Ex Parte Jim Walter Corporation

216 So. 2d 183, 283 Ala. 295, 1968 Ala. LEXIS 1031
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedNovember 21, 1968
Docket6 Div. 453
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 216 So. 2d 183 (Ex Parte Jim Walter Corporation) 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
Ex Parte Jim Walter Corporation, 216 So. 2d 183, 283 Ala. 295, 1968 Ala. LEXIS 1031 (Ala. 1968).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

Petitioner, Jim Walter Corporation, seeks a mandate of this court ordering the Honorable Bob Moore, Jr., Judge of the Circuit Court of Marion County, in Equity, to vacate a final decree, dated February 15, 1967, by which it was decreed that one George W. Green is the owner of SW 54 of NW 54 of Section 27, Township 9, Range 14, situated, lying and being in Marion County, Alabama, and that petitioner is the owner of certain described real estate in SW 54 of NW 54 °f Section 22, Township 9, Range 14, in said Marion County. The petition also seeks other relief.

The genesis of the litigation involving the aforementioned forty of land in Section “27” was a bill of complaint which the said George W. Green filed in the Circuit Court of Marion County to quiet title to said forty (in Section “27”) and to require Jim Walter Corporation and Mid-State Homes, Inc., both made parties respondent, to set forth and specify their title, claim, interest or encumbrance, if any, to said land, and how and by what instrument the same is devolved and created. The complaint contains the allegations required by § 1109, Title 7, Code 1940, as Recompiled in 1958. Complainant demanded a trial by jury authorized by § 1112, Title 7, Code 1940, as Recompiled in 1958.

Respondents, within the time allowed by law, filed an answer to the complaint. Mid-State disclaimed any right, title or interest in the forty acres described in the complaint. Jim Walter (we omit “Corporation”) denied that complainant, as alleged in the complaint, was the legal or equitable owner of all of the land embraced in said forty of land. It claimed, “subject only to the complainant’s statutory right of redemption, a portion of the real estate described in the said Bill of Complaint.” The answer further contended that “its title, claim, or interest in such portion of said real estate is derived and created through the instruments consisting of Exhibits A, B, C and D [A is a mortgage, B an assignment to Mid-State Homes, C a reassignment of said mortgage to Jim Walter, and D a mortgage foreclosure deed], which exhibits consist of true and correct copies of the instruments by which said title, claim or interest is derived and created * * These exhibits were made a part of the answer.

This court upon due presentation of Jim Walter’s petition for an alternative writ and upon a final hearing for a peremptory writ, issued a rule nisi to respondent, Judge Moore, who, in response thereto, filed a return or answer, to which petitioner filed a replication. These pleadings are now submitted to this court for determination.

The return of respondent attaches facsimile copies of complainant’s original bill of complaint, answers of respondents, and also facsimile copy of a mortgage executed by complainant Green and his wife; also [297]*297facsimile copy of foreclosure deed executed pursuant to power of attorney embraced in the mortgage.

It further appears that issues created by the bill of complaint and the answers of respondents thereto were submitted to a jury which returned a verdict as follows: “We the jury find the issues in favor of defendant, Jim Walter Corporation.”

Thereafter, before the final decree here in question was rendered by the trial court, complainant Green filed a motion praying the trial court to grant complainant a new trial therein and/or moves for judgment, and/or decree non obstante veredicto. After a hearing Judge Moore granted the motion and rendered a final decree in Green’s favor, notwithstanding the verdict,

Respondent, Jim Walter, within the time prescribed by law, took an appeal to this court from said decree “non obstante veredicto.” See Jim Walter Corporation v. Green, 280 Ala. 272, 192 So.2d 724. This court, on December 8, 1966, reversed the decree and remanded the cause “for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.” We held the decree invalid. We quote from the opinion as follows:

“We are of opinion and hold that judgment notwithstanding the verdict can be granted on common law grounds only and is required to be based upon substantial insufficiency of the pleading and cannot rest on the insufficiency of the evidence.
“In the instant case, the description of the land in Exhibit C, the foreclosure deed, does contain the letters and figures, ‘Sec. 22,’ instead of the letters and figures, ‘Section 27,’ which are set out in the bill of complaint. Whether this discrepancy vitiates the foreclosure we do not now undertake to consider or decide.
“We are of opinion, however, that the failure of Jim Walter to plead with exactness in every detail a foreclosure of the mortgage, Exhibit A, does not destroy the sufficiency of the answer to show that Jim Walter does have a mortgage on the land described in Exhibit A.. In Exhibit A, the land is shown to be in the ‘SW of the NW of Sec. 27/ which is the same forty acres described in the bill of complaint. Exhibit A does connect Jim Walter with the title to a part of the land described in the bill of complaint, and, therefore, the answer is not insufficient to show that Jim Walter has an encumbrance on part of the land described in the bill of complaint.
“Since the answer is not wholly insufficient to show that Jim Walter has a valid claim on part of the land described in the bill, the court erred in rendering a decree for complainant notwithstanding the verdict, and, for that error, the decree is due to be and is reversed.
“Complainant’s brief, page 15, indicates that Exhibit A, as attached to the original answer, consisted of a photostatic copy of the original mortgage. That may be, but we must decide on the record before us and what we have before us is a typewritten copy of the mortgage which unmistakably recites ‘Sec. 27’ and not ‘Sec. 22.’
“Appellant suggests that we render a decree in this cause. In the light of the entire record, we are not persuaded that we should undertake to render a final decree at this time. The cause is remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.” (280 Ala. 274-275, 192 So.2d 726-727.)

When this cause was tried pursuant to complainant’s demand for a trial by jury, respondent, Jim Walter, introduced into evidence the mortgage from complainant and his wife to respondent, also an assignment of the mortgage to Mid-State-Homes, Inc., and the reassignment of the mortgage from such assignee to Jim Walter Corporation. The description of the land embraced in the mortgage was in ink and in the personal handwriting of someone; the description of the land in the,as-' [298]*298signments was typed. The description in the assignments unmistakably places the land or'forty in Section 22. The description in the mortgage' does not admit of such certainty. The location appearing in the mortgage, whether in Section 22 or Section 27; was a question for the-jury.

The complainant' claimed in his complaint .that he owned- the SW 54 of the NW 54 of-Section 27, Township 9, Range 14, lying . in’ 'Marion County, in his own right and alleged that the respondents (Jim Walter Corporation and Mid-State Homes, Inc.) were claiming or reputed to claim some'right, title or interest in or encumbrance upon such land. The complaint called upon respondents to propound such claim, interest or encumbrance to the lands and by what instrument the same “is derived- and created.”-

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Bluebook (online)
216 So. 2d 183, 283 Ala. 295, 1968 Ala. LEXIS 1031, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ex-parte-jim-walter-corporation-ala-1968.