16 Ala. 581 | Ala. | 1849
We will dispose of the several assignments’of error in the order in which the'plaintiff's counsel presents them for our consideration.
11. The charges which question the, regularity of ihe trustee’s sale to Iianrick, may be readily disposed of.. The legal title to the premises being in the trustee, and he having conveyed to the defendant in error, it is not for a stranger to the deed to object that the sale was not made in conformity with the power confored by the deed. See Brown v. Lipscomb, 9 Por. Rep. 472; Gary v. Colgin, 11 Ala. Rep. 514, 519; Foster v. Goree, 5 Ala. Rep. 424. The same may be said with respect to the consideration of the deed to Hanrick, and of the previous transfer of the notes given to secure the- purchase money by Worsham to Whitman, which constituted the consideration of the mortgage. The deed from the trustee in whom was vested the legal title, vested that title in Hanrick, unless it was void by reason, of an adverse possession. in the plaintiff in error, and hence the questions atr tempted to be raised by these several charges could not properly affect the result of the cause. If the plaintiff in error claimed through Worsham,, the mortgagor, and could show that before the sale the mortgage had been fully satisfied, a very different question would arise, but this- is not pretended. See as to the effect of the trustee’s deed,. Huckaby v. Billingsley, at this term.
The importance o.f several of the principles involved in this cause,, and the zeal, ability and apparent confidence with