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Moss v. Cedrom Coal Co.

Supreme Court of Alabama
Mar 15, 1934
153 So. 195 (Ala. 1934)

Summary

discussing the fact that a tenant is responsible for paying rent to the purchaser if the tenant has “knowledge ... of said purchase and of the purchasers' rights thereunder”

Summary of this case from Givianpour v. Curtain

Opinion

6 Div. 483.

January 11, 1934. Rehearing Denied March 15, 1934.

Appeal from Circuit Court, Walker County; R. L. Blanton, Judge.

Benners, Burr, McKamy Forman, of Birmingham, and Arthur F. Fite, of Jasper, for appellants.

The Lost Creek Company's statutory right of redemption was not an interest in the land, but a mere privilege. Code 1923, § 10156; Lewis v. McBride, 176 Ala. 134, 57 So. 705. The object of redemption is to reinvest title. Morrison v. Formby, 191 Ala. 104, 67 So. 668. When the land was sold under execution, the legal estate of defendant in execution was divested and was vested in the purchaser who became the absolute owner. Searcey v. Oates, 68 Ala. 111; Cramer v. Watson, 73 Ala. 127. Defendants, who were purchasers at the sale under execution, were entitled to rent which accrued after their purchase. Code 1923, § 10145. They were never thereafter accountable to the execution debtor for rents or waste. Johnson v. Davis, 180 Ala. 143, 60 So. 799. Complainant knew of the execution sale and purchase by defendants. Notwithstanding such knowledge, complainant neither paid nor tendered any rent to defendants. Therefore complainant violated the terms of the lease and defendants had the right to cancel it.

Davis Curtis, of Jasper, for appellee.

Defendants purchased at execution sale and took just such title as the Lost Creek Company had, impressed with all rental or other contracts in existence at that time. Figh v. Taber, 203 Ala. 255, 82 So. 495; Electric L. Co. v. Rust, 117 Ala. 680, 23 So. 751. Section 10143 must be complied with to entitle a purchaser to possession of land bought at execution sale. A demand for possession by the purchaser is essential. Snow v. Land Co., 206 Ala. 310, 89 So. 719; Ensley Co. v. Lewis, 193 Ala. 229, 68 So. 1012; Richardson v. Dunn, 79 Ala. 167.


Complainant corporation, operating a coal mine under a lease executed by the owner, Lost Creek Coal Mineral Land Company, seeks injunctive relief against a forfeiture of its lease for nonpayment of rent as therein provided. Defendants on September 14, 1929, became the purchasers of the property at execution sale under a judgment against said Lost Creek Company (to so designate it for brevity), and on September 12, 1933, gave to complainant, the lessee, written notice of the termination of its lease for a failure to pay the rent, as stipulated in the rental contract. In the meantime, the Lost Creek Company, within the time allowed by law, filed its bill for redemption, resulting in a final decree allowing redemption upon the payment within a stipulated time of the designated sum found due, which time was finally extended to July 4, 1933. But the Lost Creek Company failed to effectuate said redemption so allowed, and therefore lost the right. Complainant continued in possession and operation of the mine, and alleges defendants, the purchasers under the execution sale, made no written demand upon it for possession of the property before the time had expired for the Lost Creek Company, under the decree of the court, to exercise its statutory right of redemption; that is, not before July 4, 1933. Defendants became the owners of the property, the legal estate of the judgment debtor having vested in them (Searcy v. Oates, 68 Ala. 111; Cramer v. Watson, 73 Ala. 127; Johnson v. Davis, 180 Ala. 143, 60 So. 799; Taylor v. Bell, 129 Ala. 467, 29 So. 572), and the exercise by said debtor of the statutory right of redemption was but the assertion of a personal privilege (Code, § 10156; Lewis v. McBride, 176 Ala. 134, 57 So. 705), which in no manner affected here the rights of the parties under the terms of the lease.

We are of the opinion that the ineffectual effort of the Lost Creek Company to redeem the property is without influence so far as concerns the equity of complainant's bill, and that these averments may be here laid out of view.

But complainant insists (the theory no doubt accepted by the learned chancellor) that defendants as such purchasers at execution sale were not entitled to the rents from the date of the purchase as no written demand was given it as a tenant in possession under the provisions of section 10143, Code 1923, and reliance had upon our decisions (among them, Richardson v. Dunn, 79 Ala. 167; Ensley M. R. Co. v. Lewis, 193 Ala. 226, 68 So. 1012; Comer v. Sheehan, 74 Ala. 452), holding in substance that the legal effect of such notice is to constitute the tenant in possession the tenant of the purchaser and thereby abrogate his fealty to the former owner, transfer his possession to the purchaser, and substitute the latter as his future landlord with the ordinary rights growing out of such a relationship.

But the argument overlooks subdivision 6 of section 10145, Code 1923, to the effect that the purchaser at such a sale shall be entitled "to all rents paid or accrued to date of the redemption, and the rents must be prorated to such date." Said subdivision 6 is new to the Code of 1923, and must be read in connection with the provisions of section 10143 of the Code, and if consistent, each be given a field of operation. We find no difficulty in reconciling these two statutes and giving each a useful field.

If the effect of the notice to the tenant prescribed by said section 10143 was to constitute him a tenant of the purchaser, it is reasonable to assume the provision was at least in some part for the tenant's protection and benefit. So assuming, a tenant, receiving no such demand, and being ignorant of the purchase, is protected in continued payment of rent to his original landlord. But subdivision 6 recognizes that notwithstanding no such demand, yet by the sale the purchaser became invested with the legal title, and as such entitled to the rent. And the tenant, though having no demand for possession, yet knowing of the purchase and of consequence the rights to the rents, as provided by this subdivision, is in no position to deny the purchaser the rents to which the statute states that he is entitled. Having such knowledge he must act accordingly.

The mere averment, therefore, that complainant received no demand as provided in section 10143 of the Code, does not suffice, but as an excuse for a failure to pay the rent as stipulated, the bill should further show complainant had no notice or knowledge of the purchase, and, therefore, was ignorant of the purchasers' rights thereto. And construing the pleadings most strongly against complainant, the bill must be held to show a knowledge on its part of said purchase and of the purchasers' rights thereunder.

The lease contract calls for a minimum rental of $2,000 per year, and fails to show that in fact this rental was paid to any one since the sale in 1929, or for a period of more than four years. And the offer of the bill is to pay the rent or royalty only "since it has become a lessee of the respondents," which from other averments appears to be the date of July 4, 1933, when the Lost Creek Company lost its right of redemption.

The bill therefore fails to disclose any just reason why defendants may not enforce the plain terms of the lease contract, and the demurrers thereto should have been sustained.

The decree will accordingly be here reversed.

Reversed and remanded.

ANDERSON, C. J., and BOULDIN and FOSTER, JJ., concur.


Summaries of

Moss v. Cedrom Coal Co.

Supreme Court of Alabama
Mar 15, 1934
153 So. 195 (Ala. 1934)

discussing the fact that a tenant is responsible for paying rent to the purchaser if the tenant has “knowledge ... of said purchase and of the purchasers' rights thereunder”

Summary of this case from Givianpour v. Curtain
Case details for

Moss v. Cedrom Coal Co.

Case Details

Full title:MOSS et al. v. CEDROM COAL CO

Court:Supreme Court of Alabama

Date published: Mar 15, 1934

Citations

153 So. 195 (Ala. 1934)
153 So. 195

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