96 So. 875 | Ala. | 1923
The primary purpose of the bill of complaint, both originally and as amended, is to hold the respondent Cody as trustee of the title to certain lands, and to execute the trust by a sale of the lands and a distribution of the proceeds among those alleged to have an interest therein, in the order of their respective priorities.
The essential facts upon which Cody's relationship to the lands as trustee, and the equities sought to be established and satisfied, are based, are as follows: The Tri-State Realty Company was the owner of the lands, and executed three successive mortgages thereon, the first, for about $10,000, to a Selma bank; the second, for about $3,500, to the complainant, Crowson; and the third, for $16,500, also to the complainant. Complainant transferred said second mortgage to one H. B. Allison, who is made a party respondent to the bill. Complainant also transferred said third mortgage to the respondent Cody, as collateral security for a debt of $16,050, due from him to Cody, and evidenced by his promissory note for that amount, dated October 9, 1915.
After the transfer of said second and third mortgages by complainant to Allison and Cody, respectively, the said first mortgage was foreclosed, and the mortgagee therein became the purchaser at the sale made under the power therein contained. Neither the original mortgagor, nor Crowson, nor Allison, sought to exercise the statutory right of redemption; but, before the expiration of the two-year period, the respondent Cody effected such a redemption by paying to the purchaser's vendee the sum of $13,696.28, and receiving from him a deed conveying the lands in fee simple. Thereupon Cody went into possession of said lands, receiving and appropriating the rents, and claiming them in his own right, and denying that the complainant Crowson or said Allison have any interest therein.
It is alleged that the land is worth largely in excess of the three mortgage debts, and the main prayer of the bill is that the lands be sold and the proceeds applied (1) to the reimbursement of Cody for the cost of his redemption from the first mortgage sale; (2) to the satisfaction of the second mortgage held by Allison; (3) to the satisfaction of complainant's debt to Cody; and (4) that *676 any balance remaining be paid over to complainant.
Other allegations and prayers are incidental merely, and are designed to reduce the amount of the debt claimed by Cody against complainant, and to secure an accounting between them, with discovery, to determine the amount actually due. These features of the case will be referred to and considered in their appropriate place. Some of them were discussed on a former appeal of the case (Crowson v. Cody,
Since that appeal, whereon it was held that the trial court properly sustained the demurrer to the bill, the bill has been amended by the addition of five new paragraphs, but with no change in the prayers for relief. Cody demurred to the bill as amended, assigning all the original grounds, and also seven additional grounds. The demurrer was sustained generally, and the appeal is from that ruling of the trial court.
As to its dominant asserted equity, the theory of the bill of complaint is that Cody holds the legal title to the lands as trustee for Crowson and Allison, and that, upon the general principles of equity relating to trusts, the property can be and should be sold and the proceeds appropriated to the satisfaction of all equitable claims thereto as they are alleged to be entitled.
The bill does not seek to have a foreclosure of the mortgage transferred by Crowson to Cody, and there are no averments appropriate to such relief. Nor does it seek a redemption from the pledgee, in which aspect, as declared on the former appeal (Crowson v. Cody,
The relation between a pledgor and his pledgee is certainly one of trust, and as to all dealings with the pledged property the pledgee is regarded as a trustee, and is accountable accordingly. Keeble v. Jones,
Where the pledge is by way of an assignment of a note and mortgage on land as collateral security, the transaction has been called "a mortgage of a mortgage," and, with respect to the land, the relation of the parties is substantially that of mortgagor and mortgagee.
Unquestionably, then, Cody's legal title, acquired by purchase or redemption from the vendee under the first mortgage sale, is a trust estate for which he is accountable to his pledgor or mortgagor, Crowson, after the satisfaction of his own claims, viz. the amount of the debt secured by the pledge, and the cost of the first mortgage redemption.
