110 Ala. 511 | Ala. | 1895
A question of prime importance, in this case is, whether a mortgage executed by the defendant, Kelso, to the claimants, Roden & Co., is to be declared void as to creditors, upon the undisputed evidence. Kel-so was a meróhant at Pratt Mines, in Jefferson Co., Ala., and the mortgaged property consisted of the stock of goods which he had been using in carrying on his business as such. The law day was fixed at February 18th, 1893, the mortgage being executed oh January 25th, 1893. There is no express stipulation to that effect, but it is implied, that Kelso should continue in possession of the property until the law day. After that time, the secured debt remaining unpaid, Roden & Co. were expressly authorized to take possession of the property and, after giving ten days notice.by posting, &c., to sell the same at auction to the highest bidder for cash, before the court-house door of Jefferson county, and apply the proceeds to the payment of the expenses and' the secured debt, returning any surplus to the mortgagor; and the mortgagees were authorized to bid and become purchasers at the sale. Without contemplating such an agreement, at the time the mortgage was made, but as an entirely independent different transaction, about an half hour afterwards, an agreement was entered into, in writing, by Kelso and Roden & Co., by which it was stipulated as follows : “the undersigned W. J. Kelso agrees to take charge of and sell for the said B. F. Roden & Company the stock of goods, wares and merchandise this day mortgaged by him to the said B. F. Roden & Co., the same being situated in his storehouse in Pratt Mines, Ala., he acting therein as the agent for the said B. F. Roden & Co., the mortgagees in said mortgage. It is further agreed that all monies arising from the sale of said goods shall immediately be the property of the said B. F. Roden & Co., the mortgagees in the mortgage, above referred to, and shall be paid over to them by the said W. J. Kelso on the last day of each month, beginning on January 31st, 1893, or oftener if required, and shall go as credits on the mortgage debt. It is expressly agreed and understood that the said W. J. Kelso, the mortgagor in said mortgage above referred to, renounces and releases all benefit he may have in said stock of goods, and that all sales shall be for and on account of said mortgagees, B. F.. Roden
It is clear this agreement was a modification of the contract of the parties, as set forth in the mortgage, binding upon both parties. It was a substitution, in the mortgage, of the new provisions for the provisions therein which were inconsistent with them. As such, the new agreement became essentially a part of the mortgage, of like practical and legal effects as it had been set out therein and the first inconsistent provisions omitted. By it an entirely new and different defeasance and new and different methods of disposition of the goods were created, which, being withheld from the record, whilst the original was put upon the record as representing the contract of the parties, became and was a secret agreement. To all the world, therefore, the contract was represented to be that Kelso’s right to possession should terminate on February 18th, 1893, and Roden & Co. should be then empowered to take and sell the goods at auction &c., whilst the rea] agreement, known only to the parties themselves, created the relation of principal and agent between themselves, removed all limitation upon the time of Kelso’s right to possession, empowered him to sell the goods at private sale, and entitled him to receive for his services $50 per month.
In Bryant v. Young, 21 Ala. 264, Young made an absolute transfer of a certain bond to Hall, but, by an extraneous agreement, the transfer was really intended as a security for a specified liability, Young being entitled to the surplus of the avails of the bond after the liability
The evidence shows, without conflict, that Kelso owed about $3,000, and that Roden & Co. knew he was indebted but did not know how much, or to whom. Kel-so’s business, as we have seen, was that of a merchant,
Reversed and remanded.