Land v. Cooper

34 So. 2d 313, 250 Ala. 271, 1948 Ala. LEXIS 537
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedFebruary 26, 1948
Docket2 Div. 239.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 34 So. 2d 313 (Land v. Cooper) 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
Land v. Cooper, 34 So. 2d 313, 250 Ala. 271, 1948 Ala. LEXIS 537 (Ala. 1948).

Opinion

*273 SIMPSON, Justice.

The appellees are substituted plaintiffs, as the heirs and administrator of L. M. Cooper, the original plaintiff, who died in.testate after instituting this litigation to enforce a redemption in lands owned by his intestate father, W. P. Cooper, who predeceased L. M.

This is a second appeal and proceeds from the decree of the trial court overruling demurrer to the bill as last amended. The first appeal is reported in 247 Ala. 397, 24 So.2d 436, where some pertinent facts and principles of law were reviewed.

The case made by the bill is: W. P. Cooper mortgaged the lands in 1934 to Robert Land, the mortgage maturing November 1, 1934. Default, however, was not declared at maturity of the debt by any proceedings to foreclose, and on October 28, 1937, the mortgagor, W. P. Cooper and wife, and Robert Land entered into a written contract (exhibited) to sell to Long-Bell Lumber Company 666,000 feet of timber for a cash consideration of $2,000, with an additional option of the lumber company to cut mo-re timber at $3.00 a thousand feet. The $2,000 was paid to Land on the mortgage debt and the contract provided that should the company exercise its option to cut the additional footage, the first $700, with interest from the date of the contract, accruing from the additional cutting should be paid to Land in satisfaction of the balance of his mortgage debt and the remaining accruals should thereafter be paid to W. P. Cooper. The option of the lumber company to harvest the additional timber was for a period of five years from the date of the contract, October 28, 1937, and the timber contract, as averred, “was entered into at the request of respondent, Robert Land, for the purpose of paying and satisfying the said mortgage indebtedness and for the further purpose of arriving at and agreeing upon the balance due on said indebtedness by the said W. P. Cooper * * * the maturity date of said mortgage was on said date, to-wit, October 28, 1937, extended by the respondent, Robert Land, for five years from October 28, 1937 * * * and that the respondent, Robert Land, did on said date, to-wit, October 28, 1937, agree with W. P. Cooper not to foreclose said mortgage until five years from said date * *

W. P. Cooper died inféstate in 1938, survived by his widow and ten children, including the plaintiff son, L. M. Cooper. Land, in disregard of the alleged extension agreement, foreclosed his mortgage August 23, 1939, becoming the purchaser at the foreclosure sale, though the lumber company had the right until October, 1942, to exercise the option to cut the additional timber which was ample in supply to furnish sufficient returns to pay off the balance of the mortgage.

L. M. Cooper filed this suit August 14, 1941, to set aside the mortgage foreclosure as void because prematurely made and to enforce his equity of redemption as an heir of his dead father, W. P. Cooper, or, *274 in the alternative, should the foreclosure be declared valid, he offered to do equity and to redeem from the, foreclosure sale by paying the amount legally due. Pending this suit, and in 1941, this original plaintiff, L. M. Cooper, died intestate and the present appellants, who are his heirs and personal representative, have been substituted as plaintiffs and seek to carry on the litigation.

It is quite clear from a study of the first Land v. Cooper case, supra, that the only aspect of the bill containing equity is that which seeks to set aside the mortgage foreclosure sale as prematurely made and to enforce the equity of redemption. We have again accorded studious consideration to the principles declared in the first case and are convinced that the holdings announced are sound. It results, therefore, as we shall first show, that the phase of the bill seeking to enforce the statutory right of redemption on the part of the substituted plaintiffs is without equity and the decree of the trial court holding to the contrary must be reversed.

The opinion on the first appeal took note of the unwavering line of decisions of this court, the last being Land v. Cooper, 244 Ala. 141, 12 So.2d 410, that the statutory right of redemption was a personal privilege and not property nor the right of property, was therefore not descendable and being only a personal privilege and not a property right, “L. M. Cooper’s statutory right of redemption died with him, and a bill pending at the time of his death, seeking to exercise that right was abated by his death.” 247 Ala. 400, 24 So.2d 439. The suit as well as the cause of action therefore abated at the death of the original plaintiff and was not the subject of revival under the law as it then existed.

The argument is advanced by learned counsel that Act No. 708, H. 276, Gen.Acts 1947, p. 543, averts the operation of the principle in the present litigation and gives this phase of the bill equity. The contention cannot be sustained.

The pertinent provisions of the Act are:

“Section 1. All suits pending in a court of equity shall survive in favor of and against the heirs, successors, or personal representative of any deceased party to such suit.
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“Section 3. This Act shall become effective upon its passage by the Legislature and approval thereof by the Governor and shall apply to all suits now pending in a court of equity as well as those hereafter instituted therein. * * * ”

Manifestly the Act cannot operate on a suit or cause of action which had been abated by operation of law years before its enactment, for the suit, when the Act came into existence, was not then pending as a justiciable cause of action. The action and the right to maintain it, as observed in the opinion on the first appeal, died with the original plaintiff and on his death was then abated, and a later enactment could not give them life. In analyzing the statute’s application, the distinction between the survival of the action and the cause of action (Wynn v. Tallapoosa County Bank, 168 Ala. 469, 490 et seq., 53 So. 228) is unimportant since the suit, as well as the right of action, ceased and terminated by, the death of the only one who at that time had the right to transact it, and no subsequent legislation could have revived or possibly given life to such a status. 12 Corpus Juris 977, § 570; 16 C.J.S., Constitutional Law, § 264, points up the correct principle where it is said that “it is beyond the power of the legislature to revive an action which has abated prior to the passage of the statute.”

One constitutional objection to the application of the statute here is immediately apparent, without considering any other.

When the case ended on the death of the plaintiff (L. M. Cooper) the right to maintain it also ended and was then extinguished. The two-year statutory right of redemption had then long since run and a full title to the property, unfettered by any such right, at that time vested in Robert Land as absolute owner. No retrospective legislation could effectively enfetter that title by taking away from Land the absolute ownership by reviving the dead right. To permit such would be an invasion of the plainest sort of property rights and unlawfully divest an owner of *275 title to real estate.

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Bluebook (online)
34 So. 2d 313, 250 Ala. 271, 1948 Ala. LEXIS 537, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/land-v-cooper-ala-1948.