But only through the medium of his pledge, and consistently with his obligations to his pledgee, can Crowson assert and enforce the rights of a cestui que trust. The obligations of the trust relation are limited and strictly reciprocal. If it be true that Cody was able to buy in the legal title, as he did, only by virtue of his being clothed with an interest in the property as Crowson's pledgee or mortgagee, it is equally true that Crowson can hold him as trustee of that title only by virtue of his own relation to Cody as Cody's pledgor.
Neither a mortgagor nor a pledgor, merely as such, can maintain a bill in equity to compel the foreclosure of the mortgage or pledge. 27 Cyc. 1547m, and cases cited in note 68; Kelly v. Longshore,
"The owner of the equity of redemption has no right against the mortgagee, except the right to redeem. He cannot compel the mortgagee to foreclose his mortgage."
This principle is manifestly fatal to the equity of the bill as to its main purpose — a sale of the property for distribution.
Nor can this alleged equity be strengthened by bringing in the claim of Allison as second mortgagee, and seeking to give to it a priority of payment over Cody's claim under the third mortgage, for there is neither privity of estate, nor community of interest, between Allison and Cody. That there is any such privity or community between them is, we think, the fundamental error of the bill of complaint. If Crowson should redeem from Cody, thereby freeing the lands from the charge of the first mortgage, the redemption would undoubtedly inure to the benefit of Allison, as assignee of Crowson's second mortgage. But, we repeat, the approach to Cody's legal estate lies along a single, narrow path, which none but Cody's pledgor, Crowson, may travel, and he only upon the condition, prescribed by equity, of satisfying the debt for which the pledge was given.
This, of course, is not to say that a third mortgage is, under any conditions, superior to a second mortgage. The relations and rights of these parties, under the circumstances now developed, present no such question.
As a bill for the execution of a trust, we held that the bill is without equity, and that the demurrer to the bill as to that aspect was properly sustained.
In this view of the case, it is unnecessary to pass upon the question, presented by one *677 of the grounds of demurrer, whether the original mortgagor, the Tri-State Realty Company, is a necessary party to the bill. But it may be remarked in passing, if Cody's redemption inures to the benefit of Crowson and Allison (as the bill asserts), it is difficult to understand why the discharge of Cody's claims would not inure to the benefit of the Tri-State Realty Company also, if any surplus should remain after satisfying the second and third mortgages. Certainly the original mortgagor is entitled to his "place in the sun," if the principles of equity invoked in behalf of Crowson and Allison are to be justly applied. The theory and prayer of the bill, however, would exclude Crowson's mortgagor from any share.
We consider now the other aspects of the bill.
On the former appeal we held that the mere relation of pledgor and pledgee would not support a bill for an accounting. Crowson v. Cody,
In its aspect as a bill for accounting between mortgagor or pledgor and mortgagee or pledgee, we think the bill, as amended, has equity, and may be maintained.
Crowson's debt to Cody, as collaterally secured, is evidenced by his note for $16,050. In impeachment of this debt, the bill alleges the following matters:
(1) The note was given in settlement of the balance due from Crowson to Cody, resulting from their operations under a joint enterprise for the buying and selling of real estate, which enterprise began in 1912 and terminated on October 19, 1915; and the amount of the note thus given is incorrect, in that as to some of their dealings Cody made sales at a profit of about $3,000, which he improperly retained, and which should have been credited to Crowson; and in that the note included $3,000 or more to be afterwards advanced by Cody to Crowson, but which was not in fact advanced.
(2) Usurious exactions were included in the note to the amount of about $4,000; being the amount claimed by Cody in excess of 8 per cent. interest on the money advanced by him for the operation of the business.
(3) Cody has received large sums of money as rents for the mortgaged lands, which should in equity be credited on Crowson's note.
