91 Ala. 325 | Ala. | 1890
The bill in this case was filed by the New England Mortgage Security Company, and seeks to foreclose a mortgage on real estate, made to secure a debt to complainant therein described. The mortgage contains a power of sale on default, in the following language: “The party of the second part, its agent, attorney, or assignee, may enter upon and take possession of the real estate herein described, and proceed to sell the same at public outcry to the highest bidder, after first giving thirty days notice of the time, place and terms of sale, together with a brief description of the property”-, &c. The mortgage also contains this clause: “If it shall become necessary to employ an attorney to foreclose this mortgage, or collect any part of the debt herein secured, they [the mortgagors] will pay such reasonable attorney’s fees, and all other proper costs and expenses, that may be incurred by the party of the second part in that behalf, and this mortgage shall stand as security for the same.” The chancellor decreed that complainant was entitled to attorney’s fees for filing and prosecuting this bill; and on reference to the register, the allowance was fixed at ten per cent, of the amount oí the decree. The bill contains no averment of fact' showing why it was necessary to resort to this chancery proceeding, instead of foreclosing the mortgage under the power of sale. In the absence of'
The case last cited approved the ruling in Bynum v. Frederick, as applicable to one feature of the mortgage. Comer’s mortgage, however, contained this further stipulation : “And I further agree to pay the attorney’s lees, and other expenses which may be incurred by the said L., D. & Co. in the collection of the said several sums, by a foreclosure of the mortgage or otherwise, for the payment of which this conveyance is a lien.” It will be observed that this language is essentially difierent from that found in the mortgage we have under consideration. In that case, the obligation was to pay “the attorney’s fees . . . which may be incurred”, &c. In this, the language is, “if it shall become necessary to employ an attorney,” &c. Why was the qualifying word “necessary” employed? The mortgage contains a power of sale, and a sale under that power, unless some special facts exist, will vest as complete a title as would a sale under foreclosure in chancery. —3 Brick. Dig. 656, § 332. True, the mortgagee had the option, notwithstanding the power of sale in the mortgage, to foreclose in equity.—Vaughan v. Marable, 64 Ala. 60. That is not the question before us. The inquiry for us is, whether or not the mortgagors took upon themselves an unqualified obligation to pay the attorney’s fee in a foreclosure in chancery. We must interpret their contract as they expressed it, and can not extend it beyond its terms. So interpreting the language, we can neither find, nor hold as matter of law, that they agreed to pay attorney’s fees in a chancery suit, unless such suit was necessary to a proper foreclosure of 1 he mortgage and the collection of the debt.
We can imagine many states of attendant facts which would render a chancery foreclosure necessary. Possibly, the case may he put in chancery by the mortgagors, or by some adversary claimant, which, per se, would demonstrate the necessity for an attorney; and in such contingency, a cross-bill for foreclosure might be appropriate and advisable. In such event, it would seem, the necessity for an attorney throughout the entire litigation would be self-evident. Possibly, the apparent necessity of allowing the mortgagee to bid and purchase, in
The bill shows that, after executing the mortgage to the New England Mortgage Security Company, the mortgagors executed a second, or junior mortgage, on the same land, to secure another debt to a third party. That debt, or the notes securing it, together with the mortgage given to secure its pajment, had beeen transferred to one Dunton. The bill in this case averred these facts, and made Dunton a party defendant. Dun-ton answered the bill, admitting its averments to be true, submitted himself to the jurisdiction of the court, asking that his rights be protected, and that his notes be paid out of the proceeds of the land, “after satisfaction of first mortgage lien in favor of complainant, and prays to be hence dismissed with his proper costs.” Tie neither filed a cross- bill, nor made his answer a cross-bill.' The chancellor ascertained the amount due on the second mortgage, and decreed that it should be paid out of the proceeds of the land, after satisfying the first mortgage.
No affirmative relief can be obtained under an answer. It requires a cross-bill to do that.—Ketchum v. Creagh, 53 Ala. 224: Davis v. Cook, 65 Ala. 617; Watts v. Eufaula Nat. Bank, 76 Ala. 474. So, if this question were properly before us, we would reverse that part of the ruling which grants relief to Dunton.
The question, however, is not properly presented. Dunton, in whose favor that part of the decree was rendered, can not be heard to complain of it. Only, appellant, Bedell, was injured by that ruling, and she alone can assign it as error. There should have been a severance asked and obtained, and that error assigned by Bedell alone.
We have now noticed the two questions we deem material. The record in its present shape does not enable us to render a final decree which would do justice to the parties.
Reversed and remanded.