4 Ala. 735 | Ala. | 1843
We do not consider it necessary to a decision of this cause to examine all the interesting questions discussed at the bar; and shall content ourselves with inquiring, 1. Did not the mortgage by Mr. Hitchcock and wife, executed in 1838, and the failure of the former to pay the debt, (intended to be secured,) as stipulated, entitle the mortgagees to recover of the plaintiffs in error, as his tenants, the rent becoming due after the forfeiture of the mortgage ? 2. Was the execution issued on the judgment in favor of McGehee, use, &c., so far void, that a levy on and sale of property thereunder, would not invest the purchaser with a title ? 3. Is the order of the Chancellor directing an attachment to issue against Messrs. Mansony and Hurtell, such a sentence or decree as may be revised on error ?
1. Where a mortgage is drawn in usual form, without any stipulation, expressed or implied, as to the possession, or the
The statute of 4 Anne Ch. 16,, haying dispensed with the. at-tornment of tenants to the grantees of rents and reversions., it; has, been held in England that the mortgagee of laud,, which a,t the, time of mortgage, was under a demise to a tenant,, may in case of non-payment of the interest, give notice of the, mortgage to the tenant in. possession, and recover the rent in, arrear at the time of the notice, as well as what afterwards accrues, [1 Lomax’s Dig. 330; see also Chambers et al v. Mauldin et al, at. the. la;st term, and easps there cited. Moss v. Gallimore,
The law in this State is precisely the same as it is in England, so far as it respects the right of the mortgagee to 'recover rent of the tenants of the mortgagor. We have a statute which modifies the common law to the same extent as does that of 4 Anne. It is in these words: “Every grant or conveyance of messuages, lands, tenements, and hereditaments, shall be good and effectual without attornment of the tenant; but no tenant who before notice of such grant or conveyance, shall have paid the rent to the grantor, shall be prejudiced, or suffer any darm age by such payment.” [Aik. Dig. 93.j
The appointment of a receiver being regular, it was clearly competent for the Court, to direct the tenants to pay the rent to him, and if they refused to attorn, to follow up that order by the issuance of such compulsory process as was necessary to make it effectual. The order for an attachment against the plaintiffs in error would have effected nothing more; and was consequently proper.
2. A judgment in this State is a lien upon the lands of the debtor within the same, in virtue of the statute which authorizes their extension under the writ of elegit. [Morris v. Ellis, 3 Ala. Rep. 560; Campbell, use, &c. v. Spence et al, at this term; see also Winston & Fenwick v. Rives, 4 Stew and P. Rep. 280; Pope v. Brandon et al, 2 Stew. Rep. 401; Ridgely’s Ex’rs v. Gartrel, 3 H. and McH. Rep. 449; Calhoun v. Snyder, 6 Binn. Rep. 135; Stow v. Tifft, 15 Johns. Rep. 464; Roads v. Symm et al, 1 Ohio Rep. 281; Bank U. S. v. Tyler, 4 Pet. Rep. 366; Uuited States v. Morrison, id. 124; Rankin v. Scott, 12 Wheat. Rep. 177; Woodcock v. Bennet, 1 Cow.
Assuming in the preseut case, that Mr. Hitchcock’s title to the property in question, was such as the judgment recovered by McGehee could reach, the questiou is, has its lien been defeated or delayed by any subsequent act or occurrence ? It has been repeatedly decided by this Court, that where a defendant sues out a writ of error, and supersedes the execution by entering into bond with surety, or obtains an injunction, the lien of the execution is entirely destroyed. [Barnes v. Baker & Sledge, Minor’s Rep. 373; McRae and Augustin v. McLean, use, &c. 3 Porter’s Rep. 145, 153; Wiswall v. Monroe, at the last term; Campbell, use, &c. v. Spence et al, at this term.] And in Winston and Fenwick v. Rives, [4 Stew.and P. 280,] the Court say they think it clear, that the lien of a fi fa. on personal property, or of a judgment on lands, is discharged by a bond for a writ of error, or by an injunction.