With respect to the first contention, the allegations of the bill, even as amended, are not sufficient to impeach the settlement shown to have been deliberately made between Cody and Crowson at the termination of their joint adventure on October 9, 1915. Indeed, the pleader seems to studiously avoid any charge of mistake, fraud, or undue advantage in the settlement; and adds nothing to the allegations of the original bill other than the general statement, that the settlement was not a correct and proper one, and that many matters of both debt and credit were left out. This falls far short of what is required to enlist the aid of a court of equity to open the settlement. Paulling v. Creagh's Adm'r,
"If the account impeached be a settled account, or if an instrument has been executed at the foot of it, the court expects that the errors should be specified in the bill and proved as specified."
This rule has been specifically applied to a settlement between partners, since they do not bear such a fiduciary relation to each other as to render a settlement between them less binding than between other persons. Scheuer v. Berringer,
The defect noted was aptly pointed out by one of the grounds of the demurrer, and that ground was properly sustained.
If choses in action or other property were left in Cody's hands at the time of the settlement, to be disposed of by him for the account of the joint adventure, with the understanding that any part of the proceeds should belong to Crowson, and should be credited on his note to Cody, such matters must, of course, be taken into account in ascertaining the amount due on the note; and, if a part of the consideration for the note was an amount of money to be afterwards advanced to Crowson, which was not in fact advanced or in any way accounted for, this must, of course, be deducted from the amount of the note.
The allegations of the bill are wholly insufficient to sustain the charge of usury. It is true that, if one lends money upon the consideration that he is to receive the legal rate of interest and also something else of value, over and above such interest, for the use of the money, the transaction will be regarded as usurious. It is true, also, that this result cannot be avoided, if the transaction was in fact a loan of money merely, under whatever form of contract the usurious purpose may be disguised or concealed. Rapier v. Gulf City Paper Co.,
But, if the transaction was in fact a joint adventure, upon such terms as to entitle the party who advanced the money to a share in such profits as might be made, it *678
is prima facie not usurious, although he stipulates for the repayment of the money, in any event, with legal interest for its use in the business. Ruckdeschall v. Seibel, supra; Goodrich v. Rogers,
As observed by Mr. Collyer:
"The only question in cases of this kind will be, whether or not it was the intention of the parties to enter into an agreement having the semblance of a partnership agreement, with a view to evade the usury laws. * * * The better opinion, however, is that an agreement having the form of a partnership agreement, but in which profits beyond the legal rate of interest are reserved to one of the parties, is legal, unless it appears to have been executed by way of shift or contrivance to cover usury, because, at all events, the principal, for which such profits and interests are taken, is hazarded to third persons." 1 Collyer on Part. (6th Ed.) 120, § 68.
In the instant case, the transaction exhibited is prima facie not usurious, and it is necessary for the bill to charge, and the evidence to show, that it was not made in good faith, but was intended to disguise and conceal a mere loan of money, for which usurious compensation was to be paid to the lender. No such allegation is made, and the ground of demurrer addressed to this phase of the bill was well taken and was properly sustained.
The relation between Crowson and Cody as to these lands being substantially that of mortgagor and mortgagee, Cody will be accountable to Crowson for the rents and profits derived from Cody's possession under his legal title, which in equity are applicable to the mortgage debt.
In our view of the case, as fully developed above, the only equity in the bill of complaint is the equity to an accounting. In order to maintain the bill for that purpose, it must be, by appropriate amendment, disincumbered of other inapt allegations and purposes; and in those parts which seek to falsify the settlement note the allegations must be amended to meet the requirements above stated, or they must be stricken from the bill.
While the law of amendments is liberal, and the practice of courts indulgent, there must be an end to litigation, and if a complainant cannot or will not finally amend a defective bill so as to meet the requirements of law within a reasonable time, there is no recourse except to dismiss the bill.
The decree of the trial court sustaining the demurrers to the bill, as amended, will be affirmed, but the decree dismissing the bill will be modified and conditioned so as to allow the complainant 30 days in which to amend the bill, as above indicated, if he desires to do so. The costs of this appeal will be taxed against appellant.
Affirmed, with modification of the decree of dismissal.
ANDERSON, C. J., and McCLELLAN and THOMAS, JJ., concur.