Malone v. Nelson

167 So. 714, 232 Ala. 243, 1936 Ala. LEXIS 201
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedApril 23, 1936
Docket8 Div. 649.
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 167 So. 714 (Malone v. Nelson) 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
Malone v. Nelson, 167 So. 714, 232 Ala. 243, 1936 Ala. LEXIS 201 (Ala. 1936).

Opinions

Bill to effectuate statutory right of redemption.

It appears from the averments of the bill that Mrs. Daisy W. Malone, and her husband, W. W. Malone, executed a mortgage on January 1, 1924, on certain lands in Limestone county to the First Joint Stock Land Bank, of Montgomery, to secure an indebtedness of $8,000; that the said Daisy W. Malone made default in the payment of certain installments, and the said First Joint Stock Land Bank did, on June 28, 1932, after said defaults occurred, foreclose said mortgage under the power of sale contained therein, and at the foreclosure sale the mortgagee purchased the property for the sum of $6,500, and a deed was duly executed to it on its purchase.

The bill shows that the foreclosure was in all respects regular, and was sufficient to cut off the equity of redemption of the mortgagors. *Page 245

It further appears from the averments of the bill that on the 30th day of August, 1932, the said First Joint Stock Land Bank, purchaser at the foreclosure sale, sold and conveyed the property to Sophie Nelson, Luella H. Bowen, and Lu Ellen Schram Woodroof, three of the respondents, at and for the sum of $4,250.

On June 12, 1934, the complainant, a son of Mrs. Daisy W. Malone, desiring to redeem the property, made written demand upon all the respondents for a statement in writing of the debt and all lawful charges claimed by them, in all respects as provided by section 10144 of the Code.

The penultimate paragraph of the demand reads: "The reason the notice is given to George Rudder is because I have heard that he bought or contracted to buy said place or a part thereof but there is no deed on record showing any such transaction."

To this demand, on June 20, 1934, Thomas S. Woodroof, as attorney for all the respondents, including the said Rudder, replied, and furnished complainant a written itemized statement of the debt and lawful charges claimed by the respondents to be due and payable in order to effectuate redemption.

The said W. W. Malone, Jr., not being satisfied with, but disputing, the correctness of the claimed amounts, both as to the debt and the value of the permanent improvements, as well as other items claimed as lawful charges, filed this bill against the respondents (including Rudder), seeking a judicial ascertainment of the debt and all lawful charges, offering to pay the same, and praying to be allowed to redeem the property on payment of the amount the court might find to be due and owing.

Complainant is a child of Mrs. Malone, the mortgagor-owner of the property, and it is in his right as such child, that he asserts the statutory right of redemption. Section 10140, Code. He has such right.

As we now view Braly v. Polhill (Ala. Sup.) 166 So. 419,1 it failed to properly interpret the statute, and to give due emphasis to the change made by the interpolation of the word "child." Said case is modified in so far as it holds that a child of the mortgagor, to redeem, must show an interest in the property at the time of the foreclosure.

The sufficiency of the bill is not questioned.

The respondents, separately and severally, answered the bill. In their answer, the respondents aver and state that the property was conveyed to the said Sophie Nelson, Luella H. Bowen, and Lu Ellen Schram Woodroof jointly by the said First Joint Stock Land Bank, after the foreclosure had taken place. The deed of conveyance does not appear in the evidence, but the bill avers that one was executed by the First Joint Stock Land Bank to the three named purchasers.

From their answer it appears that the said three named purchasers, in October, 1932, and after their acquisition of the property, entered into what they termed a rent and sale contract with the respondent George Rudder, by the terms of which, upon the payment by Rudder of certain yearly installments, ending on January 1, 1943, the said purchasers agreed to convey the property to said Rudder. Rudder went into possession of the property under this contract and was in possession of it at the time of the filing of the bill, and at the time the decree was entered in the cause. The legal title to the property still remained, however, in the respondents Nelson, Bowen, and Woodroof.

In their answer, the respondents Nelson, Bowen, and Woodroof claimed and asserted "that at the time they purchased the property from the First Joint Stock Land Bank, and as a part of the consideration for the transaction, the balance due on the debt by the mortgagor, Daisy W. Malone, to the First Joint Stock Land Bank of Montgomery, was duly transferred" to them, and that they were and are owners of said balance due on the mortgage debt, and that the rent sale contract made with Rudder was made subject to the right of redemption.

From the evidence noted on the submission of the cause, it appears that the original indebtedness of Mrs. Malone to the First Joint Stock Land Bank was $8,000, bearing 6 per cent. interest, payable semi-annually; that on account of her default in payment of the indebtedness, the mortgagee foreclosed the mortgage on June 28, 1931; that the mortgagee purchased the property at and for the sum of $6,500; that prior to the foreclosure, the mortgagee, in order to redeem the property from the sale *Page 246 for taxes due the state and county, paid the state and county the taxes, the amount being $351.62; that thereafter state and county taxes were paid on the property for the years 1932 and 1933, amounting in the aggregate to $168.65.

From the evidence, it abundantly appears that the First Joint Stock Land Bank, as a part of the consideration of the transaction, obligated itself, by contract in writing, to transfer to the purchasers the balance of the unpaid mortgage indebtedness, and this it did, evidencing said act either by a transfer of the note secured by the mortgage, or by a delivery of the same to the purchasers.

One of the insistences here made is that the court erred in holding that the purchasers, Nelson, Bowen, and Woodroof, acquired the note evidencing the indebtedness by a proper transfer from the mortgagee; that Bowman, the president of said bank, was not shown to have authority to make the transfer. There is no merit in this contention. The contract provided that the balance of the debt was to be transferred to the purchaser. The deed was executed by the corporation-mortgagee pursuant to the contract, and the note evidencing the indebtedness was duly delivered to the purchasers, and it is of no moment, in this suit, whether the note was or was not transferred in such way as to carry the legal title. The delivery of the note, pursuant to the contract agreement, to the purchasers was sufficient to carry the equitable title to the purchasers, and to make it their property as to any balance due thereon. First National Bank v. Murphree, 218 Ala. 221,118 So. 404; Strickland Co. v. Lesesne Ladd, 160 Ala. 213,49 So. 233; McDonald v. McDonald, 215 Ala. 179, 110 So. 291; Lee v. Wimberly, 102 Ala. 539, 15 So. 444; Tison v. Citizens' Bank Security Co., 208 Ala. 111, 93 So. 857.

The balance of the indebtedness remaining unpaid from the proceeds of the foreclosure sale, with interest thereon at 8 per cent., was properly allowed the purchasers Nelson, Bowen, and Woodroof.

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Bluebook (online)
167 So. 714, 232 Ala. 243, 1936 Ala. LEXIS 201, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/malone-v-nelson-ala-1936.