106 Ala. 349 | Ala. | 1894
— Abel Burnell executed a mortgage upon a certain parcel of land in which his wife, Ellen Burnell joined, to Wm. Morris to secure the payment of a debt due the mortgagee. After the death of Abel Burnell the mortgage was foreclosed by a power of sale, and at the sale Ellen Burnell became the purchaser. The mortgagee William Morris executed a deed to Ellen Burnell, the purchaser, with general covenants of warranty as to title. The purchaser having surrendered possession to a superior title, sued William Morris for a breach of the covenants of warranty in the deed in a court of law, and recovered a judgment against him.
William Morris then filed the present bill, the purpose of which was to reform the deed of conveyance, so as- to strike out tlie covenants of warranty, and to make it a conveyance of only such title and interest as was vested in him by the mortgage, and to enjoin the enforcement of the judgment. At final hearing the chancery court granted the relief as prayed.
The evidence of complainant shows, that he emploved an attorney to foreclose the mortgage for him, and to
The measure of proof required to authorize the reformation of a written instrument, is that the ‘ ‘proof must be clear, exact and convincing,” “clear and satisfactory.” — Ohlander v. Dexter, 97 Ala. 476 ; Guilmartin v. Urquhart, 82 Ala. 570 ; Trapp v. Moore, 21 Ala. 697: Apply this test to the evidence in the present case, and we are forced to the conclusion that complainant has not come up to the requirements; to entitle him to relief. Why should the purchaser have been compelled to pay anything more than the amount secured by the mortgage? We are of opinion the court .erred in the decree rendered.
A decree will be here rendered, dissolving the injunction, and dismissing complainant’s bill.
Reversed and rendered.