17 Ala. 749 | Ala. | 1850
This was an action of trespass to try titles to the tract of land described in the declaration. It was shown, that William K. Beck obtained a patent for the land, bearing date the 8th of August 1832, and that, on the 17th day of May 1836, a judgment was rendered in the Circuit Court of Wil
It cannot be denied that a judgment binds the lands of the defendant from the time of its rendition, and the lien thereby created is co-extensive with the limits of the State. — Campbell v. Spence, 4 Ala. 543. It is also equally clear, that the legal estate or title alone is bound by a judgment at law, and that a mere equitable title, however perfect it may be, is not bound by a judgment, nor can it be sold under execution in satisfaction thereof. — Elmore & Willis v. Harris, 13 Ala. 360. As a judgment binds the legal title, the recovery against Beck, in 1836, created a lien on the land in controversy, although in a court of equity Beck wotild have been held as a mere trustee for Varner, who had paid the purchase money in full and held Beck’s bond for title. — 1 Lomax Dig. 305. The sale by the sheriff, in 1844, gave the purchasers a title, which dates back from the day of the rendition of the judgment, for from that time the land was. bound. — Morris v. Ellis, 3 Ala. 560 ; Curry v. The Br. Bank at Montgomery, 13 Ala. 304. These principles, which we think are ihcontrovertibly settled, show that the legal title of the plaintiffs is the oldest; that dates from the rendition of the judgment, whilst the deed to the defendant cannot have relation back, but gives him the legal title only from the time of its execution. — See Nickles v. Haskins, 15 Ala. 619, and cases there cited. But it is contended, that the possession
It is certainly a well settled rule, that he, who obtains the possession of land by acknowledging the title of another, cannot be permitted to set up title in himself, or in a stranger,’ to defeat the title of him, from whom he obtained possession. Thus a tenant canno.t dispute the title of his landlord, nor a trustee the title of his cestui que trust., and it would be a perversion of justice to permit one, who acquired possession under an execu-' tory contract, to repudiate the title of’him, from whom he derived possession, and assert an adversary title, in himself or another, in defiance of the contract, by which he obtained possession. A vendor of land is a trustee, pending an executory contract, of the legal title for the vendee, who in turn is a trustee for the unpaid purchase money. — Muldrom’s Ex’r v. Muldrom, 2 Dana, 387; Grundy v. Jackson, 1 Littell, 13. To allow him to set up an adverse title to the vendor, and thereby to defeat the recovery of the purchase money, would be to permit him to repudiate his contract, whilst he held on to the benefits of it, to-wit, the possession. To this extent we should be driven, were we to sustain the argument, that the possession of Varner was adverse to the title of the defendant in the judgment, from whom be purchased.
It is true that if no suit had been brought against Varner, nor those who claim under him, until twenty years had elapsed from- the time he took possession, the statute of limitations would have protected him from a recovery, but there is often a wide distinction between an adverse possession, that will give title under the statute of limitations, and such adverse possession as will enable the tenant to set up title in himself or another, or that would prevent him, who had the title, from transfering it. Thus, if A. enter into possession, as tenant of. B., and after-wards disclaim the title of B. and assert title in himself, B. must bring ejectment within twenty years, or within the time
Nor can we say from the evidence, contained in the bill of exceptions, that the lien of the judgment was lost. The judgment was rendered in 1836, and the land was sold in 1844, according to the bill of exceptions, under a filuries execution. If it had been shown that no execution had issued within a year and a day from the time the judgment was rendered, the question would then have been presented, whether the lien would have been considered as waived or lost in favor of a bona fide purchaser, but as it appears that the land was sold under a pluries writ of fieri fiadas, we are bound to presume, or rather to know, that other executions had been isshed, and, as no objection was made to their regularity, we must presume they were issued according to law.
We come to the conclusion, that at law the plaintiffs have the better title, and a court of law can look to the legal title alone, without regard to the equity of the parties. The defence of the defendant is in a court of equity, which can give effect to his prior right.
Let the judgment be reversed and the cause remanded.