Winter v. Dickerson

42 Ala. 92
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJanuary 15, 1868
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 42 Ala. 92 (Winter v. Dickerson) 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
Winter v. Dickerson, 42 Ala. 92 (Ala. 1868).

Opinion

A. J. WALKER, C. J.

Judgments were rendered in 1861 against James R. Dickerson, by a court of record, in Montgomery county. Upon these judgments executions issued in 1861, but none of them remained in the sheriff’s hands later than February, 1862. Executions were again issued upon those judgments in February and March, 1866. There was, therefore, an interval from February, 1862, to February, 1866, without execution upon any of the judgments. On the 21st March, 1863, the defendant in the judgments, James R. Dickerson, became the owner in fee for a valuable consideration of the lands in question. On the first day of April, 1863, Dickerson conveyed in fee, for a valuable consideration, to Paul Marks and Benjamin [95]*95R. Jones, jr., who, on the the 21st March, 1864, conveyed in fee to the complainants, James L. Winter and Charles W. Winter. It thus appears that ’ the acquisition of title by the defendant in the executions,, his conveyance, and the conveyance to the' complainants, occurred during the interval, when there were no executions on the judgments.

On the 10th December, 1861, an "act was adopted which gave judgments the effect of liens on all the defendant’s property. — (Pamphlet Acts, p.' 33, § 1.) This act was repealed by the act of 8th December, 1863, but liens which had attached under it were expressly continued. — (Pamphlet Acts, 1863, p. 57.)

On the 20th July, 1865, the provisional governor of the State, by proclamation, declared, thatTrom and after that date “ the civil and criminal laws of Alabama, as they stood on the 11th day of January, 1861, except that portion ” relating to slaves, should be “ in full force and operation.” Under the law, as it stood on the 11th day January, 1861,” liens did not result from judgments. — Revised Code, § 2872 (2456.) An ordinance of the convention, adopted on the 21st September, 1865,- declared that the acts, with certain exceptions, passed after the 11th January, 1861, were ratified and valid from their dates. — Rev. Code, p. 53. James R. Dickerson having, on the 21st March, 1863, acquired a title~ to the land in question, a lien upon it was effected by virtue Of the act of 10th December, 1861, in favor of the defendants, who had judgments rendered in 1861, before its passage. These liens were continued and preserved by the later act of 8th December, 1863. On the 1st April, 1863, James R. Dickerson conveyed. Those holding under his conveyance, unquestionably took his title, subject to the liens of the judgment creditors. It is contended, that those liens were destroyed by the proclamation of Governor Parsons, on the 20th July, 1865, and remained defunct during the interval between that day and the 21st September, 1865, when the convention, by its ordinance, restored the acts from which the liens resulted, and that during such interval the title to the land became free from the liens, and they could not [96]*96again be restored in derogation of the unencumbered character which the title took during that interval.

In the case of Jeffries v. State, 39 Ala. 655, it was decided by this court, that the proclamation of Governor Parsons continued the suspension of the laws of the State which were not by it declared to be in force. The same proposition was reiterated in McDaniel v. Simpson, at the January term, 1868. To this extent, this court is committed, and its present convictions accord with its past rulings upon the subject. The above proposition admits the obligation, during Governor Parson's administration, of the laws by him declared in force, to the exclusion of those enacted during the war. Whether those laws embraced by Governor Parson’s declaratory proclamation, were by virtue of his declaration permanent rules of civil conduct repealing all variant prior enactments, or whether they were mere temporary orders for the regulation of conduct continued, subject to the will of the governor only during his authority, and displacing pre-existing laws, only in so far as was necessary to make the will of the governor as evidenced by his order, the prevailing regulator of conduct during the limited period of his domination, and allowing such pre-existing laws, with the rights springing from them, to revive upon the expiration of his authority, are new questions hitherto undecided by us. Those are the questions upon which the liens of the judgment creditors in this case depend.

The power of prescribing rules of conduct exercised by the provisional governor was extraordinary, and the source from which it was derived has been a subject of much discussion. In Jeffries v. State, the existence of the power was conceded, and it was referred to the prevalence of martial law in the State, which was enforced and executed by the President of the United States, as the commander-in-chief of the army, through the agency of an officer denominated provisional governor. The opposite theory, that the State, by its ordinance of secession and the events which followed it, severed its legal relations to the government of the United States, and stood at the close of the war in the attitude of a foreign country, conquered by the [97]*97United States, and was therefore governed as a conquered province, is not supported by any judicial precedent known to us, and seems not to be approved by the judges of the supreme court of the United. States. Chief Justice Chase, upon opening the circuit court of the United States for the district of North Carolina, in June, 1867, delivered an address to the bar explanatory of the reasons of the justices of the supreme court for delaying, after the close of the war, their appearance on the circuits in the States which had been insurrectionary. >This delay was attributed, in that address, to the military supremacy exercised under the direction of the president, and the.competency of military tribunals to exercise the requisite civil and criminal jurisdiction which belongs, under ordinary circumstances, to civil courts. The address argues that sensibility to judicial independence permitted the justices to preside, when the president by his proclamation abrogated the military authority. At the same court, Chief- Justice Chase delivered a written opinion, in the case of Shortridge v. Mason, upon the questions whether a debt due to citizens of Pennsylvania by a citizen of North Carolina,.was discharged by a payment during the war to a receiver under the sequestration act of the Confederate government, and whether interest accrued during the war. In that opinion, he asserts, with emphasis, that the separation of North Carolina from the union was never for one moment - effected. These deliverances of Chief Justice Chase-very clearly indicate the opinion that the States which attempted secession did not become, by the result of the war,,and the antecedent events, conquered foreign provinces; that martial law prevailed afterwards under the direction of the president, and that its prevalence was terminated in North Carolina by his authority. The address and opinión above noticed may be found in an appendix to the North Carolina State Eeports of decisions at the June term, 1867. We think they contribute largely to the support óf our opinion in Jeffries v. State, referring the authority of Governor Parsons to the-prevalence of martial law.

Martial law, which was the foundation of the authority exercised by the president through a provisional governor, [98]

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Bluebook (online)
42 Ala. 92, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/winter-v-dickerson-ala-1868.