Jarrell v. Farmers Nat. Bank of Opelika

43 So. 2d 116, 253 Ala. 119, 1949 Ala. LEXIS 206
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedDecember 1, 1949
Docket4 Div. 539.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 43 So. 2d 116 (Jarrell v. Farmers Nat. Bank of Opelika) 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
Jarrell v. Farmers Nat. Bank of Opelika, 43 So. 2d 116, 253 Ala. 119, 1949 Ala. LEXIS 206 (Ala. 1949).

Opinion

FOSTER, Justice.

The question on this appeal is whether a court of equity properly exercised its power to correct an error in the description of land in some of the proceedings in which the land was sold by order of the probate court to pay debts of the decedent. The administration had been removed into equity before the effort was made to correct the error which occurred before the removal was ordered.

The tract of land in question consisted of 637 acres. It had been mortgaged to> the Federal Land Bank, in which mortgage it was correctly described. The mortgage had been transferred to appellee bank. Thereafter to secure that debt and additional amounts another mortgage was made to the bank. The mortgage to the Federal Land Bank contained the description of NW %; S i/2 of NE %; NE % of NE *121 section 18, Township 17, Range 28, and other land.

The mortgage made directly to appellee by the mortgagor, whose name was Lamb, contained all the same description as that of the Federal Land Bank, except that instead of the description copied above, it was NW % of S *4 of NE ^4; NE ^4 of NE Yii section 18, Township 17, Range 28. The mortgagor Lamb having died, the administrator petitioned the probate -court for a sale of the land to pay debts, not mentioning the mortgage or any other specific debt to be paid. The land sought to be sold included that as described above as being in the Federal Land Bank mortgage, though using a different arr rangement of the government numbers.

' In due course the probate court made an order of sale in which the land as described in the petition was used, which description was correct. The notice of the sale contained the same correct description.

Before the date of sale the attorney for the administrator wrote the bank advising it of .the proposed sale and that they may sell it subject to the mortgage, and asked for an exact description as set forth in the bank’s mortgage and for the amount of the debt. The bank replied giving the amount of the debt and advising the attorney the book and page of the record of its mortgage. The attorney in a few days wrote the bank that, on the day before he had offered for sale the land “on which’ you hold a mortgage” subject to your mortgage, but received no bid and asked if the bank would like for him to show in the report by the administrator a bid from the bank in the amount of the mortgage debt, and enclosing a copy of the description of the land as same appears in the mortgage of record. That was the erroneous description contained in the mortgage executed by Lamb to the bank, of which error the bank did not then know. To this letter the bank answered offering to permit the report to show a bid for it in the total amount of the mortgage debt, and noted that the description which the attorney sent corresponded with that in the latter mortgage. The report of sale was then signed and sworn to by the administrator and filed May 12, 1945. It showed the bank as the purchaser at the named amount of its debt, but described it erroneously as set forth in the correspondence, so that instead of embracing the NW %; S 1/4 of NE 1/4; NE 1/4 of NE 1/4, section 18, Township 17, Range 28, it described it as NW 14 of S 14 of NE NE j4 °f NE 14 of section 18, Township 17, Range 28.

The report also stated that the sale was conducted fairly and honestly and in strict accordance with the orders of the court and that the amount paid was not greatly less than the actual value.

On May 31, 1945, the probate court entered a decree ordering a confirmation of the sale and in that decree the land in question was described as erroneously set forth in the report of the sale, and also adjudging that the bank had bid the amount of its mortgage debt and being the highest and best bidder the same was “knocked off” to it for such sum and that the amount bid was not greatly less than the actual value of same and that the sale was fairly and honestly conducted and ordered a confirmation thereof, and that the administrator make a deed to said land to the bank as the purchaser. On the same day, to wit, May 31, 1945, the administrator of said estate executed and delivered to the bank a deed conveying said land. but containing the same erroneous description as set forth in the report of the sale and in the order of confirmation. This deed was duly recorded. The deed also recited that the amount of the bid as specified was the balance of the mortgage debt.

That status remained until the 30th day of August, 1945, on which day the petitioner as administrator of said estate filed a petition in the circuit court in equity in the county where the administration was pending, alleging that it was necessary to quiet the title to the land in question describing it as set forth in the report of the sale, alleging that the land was sold on the order of the court for the payment of the debts and was “knocked off” to the bank as the highest and best bidder and that the deed to the bank was ordered to be made containing said description and alleging *122 that petitioner desires that said description be construed and it be determined how many acres of land were conveyed by it and prayed that the administration be transferred to the court of equity and for general relief.

On September 6, 1945, the judge of the circuit court in equity having jurisdiction in that county made an order that said cause be then and there transferred from the probate court to the circuit court, in equity, of Russell County.

The bank thereupon filed an answer and cross-bill which was subsequently amended setting out a history of the transaction, as above stated, alleging that the description of the land in question contained in the mortgage from Lamb to it was erroneous, that after the words “NW y¿' it was intended that there be a semicolon instead of the word “of” which makes a material change in the amount of the land proposed to be included. That the attention of the bank was first called to such error upon the filing of the petition by the administrator for the removal of the cause and for what may be termed a declaratory judgment interpreting the proceedings of the probate court for the sale of said land, as we have outlined. The cross-bill prayed the court to make and enter a decree correcting the description contained in the proceedings, including the deed for the sale of said land, so that instead of being for the NW % of S ^ of NE *4, it be made to read NW *4 and S Y¿ of NE

The cause came on for hearing before the judge of the circuit court, in equity, of Russell County, and was submitted on December 15, 1948, on an agreed statement of facts. Counsel for each party filing his note of testimony. The court on the 17th day of December, 1948, entered its final decree, the substance of which was to correct the description so as to make it describe the land as prayed for in the cross-bill, ratifying and confirming said sale and decreeing that the same vested title to the land in said bank on account of the sum bid and ordering a copy of the decree filed for record in the office of the judge of probate of Russell County as sufficient without further act on the part of the administrator to correct the said error in the description-The administrator of the estate has -appealed from that decree.

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Bluebook (online)
43 So. 2d 116, 253 Ala. 119, 1949 Ala. LEXIS 206, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jarrell-v-farmers-nat-bank-of-opelika-ala-1949.