Magnolia Land Co. v. Malone Investment Co.
This text of 79 So. 641 (Magnolia Land Co. v. Malone Investment 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.
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The Malone Investment Company, averring that its assignor, W. N. Malone & Co., had done work and labor and furnished materials for the repair and improvement of two certain dwelling houses situated upon separate lots in the city of Birmingham, the property of Mrs. Jordan M. Greene, said repairs and improvements, Consisting in painting and papering said houses, putting in plumbing, replacing windows, renovating floors, and such other work and materials as were necessary to beautify and improve said houses -and make the same suitable for occupancy, filed this bill against Mrs. Greene to enforce affeged separate liens Under the statute made for the benefit of mechanics and materialmen. Code, § 4754 et seq. This combination in one suit of liens on separate properties is not questioned, and is made apparently in virtue of the local act of March 4,1901 (Terry’s Local Laws, p. 581). It was averred that the Mortgage Bond Company of New York and the Magnolia Land Company, respectively, held first and second mortgages on the lots at the time of the re: pairs and improvements in suit, and that, after complainant’s demand had accrued and before the filing of complainant’s statement for a lien, the Magnolia Land Company foreclosed its second mortgage, became the purchaser at said sale, and is now exercising ownership over the lots and the improvements thereon. It is averred that complainant’s work and labor was done and materials furnished with the knowledge of the Magnolia Land Company, but there is no averment of facts going to show that the company had in any way waived, surrendered, or otherwise prejudiced the priority which now, by demurrer to the amended bill, it claims as mortgagee. Its. demurrer being overruled, the Magnolia Land Company has appealed.
Parties in their briefs discuss the case of Wimberly v. Mayberry, 94 Ala. 240, 10 South. 157, 14 L. R. A. 305, and, as was the case in Jefferson County Savings Bank v. Ben F. Barbour P. & E. Co., 191 Ala. 238, 68 South. 43, to which the briefs refer, the court is asked to overrule that case (Wimberly v. Mayberry) on the point of difference among the then members of the court, or to hold that the change in the statute, noted in Jefferson County Savings Bank v. Ben F. Barbour Co., had effect, by legislative authority, to establish the minority opinion as the law of such cases. But again it is not necessary to decide that precise question.
Speaking for himself, the writer is still unable clearly to see how the remedy approved in Wimberly v. Mayberry can be administered in a case such as that was without impairing the contract rights of the prior mortgagee. But that is not this case. Appellant’s debt is due; its mortgage has been foreclosed, though that fact-is not conceived to be of importance. As against appellant, complainant, a subsequent incumbrancer, has the same substantive rights it had before, and the practical difficulty about the remedy has disappeared — that is, the lien of the complainant may be foreclosed subject to the lien of the mortgage — the property may be exposed for sale under the decree of the court and the proceeds applied (after costs), first, in satisfaction of the mortgage debt, then, in satisfaction of complainant’s lien. The demurrer was directed against the prayer for relief, rather than to the case averred, and, in any event, was properly overruled.
Affirmed.
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79 So. 641, 202 Ala. 157, 1918 Ala. LEXIS 335, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/magnolia-land-co-v-malone-investment-co-ala-1918.