125 Ala. 330 | Ala. | 1899
Lead Opinion
There is hut the one question presented and insisted on, — whether or not the three weeks’ notice required to he given for the sale of the property in question under the power in the mortgage, was given in conformity to the.terms of mortgage.
The mortgage required that notice of sale under the power should he given, “by advertising the same in any newspaper published in Etowah county, at least three times before the day of sale.” As to this notice it further provided: “It agreed that any irregularity in giving ‘the notice, or of making the sale, shall not in any manner affect the sale.”
The deed executed to the purchaser contained a recital of the compliance with the terms of. the mortgage as to the notice of sale on foreclosure. These recitals in the deed were prima facie evidence of the facts stated therein as against the mortgagor and his privies (Naugher v. Sparks, 110 Ala. 572) ; and the complainants settled up the invalidity of the sale for the alleged failure to advertise the sale according to the requirements of the mortgage assumed the burden of overcoming this prima facie case of the sufficiency of the advertisement.
The chancellor in a well considered opinion held, “that the advertisement of the mortgage sale appeared regularly and consecutively for three weeks in the Attalla Herald (a weekly newspaper' published in the county of Etowah), in accordance with the provisions and stipulations of the mortgage, with the exception, perhaps, of a few copies of the paper which were sent to the probate judge, clerk and register of the county, and which were not intended for them, but were to be sent to nonresident subscribers of the paper.” It appears that during the time of the appearance of the notice of sale, the advertisement olid not appear in all the copies of the paper printed, except that in a few copies towards the last of one or two of the editions, it was taken out, and that a solid or block cut of the advertisement of a patent medicine or a newspaper, was put in its piace, and these
The chancellor also decided, that the non-appearance of the notice in a few copies of the paper stricken off for the non-residents, was, at most, nothing more than a mere irregularity in giving notice, coming clearly within the terms of the agreement of the parties to the mortgage, namely, that 'any irregularity in giving the notice should not in any manner affect the sale. It is unnecessary for us to decide that question, as the one above referred to is fully decisive o'f the case. Let the decree of the lower court be affirmed.
Affirmed.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting.) — The stipulation in the mortgage: for the publication of notice of sale under the power of sale was essentially a stipulation for the publication of such notice in every copy of each edition of the paper published during the time prescribed: such was the contemplation of the parties, and so the law construes it. That the notice was not published in every copy of the regular weekly editions is demonstrated by original copies of the paper which were before the trial court and are before us. From how many of such copies the notice was omitted is not definitely shown; but that it was omitted from a large percentage of the copies brought to light on tire trial of the cause the papers themselves show. Persons connected with the paper testify that it was omitted from only a few copies the last of the editions — '.some say half 'dozen, others as many as eighteen; and it is hard to escape the conclusion that they do not know how many papers of each edition failed to contain the notice. They account for the omission