Which Has Priority? & Small LLP, where the primary focus of his practice involves general commercial real estate matters for local and national clients, focusing on representing developers, borrowers and lenders in commercial real estate loan transactions, landlords and tenants in leasing matters, parties in acquiring and disposing of office buildings, retail shopping centers and multi-family apartments and advising clients on land use law situations. Suite 1800, Financial Center 505 North 20th Street Birmingham, Alabama 35203 csattorneys.com property for development. The lender provides the loan for the construction and the builder provides the material and construction based on such funds. Alabama law provides a security right to the lender for the loan and to the builder for its material and construction so everyone wins, right? Not so fast, as the Alabama Supreme Court recently reached a controversial decision on whose lien takes priority in a future advance mortgage setting materialman lien when a builder is not paid for its work. In reaching its decision, the Alabama Supreme Court relied, in part, on case law from other jurisdictions so this decision will have ramifications not only on future lending in Alabama but potentially in other states as well. Alabama law recognizes that the priority of liens are determined as follows: buildings or improvements thereon, shall have priority over all other liens, mortgages, or encumbrances created subsequent to the commencement of work on the building or improvement. Except to the extent provided in subsection (b) below, section, "mortgages and other liens") created prior to the commencement of such work shall have priority over all liens for such work. Ala. Code § 35-11- 211 (1975) (Emphasis Added). So, under Alabama law, the issue becomes when is a lien "created"? Alabama has long recognized that a mortgage under § 35-11-211 is "created" when it is executed (see Kilgore Hardware & Bldg. Supply, Inc. v. Mullins, 387 So. 2d 834, 836 (Ala. 1980) or in the alternative, when the mortgage is recorded (see Metro Bank v. Henderson's Builders Supply Co., 613 So. 2d 339, 340 (Ala. 1993). However, a recent decision from the Alabama Supreme Court addressing future advance mortgages has turned this understanding upside down and left the lending and title industries in Alabama scrambling. Supreme Court released its decision in GHB Construction and Development Company, Inc. v. West Alabama Bank and Trust, which held that neither the execution date nor the recording date controls when a future advance mortgage is created. Rather, the determining factor is the time when the mortgage secures some type of indebtedness. In secured by a future advance mortgage (the Mortgage). No loan proceeds were initially advanced at the closing. The Mortgage was recorded the very next day, on April 10, 2015. The first advance of loan proceeds did not take place until October 16, 2015, nearly six months following the date the Mortgage was recorded. All parties agreed that no materials were delivered to the borrower's property and no construction began until after the Mortgage was recorded on April 10, 2015 but before the lender made its first advance payment on October 16, 2015. The builder completed the construction of the house a full year after the Mortgage was recorded. When the builder's final invoice was not paid, the builder filed a materialman's lien (the "Builder's Lien") against the property on December 20, 2016, a full year and a half after the Mortgage was recorded, claiming its Builder's Lien had priority over the Mortgage. In deciding the issue, the Alabama Supreme Court first recognized that future advance mortgages are enforceable in Alabama, but the Court did not find any Alabama cases involving a future advance mortgage that did not initially secure |