Washington v. Bogart

HARALSON, J.

The foregoing cases were consolidated by agreement of counsel and by order of court, on ' their trial in the court below, all dependent as admitted, upon the decision of the same questions.

Transcripts in the several cases, were consolidated into one, and the causes were submitted together as one cause in this court, numbered 520.

The bills in 801 and 802 were filed to enforce alleged judgment liens of the complainants therein, on lands mentioned in the bill.

The bill in 804 was filed by the complainants therein, to enforce a vendor’s lien on the same lands that complainants in 801 and 802 are seeking to subject to their alleged judgment liens. The case numbered 804, is the same case that was before this court on a former appeal. —Bogart v. Bell et al., 112 Ala. 412.

The question presented in these three cases is one of the competition for superiority between creditors claiming to have judgment liens on lands, over other creditors claiming to have a superior vendor’s lien on the same lands; and between these three cases, respectively, and the one numbered 805, as to the superiority of liens claimed in them, over a mortgage from Thos. N. Allison to said W. H. Bogart on the same lands, the contention of Bogart being, that his mortgage is superior to each of said alleged liens, and if not superior to that of Bell and others, — complainants in case number 804, —it is superior to the judgment liens claimed by said Washington in cases numbered 801 and 802. The owner of the lands, — the judgment debtor in the first named cases, and the purchaser of the lands on which complainants in the case numbered 804 claim a vendor’s lien, — was Thomas N. Allison, individually or as administrator of the estate of James L. Allison, deceased.

The facts of these cases may be stated as was done by this court in the case of Bogart v. Bell, supra. “Thomas N. Allison, as the administrator of James L. Allison, deceased, under order of the probate court, sold the *382lands of said estate for the purpose of division among the heirs at law. The sales were made for part cash and part on time. The administrator, himself, purchased one tract of land, reported the sales, and the same were confirmed by the court. In June, 1891, a settlement was made, and the administrator charged himself, or was charged, with the proceeds of the sales, including the price of the land purchased by him, and decrees were rendered in favor of complainants and other heirs of the estate. After the settlement was concluded, and on the same day, the administrator reported tbe payment of the purchase money, an order for the conveyance of title was made, and deeds were executed a ccordingly. No notice of said report was given to the heirs. In January, 1895, certain of them (Sallie Bell él al.) filed the bill in this case (No. 804) to enforce a vendor’s lien on the land purchased by the administrator, for the payment of the decrees rendered in their favor. Appellant, Bogart, claims title under a mortgage executed by Allison to him in May, 1892, to secure an indebtedness to him. Washington and Cowan claim liens under judgments filed and registered in the office of the judge of probate. Thos. N. Allison died intestate December 18th, 1893, and appellant, Bogart, is his administrator.”

We there held, that as to the lands purchased by the administrator, his application for an order of conveyance of the title is regarded as made in his capacity of purchaser, instead of in his representative character, and notice to the heirs was essential to the validity of the order; and when such notice had not been given, the probate court acquired no jurisdiction to adjudicate the question of payments, or to order a conveyance to the purchaser. Moreover, it was held that in such a case, a mortgage or a judgment creditor of such administrator, is chargeable with notice of the infirmity of title to the land so purchased, and can assert no lien to such lands as against the prior rights of the heirs.

This was the same doctrine as declared in Bolling v. Smith, 108 Ala. 411, and still later, in Allison v. Allison, 114 Ala. 393. This last named case was another branch of this case. There, one of the heirs sued in ejectment to recover these same lands which Bogart, as administrator of Allison, had taken into his possession, and *383rented to the defendants in that case. The decision involved the title of said lands, as derived by said Allison under his purchase of them at his own sale as administrator. The facts were the same as in Bogart v. Bell. Justice Coleman, speaking for the court, said: “The principle of law upon which the decision rests (holding that the deed executed to said Allison under the orders of the probate court, Avas void on collateral attack) has been so long established by the decisions of this court, that it has become a rule of property, and * * * we are of opinion, that upon principle as’ well as the doctrine of stare cleeisis, the rule should stand,” — citing our former cases.

