Morris v. Waldrop

105 So. 172, 213 Ala. 435, 1925 Ala. LEXIS 358
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedMay 28, 1925
Docket6 Div. 431.
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 105 So. 172 (Morris v. Waldrop) 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
Morris v. Waldrop, 105 So. 172, 213 Ala. 435, 1925 Ala. LEXIS 358 (Ala. 1925).

Opinion

THOMAS, J.

The bill of interpleader by the clerk of the circuit court sought disposition of funds paid to him pursuant to proceedings by the city of Birmingham for condemnation of lands.

The suit was first instituted in the probate court. From the decree of that court, Mrs. Morris, appellant here, appealed to the circuit court, and the verdict of the jury assessed the damages to which defendants were entitled, “in proportion to their respective interests, for the taking by the city of Birmingham under its application for the lands therein described, at $2,250.” The amount of this judgment was paid to the clerk of the circuit court; hence the interpleader. The defendants named in that bill propounded their respective claims, in substantial compliance with the statute. Cloud v. Dean, 212 Ala. 305, 102 So. 437.

Mrs. McGlathery was the original owner of the land in question since the date of the Horton deed in 1896, and remained in possession thereof as a homestead until the house was destroyed by fire, in 1913. The house and lot were assessed as one tract of land for her by her agent for the year 1913. In a pending suit there was judgment nil dicit in favor of J. B.- and Mary J. Gorman against Mrs. McGlathery and husband; certificate thereof being recorded March 20, 1913. Two days thereafter a mortgage was executed by the McGlatherys to C/P. Beddow for $3,000, to provide funds to pay taxes for the previous year and a former mortgage, and on April 22d the' dwelling was destroyed by fire. The proceeds from the insurance were collected by or paid to said mortgagee, Beddow, leaving a small balance of accrued interest still unpaid. Such was dhe status of the property for the year 1913, in which the taxes were duly assessed, accrued, and unpaid, and which resulted in a tax sale of the property. .

The chronological history of the property, given by one of counsel, and sustained by the *437 record, for the year 1914, is as follows: On April 9th the tax collector for Jefferson county filed his delinquent docket with the probate judge of the county, showing delinquency in payment of taxes for the year 1913 on said property assessed to Mrs. D. R. McGlathery; notice issued and was served (Exhibit A) on her; date of hearing was fixed for May 11th; and on that date there was a due decree for the sale of said land for taxes made and entered by the probate judge. The property was sold June ISth for the taxes, and the state of Alabama became the purchaser, as shown by the certificate of Judge Styles, the probate judge (Exhibit E).

Thereafter, on May 27,. 1914, a credit of $335.98 was entered on the Gorman judgment by attorney for the Gormans on the judgment record of the same against the Mc-Glatherys. On September 8th execution, and September 25th levy, was sought to be enforced by the Gormans against the McGlatherys’ said lot. The McGlatherys filed a claim for exemption as homestead, which was disallowed by the court, and the lot was condemned and ordered sold for the satisfaction of the Gorman judgment.

The pleading as exhibited fails to disclose during the year 1915, activity as to said lot or proceedings affecting its title.

In the year 1916 W. A. Robertson- made application to purchase said lot to the state auditor, and it is shown that that official gave notice, dated June 27th, to Mrs. D. R. McGlathery, of the fact of that application, and that the same would be sold if not redeemed within 60 days, under the provisions of section 2324 of the Code of 1907. Exhibit B to the deposition of Eula R. Morris, the appellant, shows that she made application, through her attorney, to the state auditor, to purchase said lot under the provisions of said statute, and that reply was made thereto, informing her that her application was the “second application on filo” — the former application being that of Robertson, of which notice had been given by the auditor to the owner. The record further shows that on October 12, 1916, the state auditor’^ deed to said lot, reciting the facts in the premises, the decree of sale of May 11, 1914, etc., was made to the International Securities Corporation for the consideration of $182.08. which conveyance was duly authenticated, acknowledged, and recorded on October 17, 1916, as being in accordance with the provisions of chapter 45, art. 13, of the Code of 1907. A reconveyance of the lot, on October 14, 1916, by the International Securities Corporation to Eula R. Morris, duly acknowledged and recorded October 25, 1916, recited the consideration of $182 and other valuable consideration. This conveyance by that corporation was executed in its corporate name by J. E. B. Baugh, its vice president, countersigned by W. A. Robertson, its secretary and treasurer.

The history of the lot for 1917 is not shown. That for 1918 was: The institution by the city of condemnation proceedings in the probate court; appeal to the circuit court, where the judgment for $2,250 was rendered on Marcfi 11, 1919, and which amount was paid by the city to Waldrop, as clerk of the circuit court; the filing of the bill of inter-pleader by the clerx; and the payment of said funds to the register, June 25, 1919. The original parties defendant therein are O. P. Beddow (the mortgagee), Mrs. D. R. McGlathery (the original owner), Eula R. Morris (purchaser by mesne conveyance from tax sale by the state of Alabama), J. B. Gorman and Mary J. Gorman, the judgment creditors of the McGlatherys.

The appeal is taken from that decree, and was perfected in this court pursuant to statute by all the interested parties. L. & N. R. Co. v. Shikle, 206 Ala. 494, 90 So. 900.

The appellant Morris bases her claim upon her deeds • through the International Securities Corporation (Robertson), the state auditor, and tax sales pursuant to the statute as against the owner, Mrs. McGlathery. Mrs. Beddow, as executrix of O. P. Beddow, bases her claim upon an alleged balance due on the $3,000 mortgage, given by Mrs. Mc-Glathery and husband before the tax sale and after record of certificate of judgment by the Gormans. The claim of Mrs. Mc-Glathery rests upon the fact that the funds were the proceeds of the condemnation of her property by the city of Birmingham.

No insistence of error is made in this court by Mrs. Beddow, as executrix, and she is eliminated.

The controversy here is as to (1) the priority of Mrs. Morris’ claim and the amount thereof; (2) the rights of Mrs. McGlathery, as owner, to a part of the funds; and (3) the rights of the Gormans as judgment creditors.

We have examined the record, and hold that the debt, the foundation of the Gorman judgment, was that of the wife and the husband, and that she was liable to its payment under the authorities (Smith v. Rothschild & Co., 212 Ala. 276, 102 So. 206; Lester v. Jacobs, 212 Ala. 614, 103 So. 682). and was not suretyship in contravention of the statute (section 4497 of the Code of 1907). The copy of the proceedings in the circuit court showing judgment dated March 18, its record in the probate office March 20, 1913, the issue of execution thereon September 8, 1914, levy on said lot September 25, 1914, under the Gorman judgment, interposition of the claim for homestead by Mrs. McGlathery December 7, 1914, contest thereof and judgment thereon disallowing it May 20, 1918, and ordering the lot sold for the satis *438 faction of tlie Gorman judgment, Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
105 So. 172, 213 Ala. 435, 1925 Ala. LEXIS 358, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morris-v-waldrop-ala-1925.