Lamar v. Lincoln Reserve Life Ins. Co.

131 So. 223, 222 Ala. 60, 1930 Ala. LEXIS 494
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedNovember 20, 1930
Docket6 Div. 542, 542A.
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 131 So. 223 (Lamar v. Lincoln Reserve Life Ins. Co.) 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
Lamar v. Lincoln Reserve Life Ins. Co., 131 So. 223, 222 Ala. 60, 1930 Ala. LEXIS 494 (Ala. 1930).

Opinion

BROWN, J.

(after stating the facts).

The evidence, along with the admission of the answer of the defendant life insurance company, was prima facie sufficient to carry the burden to the defendant to establish its title or claim. Vidmer v. Lloyd, 193 Ala. 386, 69 So. 480, Ann. Cas. 1917A, 576.

All parties claim title under and through J. Frank Roberson, deceased, and, it appearing without dispute that the mortgage to the life insurance company was executed by Roberson and wife prior to the accrual of the rights of complainant Lamar, and those under whom he claimed, other than Roberson, to secure a loan of money actually advanced to Roberson, if said mortgage was filed for record in the proper recording office, the mortgage in connection with the evidence *64 showing the loan was sufficient to lift the burden of proof shifted to the defendant by the prima facie case made by complainant’s evidence. Code 1923, § 6856; Heflin & Phillips v. Slay, 78 Ala. 180; Truss et al., Executors, v. Harvey, 120 Ala. 636, 24 So. 927.

The appellant life insurance company insists that, by filing the mortgage for record with the judge of probate in Birmingham, it complied with the statute, and that its rights should not be prejudiced by the failure of the judge of probate to record the mortgage in the probate office in Bessemer.

The answer to this contention is the act approved September 16,1915, General-Acts 1915, pp. 549-553, the fourth section of which provides: “That all papers, documents and other things pertaining to the title to property that are authorized to be filed and recorded in any office in such county are hereby authorised and required to he filed and recorded in such offices of such officers at such place other than at the county site, as in this act provided for, if the property, affected thereby, or sought to be affected thereby is located within, or partly within the territory within which the cases arising therein may be tried in the circuit court or court of like jurisdiction at such place; provided, however, if such property is located partly within such territory, and partly within the remaining territory of such county, then such instrument, document or paper must be filed and recorded both in the office at the county site, and in such office at such place other than the county site as herein provided for, provided, further, that if such property is located partly within the territory herein provided for, and partly within some other county, then such instrument, document or paper may be recorded at the place herein provided for, and also in the proper office in the other ’county. Such records in either of the events in this section provided for shall operate in all respects just as though the same had been filed and recorded in the offices of the respective oilicers in the county site of such county. All such records so made shall be kept at the place herein provided for, and not at the county site. Provided that the deputy or officer in charge of such office shall, at the close of each day, make out and mail to the office at the county site, an abstract of all papers filed during that day affecting the title to property, which abstract shall state the character of the instrument, the names of the person or persons mentioned therein, the description.of the property affected thereby, the date thereof, and the consideration, and the probate judge shall keep a record of such abstracts at the county site.” (Italics supplied.)

Before the passage of the act under consideration by an act passed February 28, 1961 (Weekley’s Local Laws, Jefferson County, p. 115 et seq.), the county was divided1 into two judicial divisions.

An act With similar provisions relating to Blount county was before the court in Griffin v. Karter, 116 Ala. 160, 22 So. 484, litigation arising over a chattel mortgage, and it was there observed: “We construe the act of February 14, 1893, having relation to the recording of conveyances, etc., at Bangor, in Blount county, taken in connection with the act of February 13, 1891, dividing said county, for certain purposes, into two parts, to be known as the Eastern and Western divisions, respectively (Acts 1892-93, pp. 587-589; Acts 1890-91, pp. 592-594), to practically make two counties of the county of Blount for all the purposes of recording conveyances of real and personal property, and imputing notice of conveyances by the fact of registration. * * * These considerations enforce the conclusion that, after the passage of the act of 1893, there was no warrant of law for the registration of a mortgage, executed by a resident of the western division of Blount county on personal property at the time in said division, in the office of the judge of probate at Oneonta, on the books there kept for the Eastern division of said county, and that such registration of such mortgage did not import notice of its existence.”

The case at bar, in respect to the question now under consideration, is ruled by that decision, and it must be held that the filing of the mortgage in the probate office in Birmingham was without warrant of law, and such filing was inefficacious as importing notice of the existence of said mortgage.

The contention that the act is a local law and was passed in violation of the Constitution was considered in Board of Revenue of Jefferson County v. Huey, 195 Ala. 83, 70 So. 744, and the act was upheld. That decision has stood for more than a decade without question, and no doubt- rights have accrued and titles have been acquired on the faith of its soundness. The doctrine of stare decisis, therefore, forecloses further examination as to the constitutional integrity of the act on that- ground. Reynolds v. Lee, 180 Ala. 76, 60 So. 101; Board of Revenue of Shelby County v. Farson, Son & Co., 197 Ala. 375, 72 So. 613, L. R. A. 1918B, 881.

As between the complainant, Lamar, and the defendant, Lincoln Reserve Life Insurance Company, the averments of the statutory bill and the answer specifying and settling further “the title, claim, interest, or incumbrance so claimed,” in compliance with section 9907, presented every issue necessary to an adjudication of the claims of the parties, as to their respective, titles, claims, or incumbrances, and the extent thereof, including the claim of the complainant that he was a bona fide purchaser without notice. Reeder v. Cox, 218 Ala. 182, 118 So. 338.

The mortgage of the life insurance company having been executed prior to the ac *65 crual of the rights of Braley, Sullivan, and Florida P. Roberson, under whom the complainant claimed, the burden was on complainant to show purchase and payment in the first instance. This shown, the burden shifted to the defendant to show actual notice or its equivalent, knowledge of fact sufficient to put the complainant or his immediate predecessors in title, Braley and Sullivan, on inquiry, which, if followed up, would have brought knowledge of the mortgage. Reeder v. Cox, supra; Hatter et al. v. Quina et al., 216 Ala. 225, 113 So. 47; Ely v. Pace, 139 Ala. 298, 35 So. 877.

Though it be conceded that Florida P.

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Bluebook (online)
131 So. 223, 222 Ala. 60, 1930 Ala. LEXIS 494, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lamar-v-lincoln-reserve-life-ins-co-ala-1930.