73 So. 334 | Ala. | 1916
This case involves an accounting between the assignee of a mortgage and the heirs and personal representative of a deceased mortgagor. A statement of the leading facts has appeared in the report of a former appeal. — Compton v. Collins, 190 Ala. 499, 67 South. 395. After the cause had been returned to the chancery court the parties entered into an agreement by the terms of which the chancellor was authorized to make a .decree directing a reference and “that at the holding of said reference said register shall be governed by the opinion and decree of this court rendered in this cause in January, 1914, as modified and corrected by the opinion and decree of the Supreme Court of Alabama,” and, on June 22, 1915, a decree was rendered with direction to the register substantially in the language of the agreement. October 6, 1915, defendants filed their statement of' the account showing a balance in their favor on January 1, 1910 (the date, approximately, on which the bill in this cause was filed), of $8,062.54. Ten days later defendants filed another statement of the account showing a balance in their favor as of January 1, 1910, of $6,938.96, to which they added $3,261.04 for interest from the filing of the bill to the date of the filing of said second statement, and showing thus a total indebtedness of $10,-200. In this second statement they claimed also an attorney’s fee for services rendered by their attorney in this cause. On October 6, 1915, complainants also filed their statement of the account between themselves and defendants, conceding a balance
This court will consider in the way of review only such questions as have been contested in the court below, and this statement, along with the facts to which we have referred as shown by the record, will suffice to dispose of a number of the issues counsel for defendants (appellants) seek to raise by their brief, including among the rest, all those questions of fact disposed of by this court after mature deliberation on the former appeal; but, since the chancellor undertook to restate the account and to restate it not in accordance with the theory of either party, thus substantially dispensing with the register’s report, it devolves upon us to consider such objections to the chancellor’s statement of the account and his decree in accordance therewith as have not heretofore been under consideration in this court; for otherwise defendants would be deprived of the right of review as to conclusions which they have had no opportunity to controvert in the court below.
When filing their bill in this cause complainants, protesting that they were able, ready, and willing to pay any sum justly due to defendants, complained that defendants, who had advertised a foreclosure by sale under the power contained in the mortgage, were abusing the power for that they were claiming a debt against complainants that had been swollen by usurious and various other improper and unjust charges, and the event has justified this charge. The quoted stipulation of the mortgage was intended to indemnify defendants against any necessity for employing an attorney to foreclose; but it was not intended to secure the payment of a fee for unnecessary services, or services the necessity for which might be brought on by the sole or contributing wrong of defendants, however extensive or laborious
If the balance remaining after all payments were credited in their proper places came over from non-interest-bearing items only — and that is what the chancellor found — then it seems it ought to be accepted as a matter of course that the balance, so long as it remained a balance only, not merged in a decree of the court, should not bear interest; for otherwise usury would be allowed contrary to the mandate of our statute.- — -Code, § 4623.
In the chancellor’s statement of the account defendants were allowed interest from December 30,1903, on the Avery and R. W. Collins' judgments. The first mentioned of these judgments is inadvertently referred to by this court in its opinion on former appeal as the R. H. & W. C. Agee judgment. — Compton v. Collins, 190 Ala. 505, 67 South. 395. On these judgments respectively defendants should have had also interest from October 20, 1900, and January 1, 1902, down to the chancellor’s date of December 30, 1903,
Other matters assigned for error have been concluded by the former opinion and decree of this court and the terms of the agreement and decree under which the last reference was held.
On a former day of this term a 'decree was here rendered the effect of which in part was to reverse the chancellor’s decree in some respects and remand the cause in order that the account between the parties might be restated in accordance with the opinion of this court. But now, the parties having joined in an urgent request that this court render a decree finally disposing of the cause, we have ascertained the amount due at this time from appellees to appellants and have rendered a decree foreclosing appellants’ mortgage for the amount so ascertained and in other respects in accordance with the agreement of the parties on file.
Reversed and rendered.