In the Bank of the United States v. Winston’s Ex’rs. et al. [2 Brockb. Rep. 252,] Chief Justice Marshall says, “As the lien created by a judgment is given by the statute which authorizes an elegit, it is settled in this country that the lien depends upon the right to sue out an elegit..” [See also 2 Call’s Rep. 125; 4 H. & Munf. Rep. 57.] Again: continues the learned Judge, “In the case of Scriba v. Deanes, ante. vol. 1, page 170, this Court determined tha-t the lien of a judgment on which execution is stayed, dates not from the time of its rendition, but from the time when execution may be sued out. I have not changed this opinion.” To the same effect are the cases of Jackson v. Bartlett, 13 Johns. Rep. 533; Conrad v. The Atlantic Insurance Company, 1 Peter’s Rep. 443; United States v. Morrison, 4 Peter’s Rep. 124; Burton v. Smith et al. 13 Peter’s Rep.— And this Court in Campbell use &c. v. Spence et al. ut supra, determine that a bona fide purchaser, under a fieri facias upon a junior judgment, would be protected. In the language of the Court, in the case of Den v. Hill, [1 Haywood, 72,] “ were the law not so, it would be the most dangerous thing in the world
By the common law, all proceedings in a suit at law are stopped by the death of one of the parties. If either die before judgment, no judgment can be entered: if after judgment, no execution can issue. To avoid the inconvenience resulting from this principle, the judgment is made to relate back to a day previous to its rendition, or the execution to bear teste of the term when the judgment is supposed to have been rendered. [Hildreth v. Thompson, 16 Mass. Rep. 192; Stymets v. Brooks, 10 Wend. Rep. 211-12.] In the latter case, it is said, “After the death of a defendant,-no execution can issue against his personal representatives, heirs, or terre-tenants, without a scire facias. [2 Saund. Rep. 6, n. 0, 72, a. Bacon tit. Execution 731, pl. 14 note; 2 Tidd, 1029; 2 Arch. prac. 88.] The reasons given are, that a new party is affected by the execution, and there would be a discrepancy between it and the record, and indeed there is no authority for the process. A. scire facias, therefore, is necessary not only to make these new parties parties to the record, but to give them a day in Court to shew cause, if any, against the application of the property to the discharge of the judgment.” It is further maintained by the Court, that the English doctrine of the relation of an execution to the day of its teste, so as to operate a lien upon the goods of the defendant from that time, is applicable alone to the writ of fieri facias which issued against the goods and chattels of the defendant. [See also 2 Saund Rep. 6, n. 1, 2 Lord Raym. Rep. 849; 1 Archb. Prac. 282; 2 id. 88; 2 Tidd. Prac. 915; 1 Saund. Rep. 219, e. f.]
In respect to the relation of a judgment to the first day of the term, when it was rendered, this Court decided that it was a mere legal fiction, which would never be allowed to defeat the purposes of justice; and that a judgment became a lien upon, the defendants lands from the time of its rendition, and not sooner. [Pope v. Brandon et al., 2 Stewt. Rep. 408.]
It has been expressly adjudged, that an execution which, directs money to be made of the lands and tenements of a deien-
In Collingsworth v. Horn, [4 Stewt. & P. Rep. 237,] it was considered, that the issuance of an original fieri facias against the property of a defendant, after his death, might be irregular, but where an original issued in his lifetime, an alias or pluries issued thereafter would not be void, and might be sustained as a continuation of the first execution, and to keep alive the lien which it created upon the personalty. [See also Doe ex dem. Price v. Lucas at this term.] But it has been held that there is a distinction between the real and personal estate in this respect That it is the judgment, not the execution, which gives the lien upon the former; and while the execution is permitted to continue as to the personalty, the judgment does not survive as to the realty. [1 Cow. Rep. 740 1.]
We have very cautiously stated the law on this point, as we find it laid down in the book. Our conclusion upon the first question considered, relieves us from the necessity of making any definitive decision of the second, although it has been elaborately discussed at the bar. Our impression is very strong, that the lien of McGehee’s judgment was suspended by the injunction obtained by Mr. Hitchcock and continued after his death; and the execution subsequently issued was irregular, and did not authorize the levy on, and sale of the lands of which he died possessed. In fact, the first branch of this proposition may be regarded as settled by our own decisions; the latter, as it may perhaps be desirable, we are willing to leave open to be again examined when it shall arise.
3. The order for an attachment against the plaintiffs in error, is not a final decree in the cause, but is intended to provide for