Williams v. Wilson

87 So. 549, 205 Ala. 119, 1920 Ala. LEXIS 390
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedDecember 16, 1920
Docket8 Div. 291.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 87 So. 549 (Williams v. Wilson) 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
Williams v. Wilson, 87 So. 549, 205 Ala. 119, 1920 Ala. LEXIS 390 (Ala. 1920).

Opinion

McCLELLAN, J.

Bill by appellant to dis-affirm foreclosure sale under the power in mortgages and to redeem in virtue of the equity of redemption, upon the ground that the purchaser, averred to have stood in the relation of a mortgagee trustee (for that purpose), was not authorized by the mortgages to* buy at the foreclosure sale.

•Demurrers to the bill by several of the defendants were sustained, and the appeal is from that decree. The substance of the demurrers will be reproduced in the report of the appeal.

An accurate statement of the facts alleged in the bill and their legal effects will remove the bases for some phases of the discussion in the briefs of the respective solicitors. On January 8, 1889, Charles Mac Smith executed a mortgage on the land in question to, Burgess, to secure a note maturing December 25, 1889. On an unaverred date, prior to December 3, 1904 (the date of the foreclosure sale), this mortgage was assigned and transferred to Wilson Bros. & Co.

On December 31, 1889, Charles Mac-Smith executed to Wilson Bros. & Co. a mortgage on the same land to secure a note maturing November 15, 1S90. This mortgage bears a credit indorsement under date December 8,1890.

On December 3, 1904, Wilson Bros. & Co. foreclosed under the power contained in both-of these mortgages, and Wilson & Oo. became , the purchaser a.t the sale.

[1] “Wilson Bros. & Co.,” mortgagee in one of the mortgages and assignee of the other, was a mercantile copartnership composed of James E. and Charles E. Wilson and W. A. Orman. “Wilson & Co.,” the purchaser at the foreclosure sale, was and is (presumably) a similar partnership composed of James E. and Charles E. Wilson. It thus áppears that the two Wilsons were at the time in question partners in both firms, the mortgagee-assignee firm and the firm purchasing at the foreclosure sale. The bill avers:

“The mortgages on which foreclosure was attempted did not provide that mortgagees might purchase at their own sale; whereas James E. Wilson and Charles E. Wilson, doing business as Wilson & Co., attempted to purchase at the mortgage sale conducted by themselves as members of the partnership of Wilson Bros. & Co.”

Now, as to appellant’s (complainant’s) relation to the mortgagor, the mortgagor’s relation to the land, and the appellant’s right to the relief sought, the following are the averments of fact appearing in the bill; Charles Mac Smith, the mortgagor, died “during or about the year 1899,” when the appellant (complainant), his grandson, was “only a few months old,” the appellant attaining his majority in June, 1919, and filing this bill February 11, 1920. Charles Mac-Smith was, the bill avers, “in the lawful possession” of the land “at the time of his death.” It appears expressly from the allegations of the bill that appellant (complainant), intestate’s grandson, and a son of Challes Mac Smith, deceased, “constituted, were and *121 now are all the heirs at law of the said” mortgagor. The effect of this averment was to exclude any implication that appellant’s (complainant’s) parent, the child of the mortgagor, was in life when the mortgagor died.

[2] There is in the bill no impeachment of the validity of the foreclosure sale under the powers of sale in the mortgages, the primary object of the bill being directed to disaffirmance on the single ground stated and then redemption under the thus revived equity of redemption. Pitts v. Mortgage Co., 157 Ala. 56, 60, 47 South. 242.

[3-6] If otherwise so entitled, an heir at law may seasonably disaffirm a voidable foreclosure sale under the power in a mortgage and redeem. Rainey v. McQueen, 121 Ala. 191, 194, 25 South. 920. Twenty years from the date of the sale under the power, not from the date or the law day of the mortgage, is the period during which those under disability, and so otherwise entitled, may disaffirm a foreclosure sale, under the power, where the mortgagee or one standing in his relation purchases thereat without authority to do so given in the mortgage; infant heirs having 2 years after attaining their majority to disaffirm and redeem, provided, as stated, this is done within 20 years from the date of the sale. Alexander v. Hill, 88 Ala. 487, 7 South. 238, 16 Am. St. Rep. 55, Pitts v. Mortgage Co., supra, Lovelace v. Hutchinson, 106 Ala. 417, 17 South. 623, and Sharp v. Blan ton, 194 Ala. 460, 69 South. 889, among others. If in point of fact, contrary to the effect of the averments of this bill, appellant’s (complainant’s) parent survived the date of the foreclosure sale, then the doctrine of Canty v. Bixler, 185 Ala. 109, 64 South. 583, will deserve consideration. The appellant’s bill having been filed within less than a year after he attained his majority and within 16 years after the foreclosure sale in 1904, neither laches or staleness of the demand nor any limitation predicated of mere lapse of time rendered this bill subject to grounds of demurrer taking those objections. If appellant (complainant) had been sui juris for the period of 10 years after the death of his grandfather and the possession of the land had been held by the mortgagee and the successors of the mortgagee for 10 years under the circumstances stated in Dixon v. Hayes, 171 Ala. 498, 500, 55 South. 164, his right to redeem would have become barred. The doctrine of the cited decision and others in its line are without application to the cause made by the present-bill.

With reference to the insistence for appellees that subsequent (to the foreclosure sale) grantees, made respondents in the cause, should be held to be entitled to the protection accorded innocent purchasers for value, it is to be noted: First, that no specific ground of the demurrers asserts this defensive matter; and, second, that the allegations of fact in the bill are not sufficient to render demurrer an appropriate means of presenting that defensive matter for consideration. This court has recently made pronouncement of the governing principles that may, if this contention is properly pleaded, be of service in determining the rights of such subsequent grantees.

[7, 8] In respect of a power to foreclose a mortgage by a sale of the property described therein, a mortgagee or an assignee of the mortgage is a trustee, who cannot become purchaser at such sale in the absence of authority so to do (Pitts v. Mortgage Co., supra; 1 Perry on Trusts [5th Ed.] § 199; 3 Jones on Mort. [7th Ed.] § 1876; 1 R. C. L. p. 609 et seq; 1 Beach on Trusts, § 180); this for the reason, among others attributable to the law’s exaction of a very high degree of fidelity on the part of a trustee in the discharge of a trust, that the mortgagee, or his assignee, cannot be both the seller and the buyer at the foreclosure sale. Where the trustee of the power does buy at the foreclosure sale, the sale is not void but voidable only. This prohibition forbids such an unauthorized purchase either directly or indirectly by the party invested with the power. Authorities supra.

[9,10] At common law a partnership is not a natural person or an artificial entity. Lister v. Vowell, 122 Ala. 264, 25 South. 564; Phillips v. Holmes, 165 Ala. 250, 51 South. 625. For certain purposes only is a partner ship regarded as an entity distinct from its members.

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Bluebook (online)
87 So. 549, 205 Ala. 119, 1920 Ala. LEXIS 390, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-wilson-ala-1920.