This question must be considered, therefore, at rest in this court, Avhich necessitates an affirmance of the three, causes numbered aboA^e, unless there has been brought into them features to distinguish them from the case as heretofore presented to us. This is attempted to be shown, but, as we take it, without success. 'It is said, there has been such a commingling of funds from the sale of lands by the administrator and from the sale of personal property, as to render it impossible to distinguish Avliat portion of the debt avus for land, and Avhat portion came from other sources. We said in Bogart v. Bell, on that subject, on the same facts as are uoav before us, “that there Avas no such confusion of accounts and funds as to render it impracticable for a court of equity to separate the purchase money entering into the decrees, from other funds.” And, the fact is, the chancellor in this case did not find it impracticable to do so, but did ascertain by his finding on the evidence, Avhat part of the purchase money arising from the sale of said lands, actually entered into said decrees, and rendered his decree accordingly.

The judgments in the two cases, 801, 802, if that fact Is of any importance, were not recorded in the probate court until 1890, the one on September 80th and the other on 31st December of that year; and the lands Avere sold and the alleged decrees of confirmation were made in the probate court more than a year before; and as said confirmation of said sale and the conveyance thereunder, before the payment of the entire purchase money, rendered such confirmation and conveyance null and of no effect as to the heirs who had not been paid *384their respective parts of said purchase money, there was no title to which said recorded judgments could attach. Judgments" when registered properly, give a lien upon all the property of the defendant in the county where registered, which is subject to leyy and sale under exe; cution, (Code of 1896 §1921); and by section 1890 (2892), it is provided, that “executions may be levied on real property to Avhich defendant has a legal title, or a perfect equity, having paid all the purchase money, or in which he has a vested legal interest.” Here, the debtor did not have the legal title, nor a perfect equity, for he had not paid the purchase money for the lands he bought, and the title, .legal and equitable, remained in the heirs. — Code, 1896, §179 (2124) ; Shaw v. Lindsay, 60 Ala. 344; Smith v. Cockrell, 66 Ala. 75.

Nor does the fact that the heirs were before the court on the final settlement of the accounts of the administrator, and that the alleged confirmation by the court of said sale by the administrator to himself of said lands, occurred on the same day, on the heels of that settlement, avail said judgment creditors anything. That proceeding was purely ex parte, distinct from the proceedings for final settlement, and notice to the heirs of such settlement cannot be held or construed to be notice to them of the proceeding for the confirmation of the said sale by the administrator to himself.

Nor, again, can it be said, that the alleged judgment liens would attach to the interest of the heirs whose decrees had been fully paid and satisfied, if any of such decrees remained unpaid. The title under the statute, cannot be made to the purchaser until the whole of the purchase money for the land has been paid. — Code of 1896, §179, (2124). The unpaid heirs'may subject the whole of the lands to the satisfaction of their demands. The court will not split up an entire sale into several separate ones, for the whole, and not a part of the lands sold, remains as a security for the entire purchase money, and cannot be diminished by any action of the court. — Corbitt v. Clenny, 52 Ala. 480; Ketchum v. Creagh, 53 Ala. 224; Wallace v. Nichols, 56 Ala. 321; Gardner v. Kelso, 80 Ala. 500.

We fail to discover anything distinguishing the case, now, in principle, from what it was on the former appeal. The decree of the court in granting, the relief *385sought- in the case of Bell et al. v. Bogart et al., 804, and denying the relief sought in, and dismissing the two cases of Washington, Nos. 801 and 802, must be affirmed.

What we have said, in effect disposes of the Bogart case, number 805. The complainants in 801 and 802, as we have shown, — granting that these judgments were duly and legally recorded, a question we do not decide, — acquired no lien on the property in question, because the defendant in said judgments had no title legal or equitable to which a recorded judgment lien could attach. So, those recorded judgments did not stand in. the Avay of Bogart’s subsequent mortgages from said Allison, for AAThatever imperfect equity Allison had in the ]ands and for AA’hat they were Avorth.' — Jones on Mortgages, §§136, 138; Fenno v. Sayre, 3 Ala. 458 ;Patapsco Guano Co. v. Ballard, 107 Ala. 710. The chancellor so decided, and the correctness of the decision to that extent does not appear to be denied. The decree as to this case, as in the others, must be affirmed.

Affirmed.