Sexton v. Harper

99 So. 89, 210 Ala. 691, 1924 Ala. LEXIS 51
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJanuary 24, 1924
Docket6 Div. 62.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 99 So. 89 (Sexton v. Harper) 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
Sexton v. Harper, 99 So. 89, 210 Ala. 691, 1924 Ala. LEXIS 51 (Ala. 1924).

Opinion

*692 ■MILLEE, J.

This is a bill in equity by M. I. Plarper and J. H. Mayfield against Mollie Sexton and W. H. Sexton, seeking to sell “under mortgage all of the land in the S. W. Y, of the N, W. Yi, section 36, which lies ■east of the Watermelon road in township 20, range 10, in Tuscaloosa county. The bill avers the defendants executed on November 5, 1921, the mortgage on the land to secure a ■debt to the First National Bank of Beform, .and shortly afterwards this bank duly and legally transferred for value the mortgage and the debt secured by it to the complainants. A decree pro confesso on personal service was duly and regularly rendered by the court against each defendant on May 8, 1923; testimony was afterwards taken by the complainants, and the cause was submitted in term time on the bill of complaint, de■cree pro confesso and testimony noted by the register. On May 10, 1923, the court by descree granted complainants relief, fixed the amount of the mortgage debt, including attorney’s fee, secured by it, at $783.20, and •ordered the land sold to pay this sum, unless the respondents paid it within 30 days from date.

On August 4, 1923, Henry A. Jones filed in this cause a supplemental bill against these ■defendants, Mollie Sexton and W. H. Sexton, averring that Henry A. Jones is the owner and assignee of the foregoing decree rendered in this cause, and the assignment and transfer of it to him by complainants is made an exhibit to his bill. It states he bought said decree at the request of the respondents; and, further, that the respondents did on February 16, 1922, execute a second mortgage on this land to S. B. Harris to secure a debt due him; and this mortgage, with the debt secured by it, was duly transferred by S. B. Harris to Plenry A. Jones. This note, and the mortgage securing it, and written transfer of both to the intervener, are attached, to his bill, as exhibits. This supplemental bill of Henry A. Jones seeks to have the land sold to pay the debt evi•denced by the decree of May 10, '1923, and to pay the debt evidenced by the note which is secured by this second mortgage on this land.

The defendants were each served, personally, with notice of this supplemental bill or petition of Henry A. Jones. A decree pro ■confesso was regularly rendered and duly entered in term time on September 10, 1923, by the court against each defendant. After this decree testimony in the cause was taken by this complainant,-and the cause was then submitted by complainant to the court for decree in term time on “supplemental bill, •decree pro confesso against the defendants; deposition of Eobisofi Brown, entire court file in this case, with exhibits,” as noted' by the register.

The court by decree on September 13, 1923, fixed the amount due Henry A. Jones under the Harris mortgage and the decree of May 10, 1923, including attorney’s fee secured by the Harris mortgage, at a total sum of $954.-60; declared it was a lien under the.mortgages on the land; directed the land to be sold by the register to pay it, unless the respondents paid within five days from date of the decree this sum together with the costs of the cause.

The land was duly advertised and sold by the register as the decree directed, on October 15, 1923, T. A. Eice becoming the purchaser at such sale for $1,161 cash; the pur-, chase price was paid to the register; the sale, purchaser, and price together with its payment was reported by the register to the court, and the court by decree directed a conveyance of the land to be made by the register to the purchaser.

This appeal is prosecuted by Mollie Sexton from these decrees; she alone appeals and assigns errors.

Appellant insists the court erred in rendering the decrees of sale, one (iated May 10, 1923, and the other September 13, 1923, because the cause was submitted by the respective complainants for decree to the court, without filing a written request with the register therefor under section 3164 of the Code of 1907, as amended in Gen. Acts 1915, p. 606.

Whenever a cause is ready for submission under the terms, facts, and conditions mentioned in this section (3164, Code, supra), as amended, and the complainant “shall file a written request with the. register or clerk where the cause is pending that the cause be submitted for final decree and shall make out his note of testimony,” it becomes then the duty of the register or clerk to at once deliver all papers in the cause to the judge, and it becomes then the duty of the judge as soon as practicable to render a final decree in the cause, and return the same to the register, etc. But this section, as amended, does not prohibit the court in term time from receiving an oral submission of such a cause by the complainant on testimony as noted by the register, as the record shows was done in these causes.

When these causes were submitted and when these decrees were rendered, the circuit court was open for the transaction of, any and all business or judicial proceedings of every kind. Act approved September 22, 1915 (Gen. Acts 1915, p. 707). These decrees were Ijot improperly rendered by the court because the respective complainants did not file in writing a request with the register or clerk that the respective causes be submitted for final decree. This was not necessary for the validity of either decree. Section 3164, *693 as amended by Acts 1915, p. 606; Act of 1915, Gen. Acts 1915, pp. 707, 708.

In tbe original and supplemental bills personal notice was given each defendant of tbe different causes as the statute requires; and a decree pro confesso was regularly and duly rendered by the court in term time against each defendant in both causes. The allegations of this bill and the allegations of the supplemental bill, under these decrees pro confesso, are to be regarded as admitted by each of these defendants, because it is not a bill for divorce, and they are not infants, persons of unsound mind, executors, or administrators. Section 3163, Code 1907.

A note of testimony was filed by the complainants and noted by the register in the original and in the supplemental cause. The defendants made no defense, took no testimony, and submitted no evidence to be noted by the register. The original and supplemental bills, the decree pro confesso in them against each defendant, and the testimony in the cause were embraced in the respective notes of submission; the allegations in the original and supplemental bills are fully sustained and amply supported by the decrees pro confesso and the depositions mentioned in the respective notes of testimony; and the decree of May 10, 1923, in the original cause, and the decree of September 13, 1923, in the supplemental cause, were properly rendered by the court.

This land was advertised for sale by the register to be had under the decree of September 13, 1923, during the legal hours of sale on Monday, October 15, 1923. On that day, before the sale, the respondents filed in the cause a motion “to set aside and vacate the decrees pro confesso heretofore made, and entered in this cause, upon the grounds that the property described in and covered in the two mortgages, the subject of this suit, is the property of and the separate estate of Mollie Sexton.” The defendants on October 16, 1923, after the sale, filed another motion in the cause, to set aside and vacate the sale of the property to T. A.

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Bluebook (online)
99 So. 89, 210 Ala. 691, 1924 Ala. LEXIS 51, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sexton-v-harper-ala-1924.