Fidelity Deposit Co. of Maryland v. Richeson

105 So. 193, 213 Ala. 461, 1925 Ala. LEXIS 366
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJune 30, 1925
Docket8 Div. 758.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 105 So. 193 (Fidelity Deposit Co. of Maryland v. Richeson) 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
Fidelity Deposit Co. of Maryland v. Richeson, 105 So. 193, 213 Ala. 461, 1925 Ala. LEXIS 366 (Ala. 1925).

Opinion

SOMERVILLE, J.

The appellant, complainant in the court below, was surety on the official bond of S. J. Petree, tax collector of Franklin county. The bond was executed on November 10, 1920, and the principal died in June, 1922, leaving a shortage in his of *462 ficial accounts of about $17,000, the full amount of wbicb was paid by complainant as surety. Tbe statute (section 2603, Code 1923) gave to the state, from the date of the execution of the bond, a lien on all of the tax collector’s property for the amount of this shortage, and complainant, by its payment to the state, became subrogated to the lien of the state (Singleton v. U. S. Fid. & Guaranty Co., 195 Ala. 506, 70 So. 169; Turner v. Teague, 73 Ala. 554).

Complainant seeks in this proceeding to enforce the lien thus acquired by subrogation against certain property owned by the deceased officer, which the officer sold in 1921 to the respondent I. M. Richeson, and which he in turn sold to the respondent W. T. Richeson in 1922, taking from the latter a mortgage security on the land purporting to secure an indebtedness of $2,900.

On these showings in the absence of any equities available to respondents, complainant would obviously be entitled to relief by having his lien satisfied out of the land.

But the respondents assert an equity arising out of the following facts: Prior to the execution of the said official bond, the principal, S. J. Petree, had mortgaged this particular realty, along with other property, to one Margaret C. Broadus to secure an indebtedness to her of $3,000, which was duly recorded. Upon its maturity on- January 1, 1921, the mortgagor. Petree, was without the means to pay it, a. 1 proposed to sell I. M. Richeson the property in suit for $3,000, of which $2,900, was to be paid to Mrs. Broadus on the mortgage, for which she was to release the property to said Richeson in a legal way. This offer was accepted and executed in full, except that Petree paid to the mortgagee, only $1,600 of the purchase money, instead of $2,900, as previously agreed, for which she executed a proper release of this property.

Under these conditions the purchaser, Richeson, was unquestionably entitled to equitable subrogation to the lien of the Broadus mortgage, to the extent that his money had been used for the discharge of this property from that mortgage. As said in Fouche v. Swain, SO Ala. 151:

" “There would be but a poor show of logic in holding that this strengthening of her title by Mrs. Swain [by Richeson here], has, after all, served but to weaken it. It is common practice for courts of chancery to keep alive equitable liens and encumbrances as against strangers or third parties.”

To say that this complainant can now come in and appropriate to itself the benefit of Richeson’s payment to Mrs. Broadus by subjecting to its claim the property thus freed from a superior lien would require a new definition of equity and its doctrine of subrogation. And the rule is well settled that “the purchaser of an equity of redemption upon paying off prior mortgages is subrogated to the rights of the mortgagees paid off, the mortgages paid being considered part of the purchaser’s title to the premises.” 37 Cyc. 452; Faulk v. Calloway, 123 Ala. 325, 331, 26 So. 504.

On elementary principles of law, the purchaser, I. M. Richeson, could convey to another such title as he had himself acquired, with the same equitable priority over complainant’s lien. Hence W. T. Richeson, as purchaser from I. M. Richeson, stands in the latter’s shoes, and is entitled to the same protection. The case of Bigelow v. Scott, 135 Ala. 236, 33 So. 546, has no bearing on this question, and Faulk v. Galloway, supra, is clearly in accord with our conclusion as to tile right,of a subvendee. The right of complainant is therefore merely á right to redeem from the respondent W. T. Richeson upon the payment to him of the sum of $1,600, with interest and taxes.

As a junior lienholder, complainant is not entitled to come into a court of equity and have his lien established merely to have a sale of the property and thereby force a foreclosure of the senior lien. Mims v. Cobbs. 110 Ala. 577, 18 So. 309; Threefoot v. Hillman, 130 Ala. 244, 30 So. 513, 89 Am. St. Rep. 39.

But the bill in this case, though it prays for general relief, and contains a general offer to do equity, cannot serve as a bill for redemption, because it not only fails to offer to pay the amount due to Richeson, but denies absolutely that anything is due to him in this behalf. Fouche v. Swain, 80 Ala. 151; Smith v. Conner, 65 Ala. 371; Rogers v. Torbut, 58 Ala. 523, 526; Hampton v. Counts, 202 Ala. 331, 80 So. 413.

The equity set up in the answer, being defensive merely, is available to respondents without a cross-bill. Watts v. Eufaula Bank, 76 Ala. 474; First Ave., etc., Co. v. King, 193 Ala. 438, 69 So. 549.

We think the decree of the trial court is free from error, and it will be affirmed.

Affirmed.

ANDERSON, C. J., and GARDNER and MILLER, JJ., concur.

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Bluebook (online)
105 So. 193, 213 Ala. 461, 1925 Ala. LEXIS 366, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fidelity-deposit-co-of-maryland-v-richeson-ala-1925.