Bobo v. Edwards Realty Co.

34 So. 2d 165, 250 Ala. 344, 1947 Ala. LEXIS 535
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedDecember 11, 1947
Docket6 Div. 569.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 34 So. 2d 165 (Bobo v. Edwards Realty Co.) 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
Bobo v. Edwards Realty Co., 34 So. 2d 165, 250 Ala. 344, 1947 Ala. LEXIS 535 (Ala. 1947).

Opinion

SIMPSON, Justice.

The bill seeks to obtain the benefits of § 296, Title 51, Code 1940, sometimes referred to as a redemption. The question is whether or not the averment in the bill, that the redeeming-plaintiff is (when suit filed) the owner and in possession of the land, a sufficient allegation of possession to sustain the bill, when tested by demurrer.

Said § 296, in short, provides that when the suit (“for the recovery of real estate sold for the payment of taxes,” § 295) is against the taxpayer or any of his title successors named in the section, on motion of the defendant made at any time before trial, the court shall ascertain the amount! paid by the purchaser at the tax sale, etc., and, in effect, allow a form of redemption. Green v. Stephens, 198 Ala. 325, 73 So. 532.

The principle has heretofore been deduced that this Code section had the effect of conferring an additional right of redemption in case of valid tax sales on the named persons and that, under its terms, a taxpayer or his statutory successor in title who, in case of a suit at law against him for the recovery of the land, would have the privileges of the statute, may make those privileges available by a bill in equity when no suit is pending for the recovery of the land, and without waiting to be sued for possession. Burdett v. Rossiter, 220 Ala. 631, 127 So. 202; Bell v. Propst et al., 220 Ala. 641, 127 So. 212; Tensaw Land & Timber Co. v. Rivers, 244 Ala. 657, 15 So. 2d 411; Standard Contractors Supply Co. v. Scotch, 247 Ala. 517, 25 So.2d 257

The bill in the instant case is not filed under § 1109, Title 7 of the Code, as a statutory bill to quiet title under which a redemption under § 296 may also be effected as in such cases as National Fireproofing Corp. v. Hagler, 226 Ala. 104, 145 So. 421; Standard Contractors Supply Co. v. Scotch, supra; Moorer v. Chastang, 247 Ala. 676, 26 So.2d 75; and Odom v. Averett et al., 248 Ala. 289, 27 So.2d 479. Nor is it one to remove a cloud on title as discussed in Watson v. Baker et al., 228 Ala. 652(6), 154 So. 788.

It is a straight bill to enforce a redemption in equity under said § 296, a remedy heretofore approved by this court as avail *346 able to an owner plaintiff. Tensaw Land & Timber Co. v. Rivers, supra.

The requisite averments of possession essential to invite equitable relief by the several stated remedies are, of course, not the same. The court in many cases has pointed out the allegational requirements in statutory bills to quiet title and to remove clouds on titles, but we find no decision indicating the character of possession to be alleged in a bill such as the instant one seeking direct relief under the section.

The trend of our decisions seems to have been rested on the theory that to enforce a redemption in equity under the Code section the owner, taxpayer or other statutory designee must have remained in some sort of actual or constructive possession of the land since the tax sale. Burdett v. Rossiter, supra; Green v. Stephens, supra; Standard Contractors Supply Co. v. Scotch, supra.

The character of the redcmptioner’s possession necessary to such equitable relief is not prescribed in the statute, but the holding in all our cases on the subject is that such possession need not be peaceable as is required for relief under § 1109, Title 7 of the Code (statutory bill to quiet title), but only such possession that “some nature of suit must be brought to oust him [taxpayer], provided it was not obtained tortiously. Fleming v. Moore, 122 Ala. 399, 26 So. 174.” Standard Contractors Supply Co. v. Scotch, supra, 247 Ala. at page 519, 25 So.2d at page 258. And, that his possession is only scrambling does not deprive him of his right of redemption, though it would deprive him of relief under said § 1109. Standard Contractors Supply Co. v. Scotch, supra.

The principle has also been settled that where there had never been any real occupancy of the land, no one having been in actual possession thereof, the possession is regarded as constructive and follows the title of the original owner. And in land of this character the right of the true owner or his statutory title successor would not be cut off by the scrambling possession of the tax purchaser (or his successor in title) or by any other character of possession short of that as would be sufficient tei comply with the law of adverse possession.

However, as stated, for the remedy under the statute to be available it is essential that the taxpayer’s possession be such as to require a suit at law against him for recovery of possession. Hence our holding that if he has such possession he can maintain the suit in equity under the section as for a redemption.

Our cases, however, have not attempted to establish the precise principle now under consideration, nor have they dealt with the requisite continuity, after the tax sale, of the taxpayer’s possession, though there are some general expressions in some of our cases which would seem to'make the law on the question appear to contain casuistries.

Morris v. Card, 223 Ala. 254, 135 So. 340, is particularly stressed, in argument, as having declared on the principle that the taxpayer or his statutory successor need only have possession when the suit is filed. It should be noticed in passing that the strict question of pleading raised by the demurrer here considered was not in the'view of the court in that case but decision there was posed on the predicate that the taxpayer and his title successors never abandoned constructive possession of the vacant property and the acts evidencing occupancy by the tax title claimant were not of a sort sufficient as acts of actual, adverse possession to vest title as against the contractive possession of the redeeming plaintiff.

In view of the argument advanced and the stated construction placed on Morris v. Card, supra, and some few other of our cases by learned counsel, we have thought it wise to recast our original opinion in order to clear up the point.

A pertinent observation is found in Brunson v. Bailey, 245 Ala. 102, 104, 16 So. 2d 9, 11, where it was said: “The question in such a controversy is whether the right to redeem by the taxpayer has been cut off by the possession of the tax purchaser.” The question may be somewhat clarified by keeping in mind the short statute of limitations § 295, Title 51, Code 1940, which should be considered, in some respects, in connection with § 296. As that provision *347 of law (§ 295) appeared in the Code of ■1923, it had no application to a void tax sale, but that feature was eliminated (General Acts 1935, p. 366, § 260) so that subsequently, and now, void tax sales are within its purview. Prior to the amendment, under the 1923 Code, a purchaser at a void tax sale possessing the property adversely for three years was not benefitted by the short statute of limitations (Code 1923, § 3107). Brown v. Ellison, 239 Ala. 320, 194 So. 822. But after the amendment of 1935 if the purchaser at a void tax sale holds actual adverse possession for three years he has the benefit of § 295 and thereby acquires a valid title.

This redemption statute does not necessarily exclude an owner who has relinquished possession and afterwards regained it.

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Bluebook (online)
34 So. 2d 165, 250 Ala. 344, 1947 Ala. LEXIS 535, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bobo-v-edwards-realty-co-ala-1947.