Trauner v. Lowrey

369 So. 2d 531
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedFebruary 9, 1979
Docket77-338, 77-338X
StatusPublished
Cited by44 cases

This text of 369 So. 2d 531 (Trauner v. Lowrey) 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
Trauner v. Lowrey, 369 So. 2d 531 (Ala. 1979).

Opinion

This is an appeal from an action filed in the Circuit Court of Mobile County by appellants, Paul Trauner and Vernon Trauner, seeking declaratory relief and an in personam bill to quiet title. The controversy is based upon the rival claims of the Trauners and the appellees, Ernestine Higdon Lowrey and others claiming title through Lowrey Eastland, to the mineral rights to certain property located in Mobile County, Alabama. Oil was discovered in this area around 1974. After a trial on the merits, the trial court rendered judgment in favor of Lowrey finding no title in the minerals under the land in question in the Trauners.

The Trauners filed a motion to vacate or alter judgment. The trial court set aside its decree and entered an opinion and order containing substantially the same conclusions of law as its original decree but deleting the findings of fact. The Trauners appeal from the judgment, and a cross-appeal was filed by Lowrey based upon the trial court's deletion of the findings of fact in the final decree. We reverse on the appeal and affirm on the cross-appeal.

Both parties base their claims to the mineral rights upon the facts found in the record chain of title. The pertinent conveyances and contentions of the parties as to those conveyances are described below:

(1) William Maddox and his wife, Gwendolyn, owning the full fee simple title to 120 acres of land, executed a mortgage dated May 11, 1948, conveying the entire property in favor of Charles G. Hackmeyer.

(2) On July 3, 1948, William Maddox and his wife, Gwendolyn, executed an instrument to Lowrey Eastland which read in part:

. . . William Maddox and Gwendolyn Maddox . . . hereby grant, sell and convey unto Lowrey Eastland . . an undivided one-half (1/2) of their one-eighth (1/8) royalty interest. . . .

This deed further provided:

This grant is further subject to a mortgage executed by the Grantors to Charles Hackmeyer, dated May 11, 1948, and recorded in Mortgage Book 263 N.S. page 197, Probate Records of Mobile County, Alabama. . . . (Emphasis supplied).

Based upon the Hackmeyer mortgage and the language in the deed to Eastland with emphasis on the words "subject to a mortgage," the Trauners contend that they conveyed an equity of redemption to Eastland in the mineral rights in question.

(3) The Hackmeyer mortgage was foreclosed on June 27, 1949, and Charles Hackmeyer purchased the property at the foreclosure sale on July 7, 1949. The Trauners contend that Eastland's interest was extinguished by this foreclosure combined with the failure to exercise the statutory right of redemption he had as grantee of the mortgagor.

(4) By warranty deed dated August 11, 1950, Hackmeyer conveyed the entire 120 acres to Lula M. Collins (sister of William Maddox), et al. At the time of this conveyance the statutory period of redemption under Ala. Code Tit. 7 § 727 (Recomp. 1953) had not yet expired as to Maddox and Eastland.

(5) The next instrument pertinent to the issue in this case is a warranty deed from Lula M. Collins, et al., to William and Gwendolyn Maddox dated August 11, 1952, conveying the entire 120 acres. This is the crucial transaction in the case. Appellees contend that by the doctrine of estoppel to assert after-acquired title, this conveyance vested title in Lowrey Eastland and his subsequent grantees. Appellants claim that this doctrine is not applicable. By the time of this conveyance the statutory period for redemption had expired.

(6) The Trauners purchased, through mesne conveyances, approximately 25 acres of the original 120 acre tract. They hold a warranty deed from Charles E. Pierce and Shirley L. Pierce dated September 12, 1966.

To establish the rights of the parties to the property in question, we must determine the nature of the estate conveyed by a deed expressly made "subject to" a mortgage and what effect, if any, the doctrine *Page 534 of estoppel to assert after-acquired title has on the facts given.

Alabama classifies itself as a "title" state with regard to mortgages. Execution of a mortgage passes legal title to the mortgagee. Lloyd's of London v. Fidelity SecuritiesCorporation, 39 Ala. App. 596, 105 So.2d 728 (1958); Moorer v.Tensaw Land Timber Co., 246 Ala. 223, 20 So.2d 105 (1944);Jones v. Butler, 286 Ala. 69, 237 So.2d 460 (1970). The mortgagor is left with an equity of redemption, but upon payment of the debt, legal title revests in the mortgagor. §35-10-26, Code 1975. The equity of redemption may be conveyed by the mortgagor, and his grantee secures only an equity of redemption. McDuffie v. Faulk, 214 Ala. 221, 107 So. 61 (1926). The payment of a mortgage debt by the purchaser of the equity of redemption invests such purchaser with the legal title.Denman v. Payne, 152 Ala. 342, 44 So. 635 (1907). The equity of redemption in either case, however, is extinguished by a valid foreclosure sale, and the mortgagor or his vendee is left only with the statutory right of redemption. § 6-5-230, Code 1975;McDuffie, supra.

In McKleroy v. Dishman, 225 Ala. 131, 134, 142 So. 41, 43 (1932), with regard to a mortgagor's grantee taking subject to the mortgage, this Court stated:

The grantee would take only the equity of redemption, with the right, at his option, to protect his estate by a removal of the mortgage incumbrance. The grantors would remain the sole debtors to the mortgagee; but, if required to pay same, the estate of the mortgagee would revest in them. The grantee of the equity of redemption only could not take a complete unincumbered estate without paying the mortgage debt to whom it inured.

In McKleroy the plaintiff sought and obtained reformation of an instrument so as to disclose that property was conveyed subject to a mortgage and not assuming the mortgage debt. In the above quotation the Court explained the state of contractual relations between the parties after the reformation.

Appellees contend that Maddox purported to convey an unencumbered interest in the property because the qualifying clause was in a separate paragraph from the granting clause. We disagree. This position goes against the basic rules of construction. "In construing the deed, the duty devolves upon the court to ascertain as far as possible the grantor's intention, and in the performance of this duty to look at the whole conveyance." Cobbs v. Union Naval Stores Co., 202 Ala. 333,334, 80 So. 415, 416 (1918). In the deed from Maddox to Eastland, following the granting clause and description were the words "this grant is further subject to a mortgage." InToney v. Dewey, 201 Ala. 533, 78 So. 887 (1918), it was held that where the words "this conveyance is made subject to a mortgage" followed the granting clause and description, only the equity of redemption was conveyed, because the property was subject to the mortgage.

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Bluebook (online)
369 So. 2d 531, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trauner-v-lowrey-ala-1979.