Court Opinion

ID: 6513948
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-19 18:24:52.121745+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:54:58.054631
License: Public Domain

McOLELLAN, J.
Wm. S. Phillips died in 1872, owning sundry parcels of land in Dallas county, and one tract of three hundred and twenty acres situated in Perry county. ITe left surviving him seven children, to whom all of his lands in both, counties descended as tenants in common. William M. Phillips, one of the co-tenants, while residing on the Perry county tract of laud, on January 20,1874, executed a mortgage to appellant ITowze, the granting clause of which, so far as it concerns the property involved here, is in the following language: *181“We clo hereby grant, bargain, sell and convey to the said John Howze, the following personal property, to-wit: . . . . also, the following real estate lying in the county of‘Perry and State aforesaid, to-wit, all of the interest of the said Wm. M. Phillips, as heir and distributee of Wm. S. Phillips, deceased.” This conveyance contains only the following express covenant: “And the said Wm. M. Phillips hereby declares, that the above conveyed property is his own, and that there is no lien or incumbrance upon the same, except” a certain mortgage conveying a part of the personalty.
About September, 1876, a bill was filed in the Chancery ■Court of Dallas, by some of the tenants in common, against Wm. M. Phillips and the other co-tenants, for partition among them of all the lands which they held as heirs of Wm. S. Phillips in both counties, and also for partition of a parcel of land lying in Perry county, containing three hundred and twenty acres, which had descended to them from their mother, Louisa J. Phillips. The final decree in that cause, rendered July 2, 1877, allotted to Wm. M. Phillips, as his one-seventh share of all the lands in both counties, and descending from both ancestors, one hundred and sixty acres of the three hundred and twenty acres in Perry county, which had belonged to Wm. S. Phillips. Wm. M. Phillips devised this land to his wife, Amanda O. (now Amanda C. Dew), and departed this life in ■October, 1881. His will was duly probated. The appellant Howze, default having been made in the payment of the debt ■secured by the mortgage, sold the land thus allotted to Wm. M. Phillips, under the power contained in the instrument, in March, 1882, and himself became the purchaser. He entered into possession on the day of sale, and has since held it. This ■suit is by Mrs. Dew, formerly Amanda C. Phillips, claiming under the will of her first husband, for the recovery of possession of the land, and damages for its detention.
One of the prominent questions presented by the exceptions reserved on the trial, involves the construction of the mortgage in respect to the quantity of land conveyed by it. The evidence is without conflict, that, at the time of executing the instrument, the mortgagor, as an heir of Wm. S. Phillips, deceased, ■owned an undivided one-seventh interest in each of the several parcels of land lying in Dallas county, and in one tract of three hundred and twenty acres situated in Perry county; and that he was seized of no other or greater estate or interest in any ■one of said parcels. He thus held- an undivided one-seventh interest, in common with his brothers and sisters, in a house and lot in the city of Selma, a like interest in a plantation lying on the Oahaba river in Dallas comity, and the same *182interest and estate, and no more, in the tract of three hundred and twenty acres lying iii Perry county. There is no controversy, but that it was competent for Wm. M. Phillips to have conveyed his entire interest in these lands, or that, had he done so, his grantee would have taken, upon partition, whatever was allotted to him in severalty, whether lying in the one or the other county. It is equally clear in principle, and on authority, that a conveyance by Phillips, of his undivided interest in any one of the sep arate parcels, would have constituted his grantee a tenant in common with the holders of the other undivided interests, and entitled him, on partition, to have allotted to him in severalty one seventh of that parcel.—Freeman on Cotenancy & Par. § 208; Butler v. Rays, 25 Mich. 53; Prim v. Walker, 38 Mo. 98; Markol v. Wakeman, 107 Ill. 262.
It may be, too, that had Phillips undertaken to convey the tract in Perry county as an entirety, his deed would have been allowed to operate primarily so as to pass a one-seventh interest to his grantee, and on partition, if his allotment in severalty was carved out of this tract, the title he acquired thereto would enure to the benefit of his grantee, and vest the fee in the latter. This result is denied by some authorities, which hold such a deed absolutely void, though the weight of adjudication, and the better reason, support the proposition, that such a conveyance should be accorded full force and effect as against any interest the grantor has, or subsequently acquires in the land.—Freeman Co-tenancy & Par. §§ 199 et seq White v. Sayre, 2 Ohio, 112; Robinett v. Preston, 2 Rob. va. 278: Gates v. Salmon, 35 Cal. 588; Stark v. Barrett, 15 Cal. 370; Barnhart v. Campbell, 50 Mo. 599.
It is manifest that the mortgage executed by appellee’s devisor, and under which the appellants claim title to the whole allotment made to him out of his father’s lands, is neither a conveyance of the mortgagor’s interest in all the lands of his ancestor, for it is in terms confined to “real estate lying in Perry county,” nor of the entirety in the lands so situated, for it conveys only “all the interest of the said Wm. M. Phillips, as heir and distributee of Wm. S. Phillips, deceased,” therein. Giving to these limitations the effect which their terms naturally and reasonably enforce, there remains but one possible field of operation for the granting clause of the conveyance. It passes, not one seventh of all the lands, the effect of which, upon division, would be to vest in the mortgagee title in severalty to whatever part falls to Wm. M. Phillips; and not the entirety of the Perry county lands, which would operate to vest any part of that tract, which is allotted to the mortgagor, in the mortgagee; but the interest of one of seven *183heirs in the tract of three hundred and twenty acres lying in Perry county, and that interest alone became vested in the mortgagee, as a tenant in common with the other co-tenants. ¥m. M. Phillips still owned and held, wholly unaffected by the mortgage, an undivided one-seventh interest in each of the parcels lying in Dallas county.—Williams College v. Mallett, 12 Me. 298; Randall v. Mallett, 14 Me. 51.
