110 So. 323 | Ala. Ct. App. | 1926
This cause was tried before the court without the intervention of a jury. There were some rulings of the court that were technically erroneous, but, as will be seen by what follows, these rulings did not and could not affect the final results.
The case as made by the pleadings and evidence is substantially as follows: The appellee brought suit by attachment against the appellant. The affidavit, bond, and writ were issued and filed in office October 27, 1922, and executed by the sheriff on the same day by levying on one bale of cotton as the property of appellant and due return was made by the sheriff to the proper officer and notice of levy was given to appellant. On none of the foregoing papers was there any indorsement of the fact of a waiver of exemptions as is required by section 7964 of the Code of 1923. No complaint was filed at the time of bringing suit and no complaint was ever served on appellant, but on July 23, 1924, appellee, through his attorneys, filed a complaint, claiming $600 due by promissory note, and alleging a waiver of exemptions as to personal property and an order that execution issue with waiver of exemptions indorsed thereon. It was further ordered in the judgment that the one bale of cotton attached be condemned to the satisfaction of appellee's debt and costs and ordered sold. Thereafter on August 4, 1924, appellant filed his claim under section 7896 of the Code of 1923, claiming the one bale of cotton as exempt to him under the statutes of this state. The claim was in due form and regular.
We have considered the cases cited in appellant's brief, but none of them have any application to the case at bar. It is true that appellee, having elected to pursue the remedy by attachment, conclusively admitted title in the appellant to the bale of cotton levied upon, and waived his lien or title thereto under his mortgage. This is settled by Kolsky v. Loveman,
It also seems to be the law as said in Hutchison v. Powell,
Any attempt to impeach or annul a judgment other than by a direct proceeding in the court that rendered the judgment before the expiration of the term at which it was rendered is a collateral attack on such judgment. Johnson v. Johnson,
This judgment condemned the bale of cotton to the satisfaction of appellee's debt and costs and the cotton was ordered sold. The judgment not having been reversed or annulled on direct attack, the claim of exemptions came too late to be available to appellant under section 7896 of the Code of 1923. Lackland v. Rodgers,
The judgment in the original attachment suit having been pleaded in bar of appellant's claim to the cotton levied on and ordered sold, and the evidence without conflict on this point establishing this plea, the errors of the court, if any, in its rulings on other pleas and the admission of evidence, could not have injuriously affected appellant's case. The court could not have rendered judgment other than as here recorded.
Let the judgment be affirmed.
Affirmed.