108 So. 594 | Ala. | 1926
The jurisdiction of courts of equity to establish lost deeds and to require the grantors therein to execute new deeds in their stead seems to be thoroughly well settled. Owen v. Paul,
"Moreover," as observed by the West Virginia court in Cartright v. Cartright, supra, "it is the policy of the law to secure to the owner the full enjoyment of his property, one essential element of which is the jus disponendi, and while he may not be in immediate danger of an ouster, still if he is not able to deraign title by the record, and is compelled to rely upon the testimony of witnesses to establish it, the market value of his property will thereby be materially affected. In order to relieve the owner's title of such embarrassment and facilitate the transfer of his property, equity will restore a lost deed, even if no other relief be demanded, when the rights of others will not thereby be violated."
As declared by the Florida court in Griffin v. Fries, supra:
"A court of equity is alone capable of dealing with such a case, not alone by affording present relief but by establishing safeguards against future exigencies, and, as we have said, that having jurisdiction for this purpose it will in suitable cases retain the cause and make a final adjudication between the parties."
These considerations, upon which the jurisdiction of equity is grounded, are, we think, equally cogent whether the complaining grantee is in or out of possession, or whether he is or is not entitled to immediate possession. Low v. Staples,
The view that the remedy is not open to a complainant against his grantor, or one holding under him, who is in possession of the land (Hershey v. Robson [Sup.] 121 N.Y. S. 167), has probably been suggested by the text of Story and Beach (1 Story Eq. 126; 1 Beach Eq. § 20), which were based on Lord Hardwicke's dictum (1750) in Whitfield v. Fausset, 1 Vesey, 392:
"The loss of a deed is not always a ground to come into a court of equity for relief; for if there was no more in the case, although he is entitled to have a discovery of that, whether lost or not, courts of law admit evidence of a deed, proving the existence of it and the contents, just as a court of equity does."
That dictum is readily intelligible, for registration of titles was not required, and the special considerations to which we have adverted, and which modern courts now recognize, were entirely absent. The distinction is well stated in the case of Midkiff v. Colton, 252 F. 420, 422, 164 C.C.A. 344.
The bill of complaint, however, exhibits a fatal impediment to the invocation of this equity. The respondent Joe Cade bought the land from complainant in October, 1913, and Joe Cade and his wife, Ella Cade, on the same day executed a purchase-money mortgage to complainant securing the serial monthly payment of 52 notes of $20 each, of which 26 had been paid up to May, 1918. In that month the two respondents jointly executed to complainant "a quitclaim deed * * * reconveying to your complainant the premises above described, * * * and relinquishing all right, title, and interest of the said Joe Cade and Ella Cade in and to the property conveyed in the deed herein first above described."
In order to sustain such a transaction between mortgagor and mortgagee, "it must be shown that the conduct of the mortgagee was in all things fair and frank, and that he paid for the property what it was worth." As to these matters the presumption is against the mortgagee, and the burden is upon him to allege and prove. Shaw v. Lacy,
There being no equity in that aspect of the bill, the equity of the bill, if any it have, must be sought in the alternative prayer "to determine the exact amount and interest of each party complainant and respondent in and to said land, and if complainant fails to establish said deed, that this court will order the register to ascertain the amount due and unpaid with interest thereon on the mortgage [set forth in the bill], and that this court will make all such further orders and decrees as may be necessary to establish the right of complainant in and to said property and to protect the same, and to procure for him the possession, enjoyment and use thereof. * * *"
Analysis of this prayer is somewhat difficult; but, while it is not in technical form a general prayer, it may be regarded as a prayer for such general relief as a mortgagee may be entitled to after the law day of the mortgage, viz. the establishment of the mortgage, the ascertainment of the balance due thereon, and a decree of foreclosure. We think that this relief is comprehended in the prayer, and would be appropriate to the allegations of the bill, which, stripped of what is ineffective, show no more than the relation of mortgagor and mortgagee.
The demurrer is addressed to the bill as a whole, and, since its alternative aspect as a bill for foreclosure contains equity, and is not subject to any ground of demurrer, the demurrer was properly overruled.
The demurrer as for misjoinder of parties respondent is without merit. When a mortgage is executed by the mortgagor in interest and his wife — even though it be a purchase-money mortgage, and the wife's execution is not necessary for the release of her dower and homestead rights — she is always a proper, though not a necessary, party to a bill for foreclosure. Davis v. Taylor-Lowenstein Co.,
For the reasons above stated, the decree overruling the demurrer will be affirmed.
Affirmed.
ANDERSON, C. J., and THOMAS and BOULDIN, JJ., concur.