85 So. 503 | Ala. | 1920
This bill was filed to enforce an equity of redemption as to certain property previously mortgaged by the husband S. B. Bowdoin, wherein these complainants set up usury in the mortgage debt, seek an accounting, etc. While the bill is by S. B. Bowdoin and his wife, N. B. Bowdoin, as joint complainants, it shows upon its face that previous to the filing of the same S. B. Bowdoin had conveyed all his right, title, or interest in and to the mortgage property to his wife, N. B. Bowdoin. Therefore S. B. Bowdoin has no right to maintain the bill for redemption. It is a well-established principle of law that a mortgagor who has conveyed his equity of redemption either in real or personal property, or both, cannot redeem. 3 Jones on Mortgages (7th Ed.) § 1056, p. 654; Cardwell v. Insurance Co.,
It is also well settled that the right to plead usury is a personal defense to the debtor mortgagor, and may be waived, and is waived when he conveys the property to another, stipulating that the purchaser must assume the mortgage debt, to the extent that the purchaser must pay the full amount of the debt, usury and all, in order to effect a redemption of the property. Stickney v. Moore, *282
Nor are we disposed to disturb the conclusion of the trial court to the effect that the respondents, Faulk Co., had notice that their assignor the bank had been charging a usurious rate of interest.
As to the stock certificate, it has been transferred as part security for the mortgage indebtedness, and which said indebtedness Mrs. Bowdoin had to pay in order to redeem the property; and, if she had to pay the entire mortgage indebtedness, this should operate as a release of all the mortgage property, or property held as collateral security for said indebtedness. True, the original bill did not specify the warehouse certificate, nor does it seem to have been included in the injunction, but the bill was amended before the sale of the stock, asking for the redemption of same, and said sale was therefore within the lis pendens.
As to the J. F. Bowdoin 80 acres, we do not understand that it was given to secure a part of the original mortgage indebtedness, or that the mortgage held upon same was from S. B. Bowdoin to the bank, or formed a part of the debt for which the mortgages in question were given to secure. In other words, it seems to have been a separable transaction, and was not embraced nor included in the indebtedness for which S. B. Bowdoin gave the bank or Faulk Co. mortgages, and which Mrs. N. B. Bowdoin would have to pay as a condition precedent for redemption. It seems to have been for a separable and distinct debt, and was a conveyance by J. F. Bowdoin to the bank. We therefore think that the trial court erred in permitting the complainant N. B. Bowdoin to redeem said 80 acres of land under the present bill, and the decree of the trial court to this extent only is reversed, and one is here rendered denying relief as to the said J. F. Bowdoin 80 acres of land.
Affirmed upon direct appeal.
Affirmed in part, and reversed and rendered in part upon cross appeal.
McCLELLAN, SOMERVILLE, and THOMAS, JJ., concur.