93 So. 904 | Ala. | 1922
Lead Opinion
The instant bill was to set aside a decree of the circuit court in equity, and its filing date was October 10, 1921. The bill eventuating in the decree now sought to be set aside was filed by the Birmingham Fertilizer Company against W. M. Coleman and others on September 10, 1920, personal service being perfected on the respondent (complainant in the instant bill), and a decree *161 pro confesso was duly entered against him on October 18th thereafter. After submission for final decree, the same was rendered November 3, 1920, ascertaining the amount due on the mortgage debt, and allowing redemption to the complainant (judgment creditor) from the Hooper mortgage. The purpose of the former bill was to enforce the lien of a registered judgment, by complainant in the former bill and respondent here, against the instant complainant, which judgment was recovered on January 24, 1918, and perfected as a lien against the land of the judgment debtor, subject to a mortgage to one Hooper, or the transferee thereof, and for redemption by the judgment creditor.
The present bill is for injunction and redemption by W. M. Coleman against the Birmingham Fertilizer Company, judgment creditor, and J. F. Hooper, the mortgagee. No irregularity in said former proceeding nor fraud or imposition on the part of appellee is averred to have intervened or infected that decree. Complainant offers no sufficient excuse why, as respondent in the former suit, he did not or was not permitted to set up and establish his right in the premises to the lands in question, and which he now attempts to assert by this suit. The only grounds set forth in the present bill for disturbing the original decree are that the lands described in the bill are the homestead of complainant, that he was not fully acquainted with his right of homestead or the assertion thereof (Code, § 4174), and that the sum due on the Hooper mortgage is much less than that ascertained by the court to be due on former decree.
The general rule of res judicata is that the rights of the parties to the former suit are affected as to matters actually presented by the pleading and there litigated between the parties, and also all material matters or defenses which might have been litigated in that suit by and between the parties, and not conclusive as to matters incidentally brought into the controversy. Schillinger v. Leary,
In Cross v. Bank of Ensley,
The attempt of complainant to make this proceeding a part of the former proceeding is by the averments of paragraph 3 of this bill. This original bill, No. 1527, is not a supplemental bill to the former original suit, No. 1471, in the same court. Sims Ch. Pr. § 611 et seq. The necessary parties before the court and the subject-matter of the two suits are the same, and the two suits are pending in the circuit court, in equity, of Marshall county. They are, however, independent suits, and the latter is not a petition to the court in the former for the allowance of claim of homestead exemptions. It has for its purpose a larger result — the examination of the mutual accounts of mortgagor and mortgagee.
It would follow from the foregoing that the decree of the court below dissolving injunction was not laid in error, since appellant has not shown a proper intervention by petition in the former cause, and a necessity to preserve the status quo of the title to the property pending a determination of petitioner's *162 right to homestead exemption in the lands.
Affirmed.
ANDERSON, C. J., and SAYRE and MILLER, JJ., concur.
Addendum
Upon the submission to dissolve the injunction, on grounds "that there was no equity in the bill," the fact that no note of submission was made by the register pursuant to rule 75 of chancery court, page 1551 of Code 1907, does not necessitate the granting of the motion for rehearing. The rule excludes the idea that it was required to make a note of the pleadings to be considered. Sellers v. Farmer,
Rehearing overruled.
ANDERSON, C. J., and SAYRE and MILLER, JJ., concur.