85 So. 746 | Ala. | 1920
In statutory claim suits, under sections 6039, 6040, of the Code of 1907, the statute itself defines and restricts the decisive issue to be submitted to the jury. Keyser v. Maas,
When the officer making the levy returns the writ, together with the bond and affidavit of the claimant, they become papers of record in the cause (Lanier v. Branch Bank,
It is obvious, therefore, that the court must and does at the outset take judicial cognizance of the writ and of the bond and affidavit before it can submit the statutory issue of fact to the jury. The trial of the right of property, as authorized by the statute, presupposes the existence of a valid writ and its levy upon the property claimed. If the writ is invalid, void upon its face, or bears no officer's return showing its levy, there can be no trial, since, as observed by Stone, J., in Jackson v. Bain,
By filing his affidavit and bond the claimant conclusively admits the fact and validity of the levy, if officially indorsed and returned, but not the validity of the writ itself. Bradford v. Bassett,
From the language of the statute (section 6040), and from the numerous decisions of this court, we deduce the rule that the trial court must, of necessity, take judicial notice of the writ as returned by the officer, as well as of the affidavit and bond filed by the claimant, as the primary records in the case, upon which its jurisdiction is founded; from which it results that it is wholly unnecessary for either party to introduce them in evidence upon the issue submitted to the jury.
In practice parties have frequently introduced those documents in evidence, and they have always been held to be properly admitted. Cochran v. Garrard,
In the case of Jackson v. Bain,
In Schamagel v. Whitehurst,
The decision of this court in Weinstein v. Yielding,
In the instant case the record shows a valid writ of attachment, with the return of the officer showing its levy on the property in suit, and it was not necessary for the plaintiff to introduce the paper in evidence upon the issue of fact submitted to the jury.
Section 6043 of the Code provides that "when the claim interposed is based on a mortgage or lien the claimant must state in his affidavit the nature of the right which he claims." Under this requirement, it is *362 sufficient if the affiant simply states that he claims under a mortgage, or under a lien, and a further specification of the claim is not necessary, since the rules of special pleading have no application in this proceeding. The claimant's affidavit in this case stated that his claim was based on a mortgage given by Jackson, the defendant in attachment, to the claimant, McDonald. His mortgage was in fact executed by Jackson to J. N. Stephens, who transferred it to the Bank of Clio, by whom it was in turn transferred to claimant. If the affidavit were treated as a pleading, no doubt this would be a variance curable only by amendment. But we do not so regard it, and claimant's proffered amendment of the affidavit was not necessary to the availability of the mortgage as a basis for his claim. The rejection of the amendment, except upon the terms imposed, i. e., payment of the costs of suit up to that time, was therefore harmless error, if erroneous — a point we need not now decide, in view of the fact that the mortgage was admitted in evidence without objection, and the issue was evidently determined upon the question of the priority of the conflicting claims.
The evidence showed without dispute that plaintiff in attachment had a claim for advances made to her tenant, Jackson, which was a prior lien upon the corn in suit grown upon the rented premises; and we find nothing in the evidence to support the contention that the landlord's lien was waived or barred by any conduct on the part of plaintiff that amounted to an estoppel against its assertion.
In this state of the evidence the intervention failed, and plaintiff was entitled to a verdict if the jury believed the evidence. Brothers v. Russell,
Finding no error in the record, the judgment will be affirmed.
Affirmed.
ANDERSON, C. J., and SAYRE and GARDNER, JJ., concur.
McCLELLAN, THOMAS, and BROWN, JJ., dissent.