. They are indulged to preserve and effectuate, not to thwart or subvert legal rights and remedies. However this conveyance may operate as against the grantor and his heirs, by relation, it cannot be permitted to defeat the rights his creditors had acquired. When they obtained judgments, and regularly issued executions, they acquired liens, which the defendant in execution could not destroy or impair. He then had the legal title to the premises, — a title on which he could have supported ejectment against the grantee in the imperfect instrument of conveyance. That instrument not being founded on a valuable consideration, the grantee, could not in equity have compelled its completion, or have enforced it as a contract to convey. Whether it would be completed rested entirely in the volition of Walker. The spur of these judgments may have quickened him into an exercise of this volition variant from that he would have exercised, if not embarrassed by them.. He had as much power to have made an original voluntary conveyance, operating to defeat his judgment creditors, as to impart validity to this imperfect conveyance voluntarily. Each is the creature of
The result is, the circuit court did not err in any of its rulings, and the judgment must be affirmed.
This case was decided at the January term, 1875.