47 So. 224 | Ala. | 1908
— Stevens executed a mortgage to Schuessler & Co., on 80 acresc of land to secure a present indebtedness. The correct description of the land is S. 1/2 of N. E. % and S. y2 of N. W. 1/1 of section 2, in township 21, of range 10, in Randolph county; but the scrivener, in drawing the mortgage, described the lands as being in section 22, so that a mistake was made in the description of the land. After the law day in 1896, as the bill shows, Schuessler & Co., advertised and sold the lands under the mortgage, and became the purchasers at said sale. After the sale they rented the lands to Stevens for the year 1897, and for several years thereafter. On June 4, 1903, the individual members composing the firm of Schuessler & C'o., sold and conveyed by deed, with full covenants of warranty, the land, by its correct numbers, to W. P. Lucas. Lucas went into possession and held the lands as his own until the 31st of December, 1904, when he sold and conveyed by deed, with full covenants of warranty, the land by its correct numbers to Nixon Lucas, who Avent into immediate possession and has remained in possession ever since. After the foreclosure sale (the exact time not being shown by the bill) Stevens sold and conveyed the land to J. W. Jackson for a consideration of |20. Jackson, on the 18th day of May, 1906, instituted a statutory action of ejectment against Nixon Lucas tenant to recover possession of the lands. The tenant, in the manner required by the statute, had Nixon Lucas made a party defendant to the ejectment suit. The bill here was filed by Nixon Lucas, against Stevens and Jackson, to reform the mortgage so as to make it read “section 2,” instead of “section 22,” and to perpetually enjoin the ejectment suit. A motion to dismiss the bill for the want of equity, and a demurrer to the bill, were overruled by the chancellor ; arid this appeal was taken from that decree.
Applying that ruling to tbe case in judgment, tbe bill on its fact showing that there was no mistake in complainant’s deed nor in the deed of bis vendor, no privity is shown to exist between complainant and Stevens, tbe mortgagor. Tbe application of tbe ruling is fully supported by the case of Haley v. Bagley, 37 Mo. 363, in which case it was held that a purchaser at a mortgage sale made under tbe power contained in tbe mortgage held no such relation of privity with tbe mortgagor as would authorize him to maintain a bill to reform and
Reversed and rendered.