Bank of Luverne v. Turk

133 So. 52, 222 Ala. 549, 1930 Ala. LEXIS 113
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedOctober 23, 1930
Docket3 Div. 917.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 133 So. 52 (Bank of Luverne v. Turk) 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.

Bluebook
Bank of Luverne v. Turk, 133 So. 52, 222 Ala. 549, 1930 Ala. LEXIS 113 (Ala. 1930).

Opinions

*550 FOSTER, J.

Appellant, as a judgment creditor of E. J. Turk, by this proceeding, seeks to redeem his land from a mortgage to an insurance company. The land is a large tract which embraces the homestead of the mortgagor. The judgment is no lien upon the homestead.

The decree of the circuit court permitted a redemption only of the land not exempt, but required the payment of the entire mortgage debt. This would have the effect of relieving the homestead from the lien of the mortgage. But it is said that complainant cannot redeem the homestead because it has no lien on it, and that in effecting a redemption equity will not split up a debt so as to allow the payment of only a part of it. Applying the two principles, the court decreed a redemption upon full payment, but the homestead was not included.

Undoubtedly the judgment creditor cannot redeem without paying the entire mortgage debt. We think also that, in doing so, he is entitled to step into the shoes of the mortgagee to the extent of thereby acquiring all the security he holds for the debt. Lehman v. Moore, 93 Ala. 186, 9 So. 590; Jones v. Matkin, 118 Ala. 341, 24 So. 242; Wood v. Wood, 134 Ala. 557, 33 So. 347; Rothschild v. Bay City Lbr. Co., 139 Ala. 571, 36 So. 785.

In some of the cases supra, the complainant owned the equity of redemption in a part of the land mortgaged, and, as an abstract proposition, did not have the right to redeem the balance. In the other cases, a tenant in com-, mon owned only an aliquot portion, and had no such right as to the other portions. Yet, in each instance, he was required to pay the entire debt and redeem all the land and all interests, including such as he had not previously acquired.

We cannot see any difference in principle here. The mortgagor had waived his homestead as to the mortgage debt, and it was as much a part of the security for that debt as was the balance of the land.

Appellee relies upon a statement in 42 Corpus Juris, 369, which supports the decree, and is based upon two Iowa cases. In the more recent of the two eases, Sutherland v. Tyner, 72 Iowa, 232, 33 N. W. 645, where the facts are similar to those on this appeal, the court held that complainant could not redeem the homestead but in redeeming the balance of the land, on which he had a judgment lien, he should not be required to pay the whole mortgage debt in order to redeem that portion. The court therefore had the value of the homestead appraised, and the amount of such value deducted from the mortgage debt to ascertain the amount necessary to pay on redemption.

We cannot approve that practice, and such was not decreed by the circuit court in this case. It would have the effect of splitting the transactions into two parts without the consent of the mortgagee. Indeed, appellee is far from seeking such effect.

The Iowa court in passing that judgment does not refer to Spurgin v. Adamson, 62 Iowa, 661, 18 N. W. 293. That case, under somewhat similar circumstances, held that the creditor could not redeem the homestead, and in redeeming the balance, he must pay the whole mortgage debt, thereby supporting the decree rendered in this case. As we understand the cases, they conflict in that respect. Certainly the more equitable rule is that set forth in the case first mentioned, but we cannot approve that conformably to our own theories of the equitable principles that should apply.

Having proceeded thus far, appellant contends that it as the substituted mortgagee has the right to require that the homestead be separately sold first, and that the proceeds of such sale be first applied to the mortgage debt.

On that subject it is not necessary for the purposes of this case to reconsider the position taken by this court in Bramlett v. Kyle, 168 Ala. 325, 52 So. 926, following what is said to be the weight of authority (3 Jones on Mortgages [8th Ed.] §§ 2097 [1632], 1655 [1286]), to the effect that a mortgagor has no equitable right to require a mortgagee, in foreclosing his mortgage, first to sell that portion of the mortgaged property which is not the homestead, so that the homestead will be left to him free from the claims of other creditors; and that, as the mortgagor has no such right, the mortgagee may exercise his own judgment and discretion free of control by the mortgagor or the court.

But that case is not directly in point, and another principle would seem to prohibit appellant from indirectly securing for its judgment the proceeds of a sale of the homestead. This court has held that a judgment creditor may not, through the doctrine of marshaling securities, require a mortgagee, with a lien on the homestead and other property, to exhaust the homestead first, so as to leave the other property for the judgment. Talladega Bank v. Browne, 128 Ala. 557, 29 So. 552; Ray v. Adams, 45 Ala. 168; 38 C. J. 1375; 2 Story’s Eq. (14th Ed.) § 871. In the former *551 case it id said that neither the doctrine of marshaling securities nor subrogation may accomplish the result of subjecting property to incumbrances not created by the debtor himself. Neither do we think that this result can be accomplished by the doctrine of redemption.

Our conclusion therefore is that, if complainant shall redeem from the first mortgage, and the land is sold in its foreclosure, out of the remainder of the proceeds of the sale after satisfying the mortgage debt, there shall be set aside for E. J. Turk as much as $2,000 in lieu of his homestead rights, if that amount remains, subject to the lien of the second mortgage if found to exist.

The amount then remaining should be paid to appellant to the extent of its judgment, or on the second mortgage, one or both, as the court shall direct according to their respective priority and amount.

In connection with the second mortgage, we observe the following situation:

The mortgagor E. J. Turk and his wife executed a second mortgage, pending the suit at law by appellant against him. It was given to the Autauga Bank & Trust Company and E. J. Turk, guardian for Annie G. and Olive E. Turk. E. J. Turk was the mortgagor in both mortgages, and also was a mortgagee for the minors in the latter. The mortgage recited that it was to secure certain notes to the bank and others to E. J. Turk, guardian for the minors. The notes, which had been executed to the bank, were transferred to Mrs. Dannie E. Turk, wife of E. J. Turk. The notes of E. J. Turk, guardian, were not transferred. The bill attacked the transfer of the bank’s notes, claiming that they were paid, and that the transfer to Mrs. Turk was merely colorable. The court sustained that claim, and decreed on it for complainant.

No question as to that issue is involved on this appeal taken by complainant who was successful as to it. But the bill also made an attack upon the mortgage in so far as it undertook to secure the notes of E. J. Turk, guardian, as not being a bona fide transaction, and that it was without consideration, etc. The minors were not made parties to the suit, and the circuit court decreed that no relief could be granted on that claim in their absence.

It appears that, when the mortgage was given, Turk had not been appointed guardian, but was administrator of the estate of his first wife who was the mother of the minors. Later, he, as such administrator, made settlement in the probate court.

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Bluebook (online)
133 So. 52, 222 Ala. 549, 1930 Ala. LEXIS 113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bank-of-luverne-v-turk-ala-1930.