Court Opinion

ID: 6512556
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-19 18:23:41.835181+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:54:32.222167
License: Public Domain

SOMERYILLE, J.
Section 2126 of the Code of 1876, prior to amendment, read as follows: ‘‘ Every general assignment made by a debtor, by which a preference or priority of payment is given to one or more creditors over the remaining creditors of the grantor, shall be and enure to the benefit of all the creditoi’s of the grantor equally.” On February 23, 1883, this section was amended by the General Assembly, by adding the following clause : “ but this section shall not apply to, or embrace, mortgages given to secure a debt contracted contemporaneously with the execution of the mortgage, and for the security of which the mortgage was given.”. Acts 1882-83, p. 189.
The purpose of this amendment, very clearly, was to obviate the-construction placed on section 2126 by this court in Shirley v. Teal, 67 Ala. 449, and again in Danner v. Brewer, 69 Ala. 191, where it was held that the section did apply to mortgages given to secure a debt contracted contemporaneously with the execution of the mortgage. The mortgage sought to be declared a general assignment in this case was executed on February, 19, 1883, or four days prior to the date of the above amendment. The chancellor construed the amendment to be retrospective, so as to be applicable to this case. This, we think, was erroneous.
There is no clause, it is true, in our Constitution, which forbids legislation merely because it may be retrospective, without its being obnoxious also to other objections. But, inasmuch as legislation of this character is very liable to abuse, and frequently oppressive in its effects, the courts have uniformly adopted the rule, that statutes should generally be construed to operate in the future only, unless the legislative intent appears clear from their terms that they are to have a retrospective operation. Cooley’s Const. Lim. (5th Ed.) 456, *370. Especially is this the case, where the tendency of a statute is to *431impair or destroy vested rights which may have been previously acquired. Sedgwick on Stat. and Const. Law. (2nd Ed., Pomeroy), 161, note, 346. The rule is often stated to be, that such a construction, when it operates to take away vested rights, whether legal or equitable, is not to be admitted, “unless the implication is so clear as to be equivalent to an explicit declaration.”— Osborn v. Nicholson, 13 Wall. 654, 662.
We do not doubt that the complainants, as creditors of the mortgagor, acquired valuable vested rights under the mortgage in question, which could not be taken away by subsequent legislation. They acquired an equitable title or lien which enured to their benefit through the influence of section 2126 of the Code. This lien is not like that of an attachment or judgment, which is created by law, and may be abrogated in like manner. But it springs out of the contract of assignment, having its peculiar character impressed upon it by the statute, just, as the lien of a landlord for rent springs from the contract of renting, although given by statute. — Knighton v. Curry, 62 Ala. 404; Dallas County v. Timberlake, 54 Ala. 403; McDonald v. Morrison, 50 Ala. 30.
The mortgagee, or trustee, represents the creditors, taking and holding for them in trust the legal title. The conveyance of the property being a benefit intended for the creditors of the grantor, no express acceptance of it is requisite, but their assent is implied. When such conveyance is a general assignment, by reason of having transferred substantially all of the debtor’s property, it is such by reason of the attendant facts existing at the time of its execution, and not by reason of any decree of a court so declaring it, upon judicially ascertaining the truth of such facts. The effect of the statute is “ to en-graft upon it a trust for the benefit of all creditors.” Danner v. Brewer, 69 Ala. 191, 200; Perry Ins. & Trust Co. v. Foster, 58 Ala. 502, 522.
The necessities of this case do not require us to decide that, if the amendment under consideration could be construed to be retrospective, it would be liable to several serious constitutional objections, as materially impairing and lessening the value of an existing contract; or as taking away the citizen’s private property without due process of law, and without just compensation. Edwards v. Williamson, 70 Ala. 145; Sedgwick on Stat. & Const. Law (Pomeroy), 346. It is sufficient for us to decide, as we do, that this amendatory statute • has no retrospective operation, so as to affect general assignments made before the date of its enactment. It must be construed to be prospective only.
We have examined the other grounds of demurrer, and consider them not to be well taken.
Reversed and remanded.