117 So. 216 | Ala. | 1928
The original bill in this cause was filed by Homer Marshall as surviving partner of Marshall Tie Company, a partnership composed of complainant and E. D. Marshall, now deceased, for the settlement of the affairs of the partnership. The Corinth State Bank of Corinth, Miss., and the First National Bank of Florence, Ala., were made parties defendant on an averment that they held or claimed liens on a tract of 10,000 acres of land, which had been the property of the partnership, in Colbert county. The question now presented for decision arose out of a cross-bill filed by the Corinth bank in which it averred that, on the request of E. D. Marshall, it had furnished the money to pay a note for $8,529.84, held by Franklin R. Webber of Boston, Mass., and secured by a first mortgage on the Colbert county land, with the agreement that the repayment of the money so advanced should be secured by the lien of the mortgage. Cross-complainant sought to be subrogated to the security of the mortgage held by Webber. The Florence bank showed that it had held a mortgage on the Marshall land, executed after the Webber mortgage which was duly recorded — a second mortgage in fact, though it did not purport to be a second mortgage — and that it had foreclosed the mortgage purchased from Webber and at the foreclosure sale had purchased the land at a price of $25,000, something less than its second mortgage indebtedness, and denied any right of subrogation in the Corinth bank. On final hearing on pleading and proof, the chancellor dismissed the cross-bill. The Corinth bank appeals.
The note for $8,529.84, mentioned above, was the fifth of a series of six notes for like amounts given to secure the purchase price of the Colbert county land. E. D. Marshall at its due date had made a payment of $5,000 on the fifth note of the series, and, in order to raise funds for the payment of the balance due on the fifth and as well for the payment of the sixth, not then due, Marshall applied to the Corinth bank for a loan. The bank let him have $14,000 — not as much as he asked for — taking collateral security, which afterwards in large part proved to be worthless. The testimony of several witnesses goes to show that in negotiating the loan from the Corinth bank to E. D. Marshall it was distinctly understood and explicitly agreed between the parties to the transaction that out of the funds so secured Marshall would pay the balance due on the fifth note held by Webber, take up the note, and turn it over to the bank to be held, along with the rest of the collateral, as security for the loan. There is no contradiction of this testimony, nor anything unusual or unreasonable in the nature of the transaction, and we are unable on any adequate ground to hold that the transaction was not negotiated or consummated in the manner and with the result detailed by these witnesses. Not exclusively by any means, but in the main as we gather, the defense interposed by the Florence bank rested upon the proposition that there was a failure of proof going to show that the money borrowed from the Bank of Corinth, or so much thereof as was necessary to pay the balance due on the note in question, went in fact to the payment of that note. We are unable on the record to deny the fair and reasonable inference that it was so applied. The loan to Marshall was consummated *634 November 3, 1924. At that time E. D. Marshall, who managed the affairs of the partnership, was heavily involved and was looking around for money to keep his business on foot. He owed the Florence bank $30,000. He owed the Bank of Princeton, Ky., with which ordinarily he did business, a much larger sum. Webber was pressing for payment of the fifth of the purchase-money notes then past due. The Princeton bank, by representations concerning the character and financial ability of Marshall, helped him to get the loan from the Corinth bank with which, prior to that time, he had had no dealings. The $14,000 was transmitted to the Princeton bank November 3, 1924. Webber, in Boston, acknowledged the receipt of a check for $4,633.40, on November 6, 1924, of which amount $4,113.69 went to pay the balance due on the fifth year note, but denied Marshall's request for a transfer of the note for the assigned, and doubtless the true, reason that the sixth of the purchase-money notes held by him remained to be paid, and he did not wish any one else to own an interest in his mortgage. The note was marked "Paid and canceled," and returned to Marshall. Mr. Pomeroy, apropos of cases circumstanced as is this, says:
"Whether one not himself paying the debt, but loaning money to the debtor upon his personal security, but with the understanding that it is to be used in removing an incumbrance, is thereby entitled to claim the benefit of the incumbrance removed, is a matter of doubt." 5 Pom. Eq. Jur. (2d Ed.) § 2347, citing cases pro and con in the footnote.
In this state our predecessors Brickell, Stone, and Somerville, in Bolman v. Lohman,
"Where money is expressly advanced in order to extinguish a prior incumbrance, and is used for this purpose, with the just expectation on the part of the lender of obtaining a valid security, * * * the lender * * * may be subrogated to the rights of the prior incumbrancer, whose claim he has satisfied; there being no intervening equity to prevent" — citing Kitchell v. Mudgett,
In Bolman v. Lohman, the court cited with approval the cases of McWilliams v. Jenkins,
Appellant's proposal to take over the fifth note would have left Webber in possession and ownership of the sixth note unpaid. In the situation thus disclosed it may be suggested that the equitable rule will not permit subrogation to be decreed until the whole debt is paid. Atherton v. Tesch,
But we do not see that appellant is entitled to subrogation as to the $5,000 paid to Webber on account of the fifth note prior to the loan obtained from appellant; Marshall had paid $5,000 out of his private purse; but that amount went to pay a debt of the partnership for which as partner he was responsible. His purpose in making the loan with the Bank of Corinth, in addition to paying the balance due to Webber on the fifth note, was, it may be conceded, to reimburse himself as against his partner for the $5,000 payment. No claim for subrogation can be maintained on that account. As to that, the bank was not entitled to subrogation against Webber, for it advanced no money to pay $5,000 of the note then due. That had already been paid. But, as to the balance of the fifth note, $4,113.69, appellant is entitled to subrogation as against the Bank of Florence. If foreclosure shall be necessary, the Bank of Florence will first be paid the amount it expended in the purchase of the sixth note.
After Webber had refused to deal with the fifth note otherwise than by marking it "Paid and canceled," Marshall in some sort of an effort to make the Bank of Corinth whole, sent to it a note for $9,149.65, made by Marshall Tie Company, Homer Marshall, and George Land, and payable to E. D. Marshall. This note, it afterwards appeared, was of no value. This is insisted on as a waiver of subrogation; but the evidence goes to show that the Bank of Corinth did not accept the note in lieu of the fifth note of the series secured by the mortgage held by Webber — expressly declined so to do — but as additional security only (Watts v. Eufaula National Bank,
The decree under review will be reversed, and the cause remanded, in order that it may be disposed of by a decree in agreement with this opinion.
Reversed and remanded.
ANDERSON, C. J., and GARDNER and BOULDIN, JJ., concur.