Ritter v. Moseley

148 So. 143, 226 Ala. 648, 1933 Ala. LEXIS 420
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedMarch 30, 1933
Docket6 Div. 268.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 148 So. 143 (Ritter v. Moseley) 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
Ritter v. Moseley, 148 So. 143, 226 Ala. 648, 1933 Ala. LEXIS 420 (Ala. 1933).

Opinion

BROWN, Justice.

This is a statutory action in the nature of an action of ejectment by the appellant against the appellee to recover possession of “lot 4, according to Wm. Hall’s Subdivision as shown on Map Book 3, on page 40, in the office of the Probate Judge of Jefferson County, Alabama, which said Lot fronts forty-two (42) feet on the North side of Eleventh Avenue, North, and extends back of uniform width along the West side of Lawn Street one hundred forty (140) feet, situated in Jefferson County, Alabama.”

On the trial the defendant pleaded the general issue, 'not guilty, and there was a verdict and judgment for the defendant.

The plaintiff, to establish a legal title in himself, offered the following evidence:

First, a mortgage embracing said lot, executed by the defendant and her husband, J. D. Moseley, to Ida B. Culpepper Greene on the 24th day of February, 1926, to .secure an indebtedness of $700, evidenced by a note of the same date, due and payable two years after date. The power of sale embodied in the mortgage was in the following language: “Should default be made in the payment of any sum expended by the said Ida B. Culpepper Greene, or should said note or any part thereof, or interest thereon, remain unpaid at maturity, or should the interest of said Ida B. Culpepper Greene or her assigns in said property become endangered by reasons of the enforcement of any prior lien or incumbrance thereon, so as to endanger the debt hereby secured,_ then in any one of said events the whole of said indebtedness shall at once become due and payable, and this mortgage *651 be subject to foreclosure as now provided by law in ease of past due mortgages, and the said Ida B. Culpepper Greene, her agents or assigns, shall be authorized to take possession of the premises hereby conveyed, and after giving thirty days notice by publication once a week for three consecutive weeks, of the time, place, and terms of sale by publication in some newspaper published at Birmingham, Jefferson County, Alabama, in said County and State, to sell the .same in front of the Court House door of said County, at public outcry, to the highest bidder for cash, and apply the proceeds of said sale, first, to the expense of advertising, selling and conveying, including a reasonable attorney’s fee; and second, to the payment of any amounts that may have been expended or that may then be necessary to expend, in paying insurance, taxes or other incumbrances, with interest thereon; and third, to the payment of said note in full, whether the same shall or shall not have fully matured at the date of said sale; but no interest shall be collected beyond the day of sale; and fourth, the balance, if any, to be turned over to the said N. W. Embry Moseley and J. D. Moseley, and ’tis further agreed that said Ida B. Culpepper Gxeene, her agents or assigns may bid at said sale and purchase said property, if the highest bidder therefor.” (Italics supplied.)

Second, the assignment of the note and mortgage and the debt secured thereby in the following words: “For value received, I, the undersigned, Ida B. Culpepper Greene, do hereby grant, bargain, sell and convey and transfer to Ritter, Wynn & Carmichael the within mortgage, the debts secured thereby and the note evidencing said debt.” (Italics supplied.) This transfer purports to have been executed on September 27,1927, and was signed by the mortgagee and her signature witnessed by two witnesses.

Third, a deed purporting on its face to be executed to correct the description of a deed theretofore executed by the mortgagors, N. W. Embry Moseley and J. D. Moseley, on the 25th of May, 1928, “by I. D. Hobbs, their attorney-in-fact,” to the plaintiff, C. D. Ritter, said deed, after reciting the steps taken to foreclose, the sale “by I. D. Hobbs as auctioneer and agent for the transferees or assigns,” on May T8, 1928, the purchase by C. D. Ritter, the highest bidder, at $860 and its payment, etc.,' and the execution of the former deed, concludes: “Now, therefore, in consideration of the premises, we, the said N. W. Embry Moseley and J. D. Moseley, by their attorney-in-fact, said I. D. Hobbs, do hereby grant, bargain, sell and convey unto the said C. D. Ritter the following described real estate [describing the lot in suit]. To have and to hold, to the said C. D. Ritter, his heirs and assigns forever. Witness our hand's and seals, this the 17th day of April, 1929. (Signed) N. W. Embry Moseley, (L. S.), J. D. Moseley, (L. S.), By J. D. Hobbs, Their Attorney-in-fact.”

The certificate of acknowledgment is to the effect that “I. D. Hobbs, whose name is signed to the foregoing conveyance as attorney-in-fact for N. W. Embi;y Moseley and J. D. Moseley,” as such attorney in fact for N. W. Embry Moseley and J. D. Moseley, and in “their name and behalf, executed the said conveyance voluntarily on the day the same bears date.”

Fourth, the notice of foreclosure published “in the Weekly Call, a newspaper published at Birmingham, Alabama,” appearing in the issues of April 14, April 21, and April 28, 1929, advertising the property for sale May 17, 1928, at the door of the courthouse in Jefferson county, Ala., by “Ritter, Wynn & Carmichael, transferors of said mortgage.”

The plaintiff testified that he was the senior member of the firm of Ritter, Wynn & Carmichael; that he knew the handwriting of Ida B. Culpepper Greene, and that the signature on the back of the note and to the transfer was her signature; that he received the mortgage with the “purported assignment attached to it, as is now attached, about the last of September, or the first of October, 1927, and has had it ever since.” The plaintiff also proved the rental value of the property as from $15 to $20 per month.

The plaintiff, on cross-examination, testified that the note and mortgage were not delivered to the firm of Ritter, Wynn & Carmichael for collection, but defendant offered in evidence the letter accompanying the delivery of the note and mortgage and the transfer, admitted to be such by the plaintiff, which concluded: “In accordance with suggestion in your present letter, I am enclosing mortgage deed and note described in my letter of August 27, 1927, together with assignment and indorsement. Please collect interest which was due August 24, 1926, and hold papers for collection of principal and1 interest due February 24, 1928.” This letter was signed by the attorney of the mortgagee residing in Detroit, Mich.

The defendant also offered evidence tending to show that the defendant, acting in her own behalf and as the administratrix of her husband’s estate, he having died in the year 1926, had made repeated efforts to pay the mortgage debt, and was ready, willing, and able to pay the same; that she had attempted to intervene in a divorce proceeding between the mortgagee and her husband, and paid the money into court, even before the debt was due, and had made other efforts to protect her home covered by the mortgage, worth something like $6,000; that the mortgagee was willing to settle for the amount due with interest, and that the defendant was ready and willing to pay the same, and that such *652 settlement was prevented by the attitude of (lie plaintiff, who claimed that the said Ida B.

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Bluebook (online)
148 So. 143, 226 Ala. 648, 1933 Ala. LEXIS 420, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ritter-v-moseley-ala-1933.