Crabtree v. Price

This is a statutory suit in ejectment. Plaintiffs claim title as heirs at law of Thomas Crabtree, deceased; the defendants, through mortgage from Thomas Crabtree and wife to Merritt Street, foreclosure deed from C. W. Ashcraft, administrator de bonis non of the estate of Merritt Street, to A. P. Mitchell, deed from A. P. Mitchell to J. C. Street, and executory contract of sale from J. C. Street to these defendants in possession. The court below gave the affirmative charge for defendants. The correctness of this ruling is the controlling point in the case. The validity of the mortgage is unquestioned.

Appellants' chief reliance is an insufficiency of the proof of the notice of sale on foreclosure. The foreclosure deed made in 1901 recited full compliance with the terms of the power of sale. These recitals are prima facie evidence of a valid foreclosure. Harton v. Little, 176 Ala. 267, 57 So. 851; Naugher v. Sparks, 110 Ala. 572, 18 So. 45; Ward v. Ward,108 Ala. 278, 19 So. 354.

The plaintiffs having offered no evidence to overcome this prima facie case, any adverse rulings on parol testimony offered by defendants to prove the same facts were harmless. Parol testimony, however, is competent to prove the posting of notices as required by the mortgage. Naugher v. Sparks, supra.

Moreover, the defense here did not depend upon proof of the regularity or validity of the foreclosure. A mortgage of realty passes the legal title to the mortgagee, with right of possession, with or without foreclosure, after the law day. Those deriving possession through him can defend ejectment on his title. It is undisputed that these defendants so hold. A purchaser holding under a foreclosure deed made pursuant to a sale under a valid mortgage, if no more than color of title, is not a trespasser. Neither is one holding under such purchaser. The mortgagor, and those claiming under him, must recover on the strength of their title. They must show no title passed under the mortgage or that it has been thereafter divested out of the mortgagee or his privies. Snedecor v. Freeman, 71 Ala. 140; Dodge v. Irvington Land Co., 158 Ala. 91, 48 So. 383, 22 L.R.A. (N.S.) 1100.

Payment of the mortgage debt before foreclosure divests the title of the mortgagee. The receipts offered and excluded on objection of defendants did not purport to be on this mortgage debt. If any of them were admissible, their refusal was harmless in the absence of some evidence to show payment of the mortgage debt in full. Part payment would not suffice. All the payments claimed did not equal the mortgage debt.

The affirmative charge for defendants was properly given.

Affirmed.

ANDERSON, C. J., and SOMERVILLE and THOMAS, JJ., concur. *Page 389