Baker v. Graves

| Ala. | Nov 15, 1893

STONE, C. J.

As the assignee of the mortgage, the *249appellant filed the original bill for a foreclosure of the mortgage and to compel the parties who had received, or who were in possession of, parts of the mortgage property, to account for the same.

The amended bill avers that at the time of the assignment of the mortgage, the assignors made to the appellant the representation that the landlord of the mortgagor had waived his lien for rent on the crops conveyed by the mortgage ; and also introduces a senior mortgage, of which the appellant claims to be assignee, and avers that it is entitled to priority of payment. The only prayer for special relief in the amended bill is expressed in these words: “That the said Pritchett and Merriwether and McGrath be held and required to make good their representations hereinbefore stated, and that the transfer to this complainant of said mortgage be held fraudulent and void, and the said Pritchett and McGrath and Merriwether, be required to refund to the complainant the amount of money paid by him to them for said mortgage, together with the interest thereon, and the damages which he has sustained thereunder.” There were demurrers to the amended bill, and a decree rendered by the .chancellor sustaining them, from which this appeal is taken.

1. The grounds of demurrer necessary to be considered, are, that the amended bill makes an entirely new case, and is a radical departure from the matter and cause of action stated in the original bill. Liberal as is the statute of amendments, and liberal as has been the judicial construction it has uniformly received, the right it confers is not without limit. Under the guise of an amendment, there can not be an entirely new case made, or a radical departure from the cause of action stated in the original bill. The purpose of the original bill was clear and well defined, the foreclosure of the mortgage assigned to the appellant — and in aid of it, an account of parts of the mortgage property which had passed into the possession of persons taking with notice of the mortgage. From this purpose the amended bill proposes to depart, and to make a new case variant from and repugnant to that made by the original bill. The foreclosure of the mortgage is abandoned, the validity of the assignment to the appellant is assailed, and compensation from the assignors is sought to be recovered, because of represen*250tations which, it is supposed convict the assignors of fraud. If the amended bill presented matter of equitable relief, it is apparent that it is repugnant to, and variant from, the matter of the original bill, introducing a wholly different cause of action and ground of relief.— 3 Brick. Dig., 380, §§ 208, 209, 219.

2. A demurrer to a bill in equity “must set forth the ground of demurrer specially, and otherwise must not be heard.” — Code, § 3443. Some of the causes of demurrer assigned, it may be, are too general, and could not be heard. The second, third and fourth causes of demurrer assigned by the appellee Brinson specify with sufficient distinctness the objection to the amended bill we have considered. The decree of the chancellor is general, not stating the particular causes of demurrer which were sustained, and if necessary, we would refer it to such causes as were well, and not to such as may be illy, assigned .

The decree is affirmed.