Wiggins v. Stewart Bros.

Decision Date10 June 1926
Docket Number8 Div. 842
Citation109 So. 101,215 Ala. 9
PartiesWIGGINS et al. v. STEWART BROS.
CourtAlabama Supreme Court

Appeal from Circuit Court, Morgan County; J.E. Horton, Judge.

Action in ejectment by Stewart Bros., against D.K. Wiggins and others. Judgment for plaintiffs, and defendants appeal. Affirmed.

W.W Callahan and A.J. Harris, both of Decatur, for appellants.

Sample & Kilpatrick, of Hartselle, and E.W. Godbey, of Decatur, for appellees.

BOULDIN J.

The appeal is from a judgment in ejectment in favor of Stewart Bros. plaintiffs, against D.K. Wiggins, Jas. T. Wiggins, and Z.Y. Sims. The affirmative charge was given for plaintiffs. Both parties claim title through M.D. Wiggins. Plaintiffs showed judgment, execution, levy, sale, and sheriff's deed in due form. Their evidence further showed prior possession in one Orr, deed from him to Mattie J. Wiggins and deed from Mattie J. Wiggins and her husband to M.D Wiggins, defendant in execution, Without more plaintiffs' title is not questioned. Defendants relied upon a deed from M.D. Wiggins to defendant D.K. Wiggins of date some 12 days before the date of the judgment.

Appellants deal first with the law of fraudulent conveyances.

A judgment speaks from its date, and is not evidence of the existence of the debt prior thereto. In the absence of all proof of the date when the debt was contracted, it must be considered as of the date of the judgment.

Snodgrass v. Branch Bank, 25 Ala. 161, 60 Am.Dec. 505; Martinez v. Lindsey, 91 Ala. 334, 8 So. 787.

The judgment being subsequent to the date of the deed, the rights of the judgment creditor are those of a subsequent rather than an existing creditor of the grantor. Subsequent creditors have the burden of proving actual fraud. Allen v. Overton, 208 Ala. 504, 94 So. 477.

But the case is governed by the law of dormant conveyances, not necessarily fraudulent. All deeds to real property are inoperative and void as to judgment creditors without notice unless recorded. Code, § 6887. The deed on which defendants rely not being recorded, the burden was on them to show actual notice to plaintiffs at the time of, or prior to, obtaining their judgment.

The actual open possession of lands is sufficient to put others on inquiry and constitutes notice of claim of title in the holder.

But if one is holding in subordination to the title of another, and acquires a conveyance to the property, his continued possession under the conveyance is not notice of his change of relation to the property. There must be an actual visible change of possession; otherwise, the unrecorded conveyance itself is made the instrument of giving notice. Brown v. International Harvester Co., 179 Ala. 563, 60 So. 841; Griffin v. Hall, 129 Ala. 289, 29 So. 783; Winston v. Hodges, 102 Ala. 304, 15 So. 528; Harris v. Hanchey, 192 Ala. 179, 68 So. 276.

Notice of an unrecorded deed to an attorney, to be binding upon his client, must be shown to have come to the attorney while acting in the line of his duties as attorney; must be received as attorney while engaged in a service for his client to which the notice is related. Ala. W.R. Co. v. Bush, 182 Ala. 113, 62 So. 89; Traders' Ins. Co. v. Letcher, 143 Ala. 400, 39 So. 271; Mundine v. Pitts' Adm'r, 14 Ala. 90.

Applying these rules, there was no evidence of notice to plaintiffs in person of the execution of the deed in question. Plaintiffs' evidence of want of such notice, while not required until some evidence thereof was produced by defendants, was properly admitted.

No evidence appears of any visible change of possession of the lands from the execution of the deed May 1st to the date of the judgment, May 12th.

So far as appears, D.K. Wiggins, the grantee, was in possession all along with his father, J.T. Wiggins, the head of the family, one of the judgment debtors and a grantor in the deed to M.D. Wiggins. Holly v. Dinkins, 202 Ala. 480, 80 So. 861.

It is not insisted in argument that the alleged notice to...

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36 cases
  • Girard Fire & Marine Ins. Co. v. Gunn
    • United States
    • Alabama Supreme Court
    • March 20, 1930
    ... ... and remanded ... [130 So. 181] ... Coleman, ... Coleman, Spain & Stewart, of Birmingham, and Eyster & Eyster, ... of Decatur, for appellants ... S. A ... v. State, ... 215 Ala. 431, 111 So. 1 ... In the ... recent case of Wiggins v. Stewart Bros., 215 Ala. 9, ... 109 So. 101, 102 (opinion by Mr. Justice Bouldin), is used ... ...
  • Florence v. Carr
    • United States
    • Alabama Supreme Court
    • March 30, 1933
    ... ... 167, 79 So. 651; McCormick & Richardson v. Joseph & ... Anderson, 83 Ala. 401, 3 So. 796; Wiggins v. Stewart ... Bros., 215 Ala. 9, 109 So. 101; Alabama West. R. R ... Co. v. Bush, 182 Ala. 113, ... ...
  • Smith v. Arrow Transp. Co., Inc.
    • United States
    • Alabama Supreme Court
    • September 7, 1990
    ...the person holding under an unrecorded deed to show notice in order to defeat the rights of the judgment creditor. Wiggins v. Stewart Bros., 215 Ala. 9, 109 So. 101 (1926). It is not disputed that Arrow recorded its certificate of judgment before the deeds that purportedly transferred the p......
  • Commercial Bank v. Hall
    • United States
    • Alabama Supreme Court
    • April 4, 1957
    ...a cause from the law docket to the equity docket, under Tit. 13, § 153, Code 1940, is not reviewable on appeal. Wiggins v. Stewart Bros., 215 Ala. 9, 109 So. 101; Pickens County v. Johnson, 227 Ala. 190, 149 So. 252. Mandamus is the proper remedy. Ex parte Tennessee Valley Bank, 231 Ala. 54......
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