The grant was not enlarged or extended by the subsequent partition and allotment to ffm. M. Phillips, of more than one-seventh of the Perry county land, in consideration, so to speak, for his surrender of his interest in the Dallas county lands. If he had exchanged other property, lying in Dallas county or elsewhere — property which did not come to him through his father — for the excess over the one-seventh in the Perry lands, it would scarcely be insisted that the land thus coming to him by exchange or purchase would pass under the mortgage. And his interest in the Dallas lands was palpably as foreign to his conveyance to Howze, as wholly. excluded from its terms, as such other property would have been. The excess over his aliquot share allotted to him in the Perry lands was, therefore, not only not embraced in his grant to Howze, but it was not vested in him by way of substitution for any land or interest in land which was so embraced.
Nor do we conceive that any different result will flow from an invocation of the principles of warranty. It may be conceded, indeed, we entertain no doubt, that the mortgage contains, or imports, a covenant of warranty. Our statute attaches to its language, “grant, bargain, sell and convey,” prima facie the force and effect of a general warranty; and there is nothing in the instrument inconsistent with, or repugnant to the meaning which the statute thus gives them. — Code, § 1839. But we do not understand that the office of a warranty can ever be.to extend a grant to lands not embraced in its terms. Its office, in cases like this, is to perfect the grantee’s title to the land embraced in the conveyance, by drawing to him any title which the grantor subsequently acquires to that particular land, and not to vest in the grantee title to lands not covered by the conveyance. Its precise effect here was, to vest in Howze the title which Phillips acquired by the decree of partition in one-seventh of the three hundred and twenty acre tract lying in Perry county, which, before partition, had been held by Phillips as co-tenant with his brothers and sisters, and not to extend this title to the whole allotment made to the mortgagor.—Nolen v. Gwyn, 16 Ala. 725; Carter v. Chaudron, 21 Ala. 72; Loomis v. Riley, 24 Ill. 307; Williams College v. Mallett, 12 Me. 298; Randall v. Mallet, 14 Me. 51.
*184The court below construed the mortgage in consonance with these principles, and its rulings in this regard are free from error.
If the sale and purchase by the mortgagee be treated as a valid foreclosure of the mortgage, vesting in the purchaser the land conveyed, as perhaps it should be when reference is had. to the doctrine of ratification by the devisee of the mortgagor, its effect was to make appellant Howze and appellee tenants in common of the tract of land sold. It is one of the well settled general principles pertaining to this relation, that notice to one co-tenant, of facts affecting the common property, is not notice to the other or others, and the latters’ estate will in no way be prejudiced, nor the assertion of their rights precluded thereby. — Freeman Co-tenancy & Partition, § § 173 et seq. This principle is applicable to notices required by statute to be given to the owners of land, of proceedings to subject it to sale for the payment of taxes, and a sale made without such notice to all of the co-tenants is void.—Thurston v. Miller, 10 R. I. 358.
Under the statute in force at the time of the tax sale relied on in this case, notice of the proceeding in the Probate Court, to condemn land to sale for the payment of taxes, was required to be served on the owner. Without such notice, the court acquired no jurisdiction; and its judgment of condemnation and consequent sale was void. The proof in this case was clear, that this notice was not served on Mrs. Dew, one of the co-tenants in this land; and no title, at least as against her, passed by the sale to the appellant.—Riddle v. Messer, 84 Ala. 236.
Whether, even had the proceedings in the Probate Court been in all respects regular, and its decree valid, one tenant in common, under the facts of this case, should be allowed to set up against his co-tenant the title he acquired through the tax sale, otherwise than as a basis for contribution to the amount thus paid for the common benefit, is open to grave doubt, which the exigencies of tins appeal do not require us to decide.—Vanhorn v. Fonda, 5 Johns. (Ch.) 388; Brown v. Hoyle, 30 Ill. 119; Picot v. Page, 26 Mo. 398; Wright v. Sperry, 21 Wis. 331; Matthews v. Bliss, 22 Pick. 48.
On the other hand, if the fact that the mortgagee became the purchaser at his own sale under the mortgage be considered to have defeated foreclosure — as doubtless it would, in the absence of ratification — it was still a mortgage as to him, at the time of the tax sale; and he, being in possession under it, could not acquire a tax title which would be good against the mortgagor, or his devisee. —Seats v. Johnson, 70 Ala. 108; *185Bailey v. Campbell, 82 Ala. 342; Blake v. Howe, 15 Amer. Dec. 684. So that it is, we think, clear from any point of Mew, that the tax sale passed no title to the appellant Howze, which ■can be relied on to defeat appellee’s recovery.
The only other exceptions insisted on by the appellants go to the correctness of the Circuit Court’s rulings on the issue, whether the debt secured by the mortgage had been paid at the time of the sale under it. The jury, in confining plaintiff’s recovery to five-sevenths of the land sued for, must, of necessity, have found this issue in favor of the defendants, as, otherAvise, it would have been their duty, under the charges which the court gave, to have returned a verdict for the entire tract. It is manifest, therefore, that if the court committed error in its rulings on this inquiry, they were lacking in that element of inj ury to the appellants, without which error is never available to reverse.—Thomason v. Gray, 82 Ala. 291; Eufaula v. Simmons, 86 Ala. 515; Campbell v. Lunsford, 83 Ala. 512.
The judgment of the Circuit Court is affirmed.