Cox v. O'Neal

142 Ala. 314 | Ala. | 1904

HABALSON, J.

J. W. Cox, the defendant below and appellant here, was Colonel of the First Infantry, Alabama National Guards, on and prior to the 1st day of July, 1897. On that day he entered into a written contract with the complainant, William O’Neal, which recited that, “I, William O’Neal, for and in consideration of the sum of one dollar to me in hand paid, the receipt of which is hereby acknowledged, hereby lease to James Wade Cox for the term of four years, to commence on tlie 1st day of June, 1897, the following described real estate (describing the property.) It is understood and *316agreed that said James Wade Cox shall have the privilege of erecting on said property such buildings as he may see fit and proper, and that he shall be allowed to remove said buildings so erected, upon the expiration of this lease. The said Janies Wade Cox agrees to surrender said premises at the expiration of the term in as good condition as reasonable use will allow, unavoidable casualties excepted.”

It appears that Cox erected on the land mentioned in the lease, a mess hall, store room, guard house and tent floors, and the same was used afterwards as an encampment ground for the First Infantry, Alabama National Guard. It appears that O’Neal, under a claim that he set up to the materials in said erections, refused to allow Cox to remove the same, when the latter brought suit against said O’Neal in the circuit court of Baldwin county, for a breach of said contract of lease. Thereupon, O’Neal filed this bill in the chancery court of Mobile county, alleging that the contract sued upon, although made by Cox as an individual, was in fact made by him as the Colonel of the First Regiment, Alabama Rational Guard; that subsequent to the making of the contract, the term of office of said Cox, as such Colonel expired, and he was succeeded by Col. DuMont; that Col. DuMont and the quartermaster of the Regiment sold to him, O’Neal, for §75.00, the property above mentioned, constituting the improvements put on said land by the defendant, and prayed that defendant Cox, be enjoined from the further prosecution of his suit at law. The bill is sought to be maintained upon the allegation “that no legal defense can be made to the said suit of James Wade Cox against Orator, and that orator’s only remedy is by this proceeding in this honorable chancery court.”

The averment is further made, that although the contract of lease appears to have been executed by the said Cox as an individual, yet, as a matter of fact, the said Cox when he executed said agreement was not acting for himself, but was acting in behalf of the troops commanded by him, and obtained the lease of said land for the purpose of the encampment of said troops; that *317said buildings were not erected with funds of the said Cox, but" that the material and the erection of the same Avere paid for Avith money from the funds appropriated by the State of Alabama, for the use of the said First Infantry, Alabama National Guard.

The defendant demurred to the bill oh many grounds, among them, that the bill shows that complainant has a full and adequate remedy at Iuav; because, if the buildings mentioned in the bill, were erected in the manner stated, and Avere not erected by the defendant as an individual, this would be a defense at laAv to the suit pending-in the circuit court, and because the complainant by his contract with defendant has estopped himself under the allegations of the bill, from disputing the title of defendant to said buildings, etc.

The court overruled the demurrer, and decreed, that under the evidence complainant Avas entitled to the relief prayed for.

The evidence tended, on the part of the complainant to show, that the improvements placed on the land Avere made from funds appropriated by the State for military purposes; and on the part of the defendant, that they were paid for out of funds of his own, and that what he had paid was refunded to him out of the share of the regiment in the State appropriation; that the appropriation was divided among the regiments, after the close of the encampment, pro rata, according to the strength of the respective commands and the State incurred no obligation. for 'encampment grounds, and whatever preparations that were made for a place of encampment and necessary erections thereon, Avere made by the Colonels at their oayu risk, to be paid afterwards, if the pro rata of the annual .fund for the particular regiment, was sufficient for the purpose.

.But, however that may have been, the written contract of rent between complainant and defendant, was certain and unambiguous, and required the aid of no. extrinsic proof to make it certain. By it complainant rented the vacant grounds mentioned, to defendant for four years from the 1st day of June, 1897, and agreed that *318the defendant should have the privilege of erecting on said property such buildings as he might see proper, and .should be allowed to remove said buildings so erected, upon the expiration of the lease. What the premises were rented for, is not specified in the contract, and oral testimony of the intention or purpose for which defendant rented the grounds was inadmissible, as having nothing to do' with the construction of the contract. Morris v. Robinson, 80 Ala. 291.

The complainant in filing his bill, proceeds upon the theory, that the lease contract having been made to Cox in his own name, could not be shown, on the trial of the case at law, to have been made, not for the defendant but for the benefit of the First Regiment, and that it was the Regiment’s lease and not Cox’. If it was competent for the complainant to malee this proof on a bill in equity, it being a mere rule of evidence, no reason exists why it could not be made, if at all, as well in a trial at law. Such being the case, there was no use in resorting to a court of equity, on the ground that the remedy at law was inadequate.

Whether the complainant having leased the land to- the defendant was estopped to.deny the lease to him, and show that it was to the Regiment and for its benefit, and whether or not DuMont and his Quartermaster had any right, in the absence of a statute allowing it, to sell the property on the grounds, — even if it belonged to the regiment, — to complainant, are questions raised and discussed on this appeal. But, we need not decide these, or any other error assigned, since there can be no pretense of a right to file the bill, except on the one on which it is based, — “that no legal defense can be made to said suit i at law) of said James Wade Cox against orator, and that orator’s only remedy is by this proceeding,” etc.

The decree of the court below must be reversed, and one will be here rendered sustaining the'demurrer to the bill, and remanding the cause.

Reversed, rendered and remanded.

*319McClellan, C. J., Dowdell and Denson, J.J., concurring.
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