Alabama Life Insurance & Trust Co. v. Boykin
This text of 38 Ala. 510 (Alabama Life Insurance & Trust Co. v. Boykin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
In the case of Boykin v. Rain, (28 Ala. 332,) the same mortgage and certified acknowledgment were under discussion, which are the foundation of the present suit. In that case, the court held, that the certificate was not a substantial compliance with the requirements of the statute, and that consequently the title did not pass. That case was decided before I became a member of the court; but an application for a rehearing was submitted to the court after my election. The majority overruled the application, but I did not concur in their [512]*512conclusion. That decision has stood for seven years ; and although I am not convinced of its correctness, I think more evil would result from overturning it now, than from adhering to it. New deeds, if any, will be found so entirely like the one there construed, as to constitute that case a dangerous precedent; and uniformity of decision, in cases affecting rights of property, is one of the benefits that result from a well regulated judicial system. I adhere to that decision.
My brother, Hon. B. W. Walker, fully concurs with me in the views above expressed.
While we admit, that the legislature may change or [513]*513modify the rules of evidence, and make these modified rules applicable to existing rights, and even to existing suits ; we think this . statute goes much farther. It attempts to make valid and effective that which was before inoperative and void ; effective to divest a title out of one, and vest it in another ; and this by a mere edict of legislation. It attempts to declare, not only what the law shall be, but what it has been. It has been well said, that, “to decláre what the law is, or has been, is a judicial power ; to declare what the law shall be, is legislation.” — Per Thompson, J., in the leading case of Dash v. Vankleek, 7 Johns. R. 496.
We think, that to give this statute operation as its words import, would be to break down the dividing wall between the legislative and judicial departments of the government, which, by the 1st section of the 2d article of our constitution, are declared to be distinct. Moreover, we should invade that part of the 10th section of our bill of rights which declares, that the citizen shall not “be deprivedof life, liberty, or property, but by due course of law.” A legislative edict, which takes property from one, and gives it to another, is not “due course of law.” — Saddler v. Langham, 34 Ala. 329 ; Dorman v. The State, ib. 216.
The mortgage, and its acknowledgment, being, up to February 8th, 1858, inoperative and invalid against Mrs. Hazzard, the title to the lands was in her a vested right. This it was not within the power of legislation to take away. — Coosa River Steamboat Company v. Barclay, 30 Ala. 126; Dash v. Vankleek, supra; Gilmore v. Shuter, Lev. 27 ; S. C., 2 Mod. 310 ; Couch v. Jeffries, 4 Burr. 2462 ; Houston v. Bogle, 10 Ired. 503 ; McCrackin v. Hayward, 2 How. U. S. 608; People v. Sup. Westchester, 4 Barb. Sup. Ct. 75 ; Holmes v. Holmes, ib. 300; Wright v. Marsh, 2 Green, (Iowa,) 118 ; Norman v. Heist, 5 Watts & Serg. 173.
We are aware that there are some decisions in Pennsylvania, which lay down a rule different from ours ; but we think them wrong in principle, and not to be followed.
The judgment of the circuit court is- affirmed.
I was on ihe bench when the opinion in Boykin v. Rain (28 Ala. 332) was delivered. That opinion had the full sanction of my judgment. The argument and investigation on this appeal has not shaken, but has served to confirm the conviction previously entertained. I hold, that the opinion in Boyloin v. Bain was right; and I base my assent to an affirmance upon the intrinsic merits of the questions involved, and not upon the doctrine of stare decisis.
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