Ensley Mortgage & Realty Co. v. Lewis
This text of 68 So. 1012 (Ensley Mortgage & Realty Co. v. Lewis) 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.
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Appellant filed its bill under the statute to redeem from the vendee of a purchaser at execution sale. On hearing the pleading and proof, the court below dismissed the bill.
This appeal requires a statement of our conception of the operation and effect of the redemption statute in the circumstances shown. The statute (section 5747 of the Code) says: “The possession of the land must be delivered to the purchaser, within ten days after the sale thereof, by the debtor, if in his possession, or if any one holding under him by privity of title, if in his possession, on written demand of the purchaser or his vendee. If the land is in the possession of a tenant, written notice by the purchaser, or his vendee, of the purchase, after the lapse of ten days from the time of the sale, and that it has not been redeemed, vests the right to the possession in him, in the same manner as if such tenant had attorned to him.”
“The language of the statute, and the equity of such cases, both require that the purchaser should have possession of the lands, that he may enjoy the rents and profits in the meantime, since the sum required to be tendered by the statute embraces only the purchase money, with 10 per cent, interest, and it could not be [229]*229tolerated that the defendant in execution should have the rents, when they often amount in value to a much larger sum than the purchase money and the interest required, and almost invariably to a larger amount than the 10 per cent, interest.”- — Pauling v. Meade, 23 Ala. 513.
A tenant holds in privity of title with his landlord, of course, but that is not the privity of the statute, because the last half of it makes a different provision in cases where a tenant is in possession. In this case a tenant of the debtor or his vendee was in possession. It results that the first half of the statute has nothing to do with the case. The provision of the second half of the statute is that: “If the land is in the possession of a tenant, written notice by the purchaser, or his vendee, of the purchase, after the lapse of ten days from the time of the sale, and that it has not been redeemed, vests the right to the possession in him, in the same manner as if such tenant had attorned to him.”
“The legal effect of such notice, when given, is to constitute the tenant in possession the tenant of the purchaser, and thereby abrogate his fealty to the former owner, transfer his possession to the purchaser, and substitute the latter as his future landlord, with the ordinary rights growing out of this relationship.” — Comer v. Sheehan, 74 Ala. 452; Richardson v. Dunn, 79 Ala. 167.
[230]*230
Affirmed.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
68 So. 1012, 193 Ala. 226, 1915 Ala. LEXIS 131, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ensley-mortgage-realty-co-v-lewis-ala-1915.