Sheffey v. Davis
This text of 60 Ala. 548 (Sheffey v. Davis) 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
Motion was made in this case to quash executions, and the returns thereon, and to set aside a sale of land thereunder, on certain specified grounds. The court [551]*551sustained the entire motion, and the purchaser at the sale, plaintiff below, excepted. It is contended here that, inasmuch as the record fails to affirm that it contains all the evidence, we must presume the existence of a sufficient cause to justify the action of the court, even if the grounds stated in the motion be held insufficient. We can not assent to this. A motion is not, strictly, pleading; and, although a demurrer may sometimes be interposed to such motion when in writing, yet, in motions such as this, pleading is not necessary. We feel it our duty to presume, in the absence of some record averment to the contrary, that the action of the court was had on the motion copied in the record. Such action is, at most, but a response of the court to a motion made by counsel; and it would be a high-handed measure for a court to make an order unsettling titles to property, or destroying the evidence of title, without any motion therefor, and without stating any facts, or giving any reason for such decision. We will consider the judgment of the court as based on one or more of the grounds stated in the motion.
None of the grounds stated in the motion justified the ruling of the Circuit Court; and its judgment is reversed, and a judgment here rendered, overruling the motion made in the court below.
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