31 Ala. 447 | Ala. | 1858
— It is declared by the Code, (§ 2455,) that executions may be levied on an equity of redemption, in either land or personal property, and that when any interest less than the absolute title is sold, the purchaser is subrogated to all the rights of the defendant, and subject to all his disabilities. There certainly remains in one who absolutely conveyed a slave, as a mere security for the payment of a debt, “an equity of redemption.” Chancellor Kent, in reference to conveyances absolute in form, yet designed to have effect as mortgages, says: “When it
Looking beyond the letter, wo find no sufficient reason for the conclusion that it is without the spirit of the law. It is true that such an equity of redemption was precluded from the cognizance of a court of law by a rule of evidence, and was susceptible of establishment only in a court of equity. But we cannot say that the legislature designed to observe this wholesome rule of evidence, and to restrict the operation of the statute to equities of redemption evidenced by writing. In construing the part of the law which relates to equities of redemption, we must look at the first clause found in the same section, which authorizes a levy on real property, to which the defendant has a legal title, or a perfect equity, having paid the purchase-money. Under it, the interest of one who has made a parol purchase of land, paid the purchase-money, and entitled himself to a specific performance, might be sold •under execution; yet the statute of frauds has always been an insuperable barrier to establishment by parol, in a court of law, of a purchase of land. The purchaser by parol, who has paid the purchase-money, and is entitled to a specific performance, certainly has a perfect equity, and his interest must necessarily come within the operation of the statute. Since the legislature has, in the first clause of the statute, disregarded the distinction, as to the evidence requisite to prove a purchase of land at law and in equity, we are led to impute to it a similar design in the last clause.
The judgment of the court below must be reversed, and the cause remanded.