Mixon v. Burleson
This text of 82 So. 98 (Mixon v. Burleson) 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.
Opinion
The facts being undisputed, the issue here presented is purely a question of law. Did defendant, by paying to A. P. Cooper and wife, who were subpurchasers under the mortgage foreclosure sale, the full amount required for redemption therefrom, and by obtaining from the Coopers a conveyance of the land, divest also from H. L. Cooper the estate in remainder vested in him by the grant from Palmer?
Defendant’s theory of the law is that any subpurchaser of land which has been sold under a mortgage is, as to redemption rights, subject to the law in force at the time of his purchase. This theory is founded in error. The true theory is that the purchaser at the foreclosure sale is subject, as to redemption rights, to the law in force at the time of his purchase. Hence, when S. B. Williams purchased at the foreclosure sale of January 8, 1908, the mortgagor’s, statutory right of redemption not then being assignable, the subsequent enactment of section 5746 of the Code of 1907, making such right assignable, was not retroactive upon that purchase, and did not subject the land to redemption by defendant, as assignee of the mortgagor.
The case of Cowley v. Shields, 180 Ala. 48, 60 South. 267, differs from the instant ease, in that there, although the mortgage was executed prior to the adoption of section 5746 of the Code, the foreclosure sale was after its adoption; and the decision was that the assignee of the mortgagor’s statutory right was entitled to redeem under that statute, on the principle that redemption rights were fixed by the law in force at the time of the sale. The phrase, “at the time of the sale,” obviously means, and could only mean, at the time of the foreclosure sale. It does not mean at the time of resale by the original purchaser to a subpurchaser, or by one subpurchaser to another. Clearly enough, the original purchaser conveys to his subpurchasers a title exactly as defeasible or as indefeasible as his own, and whoever was entitled by law to redeem at the time of his purchase was equally authorized to redeem from any one to whom his title was conveyed. And, equally, no one not entitled to redeem at that time could redeem from his subpurchaser. This necessarily results from the application of elementary principles which govern privies in estate.
Our conclusion is that defendant was not entitled to redeem the land, and that therefore neither the acceptance of the redemption money, nor the execution of the deed by A. P. Cooper and wife, divested H. L. Cooper’s estate in remainder; and, that estate being outstanding, plaintiff is entitled to recover for a breach of the covenants sued on.
In rendering judgment for defendant the trial court erred, and the judgment will be reversed, and the cause remanded for another trial.
Reversed and remanded.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
82 So. 98, 203 Ala. 84, 1919 Ala. LEXIS 139, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mixon-v-burleson-ala-1919.