Citibanc of Alabama/Tuskegee v. Potter

379 So. 2d 553
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJanuary 11, 1980
Docket78-577
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 379 So. 2d 553 (Citibanc of Alabama/Tuskegee v. Potter) 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
Citibanc of Alabama/Tuskegee v. Potter, 379 So. 2d 553 (Ala. 1980).

Opinion

This appeal is from a declaratory judgment subordinating a recorded judgment lien obtained by Citibanc to mortgages executed subsequent to the judgment lien and to a statutory claim of homestead exemption. We affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand for entry of a judgment in conformity with this opinion.

The facts are best presented chronologically.

April 27, 1976: Citibanc obtained a judgment against Guy and Hazel Potter for $19,363.25 and costs of $27.50. The judgment was recorded the same day.

November 1, 1976: The Potters received a deed to the lot in question from their son, reciting $10 consideration. The deed was duly recorded. The same day the Potters executed a construction mortgage for $15,000 to Alabama Exchange Bank, which was also duly recorded.

December, 1976: The Potters entered into a construction contract with Tuskegee Lumber Company, Inc. to construct the house for $38,000.

January 10, 1977: The Potters executed another mortgage to Alabama Exchange Bank purporting to correct the previous mortgage to show it as a purchase money mortgage rather than as a construction mortgage.

February 22, 1978: The Potters executed a mortgage to Tuskegee Federal Savings Loan Association to cover $30,000 of the construction contract, including the $15,000 mortgage to Alabama Exchange. On this same date, the Potters executed a second mortgage to Tuskegee Lumber Company for $8,000 to cover the balance of the construction contract. Also on this date, the Potters filed the statutory statement claiming the property as a homestead.

July 12, 1978: Citibanc brought its action for declaratory judgment.

April 18, 1979: A final judgment was entered in which the court held that the Potters had a homestead exemption of $2,000 in the property subject to the mortgages; that Tuskegee Federal Savings Loan Association had a first mortgage on the property; that Tuskegee Lumber Company, Inc., had a second mortgage on the property; and that Citibanc had a judgment lien on the equity of the Potters in excess of $2,000. The court refused to grant priority to Citibanc's lien because such a result "abhors justice and is rejected because the plaintiff [Citibanc] would be unjustly enriched." Citibanc then appealed.

Appellant contends that the trial court erred in subordinating its judgment lien to the subsequently obtained mortgages. Appellees contend that the mortgages amount to purchase-money mortgages and therefore were correctly given priority over the judgment lien.

It is clear that the mortgages were not purchase-money mortgages. The Potters already had title to the land before they ever attempted to obtain a loan from appellees. Title was obtained from their son, for a recited consideration of $10. The mortgages were created subsequent to the deed to the Potters from their son. The trial judge was faced with the question as to whether, by virtue of the attempted correction of the mortgage to Alabama Exchange Bank, it became a purchase-money mortgage. He ruled, correctly, that the attempted correction was ineffective and that the mortgage was not a purchase-money mortgage.

The issue, therefore, plainly stated, is whether the judgment lien should be *Page 555 given priority over subsequently created construction mortgages. As the trial court noted, there is no case law covering this exact point in Alabama. The question is therefore one of first impression. We hold that a duly registered judgment lien must be given priority over subsequently created construction mortgages.

Here, appellant Citibanc obtained a judgment against the Potters. It recorded that certificate of judgment in the probate court of their home county. A duly registered judgment lien, filed in accordance with Code 1975, §§ 6-9-210, -211, is superior to any rights acquired under a mortgage on the debtor's property executed subsequently. Compton v. Sharpe,174 Ala. 149, 56 So. 967 (1911).

The fact that the mortgages are construction mortgages makes no difference. The statutory lien attaches to the Potters' interest in the property acquired after registration of the lien, and all subsequent mortgagees are charged with notice of the statutory lien. W.T. Rawleigh Co. v. Patterson, 239 Ala. 309,195 So. 729 (1940). The facts make it unmistakably clear that appellant Citibanc complied with the statutory requirements to perfect its judgment lien. It could do no more.

It is true that Citibanc waited until the construction mortgages were executed and construction began before it sought a declaration of its rights. However, the statute does not place a duty upon the judgment lienholder to notify lending institutions of the judgment lien. Rather, the statute places prospective subsequent mortgagees on notice of the judgment lien against the debtor's property.

The subsequent mortgagees can protect themselves by a check of judgment records to determine whether there are outstanding liens against the debtor or his property. Either appellees failed to do this or overlooked the judgment lien. They cannot now claim that appellant Citibanc would be unjustly enriched because it followed the statutory requirements to perfect its judgment lien against the Potters.

Our holding is supported by other jurisdictions. In Rittenourv. Smith, 107 Ohio App. 119, 157 N.E.2d 367 (1958), the Court of Appeals of Ohio was faced with a similar problem. The court first held that a real estate mortgage and a lien of a construction company should be given priority over judgment lienholders because "the record discloses that these creditors made no objection to the construction of the houses on the lots by [the construction company] and should not now, in equity, be allowed to benefit by the expenditures made by [the construction company] in increasing the value of the lots." 157 N.E.2d at 371.

However, on rehearing, the court noted that the real estate mortgage, as to one of the lots in question, was dated after the judgment creditors had perfected their liens on all the lots. In addition, the equitable award to the construction company was made after the judgment creditors had perfected their liens. The court modified its original judgment and held that the judgment lienholders were entitled to priority over both the construction company's lien and the real estate mortgagee. The real estate mortgagee was given priority over the judgment lienholders as to two other lots in question but only because the mortgage lien had been acquired prior to the dates of the judgments. 157 N.E.2d at 372.

Perhaps more in point is the case of Cobleskill Savings Loan Association v. Rickard, 15 A.D.2d 286, 233 N.Y.S.2d 246 (1962). There, Rickard obtained title to the property in July 1953. He transferred title to his wife in February 1954. In October 1954, December 1954, March 1955, and May 1955, several creditors filed judgment liens against Rickard. In December 1955, Rickard's wife conveyed the premises to herself and Rickard. In July 1956, Cobleskill Savings Loan recorded a building and loan mortgage executed by the Rickards on the premises in the amount of $8,000. In July 1957, a contractor filed a mechanic's lien against the premises. Rickard subsequently filed bankruptcy.

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379 So. 2d 553, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/citibanc-of-alabamatuskegee-v-potter-ala-1980.