107 Ala. 429 | Ala. | 1894
On Nov. 28, 1877, F. L. Hammond, being indebted to the complainant, Bettie H. Curry, who ■was his daughter, in the sum of $1,377.18, and to Bur-well J. Gurry, her husband, in the sum of $12,330.15, conveyed, by deed, to said Burwell J. the lands which fornn the subject matter of this suit, in payment of the latter indebtedness, but declaring, in the deed, by appropriate words, a prior and paramount charge or lien xxpoxx the lands-in favor of the complainant, the said Bettie H., for the security of the said indebtedness to her.
• ,TOn May 7, Í886, the said Burwell J. Curry bon*owed of the defendant, The American Freehold Land Mortgage Company of London, Limited, the sum of $10,000,
1st. It is not questioned, as the written application for the loan made by Burwell J. Curry shows, that the loan was to him individually. He was tho legal owner of the lands, and they were mortgaged, as his property, to secure the loan. To perfect the security it was necessary that the wife release her dower, and sign the conveyance so as to bar the husband’s homestead. Section 1894 of the Code of 1886, provides how dower may be relinquished. It provides that the wife may relinquish her dower in land by joining with her husband in a conveyance thereof, or by joining with her husband in a power of attorney authorizing the attorney to convey the lands, or subsequently to a conveyance thereof by the husband, by a separate instrument executed by her alone ; and in either case, her signature must be attested by two witnesses who are able to write, or acknowledged by her according to the form prescribed for the acknowledgment of other conveyances in this State ; and section 1899 provides, that “Neither the wife individually, nor
There is, in the covenants of this mortgage, no element of misrepresentation of fact, as suggested by counsel, upon which the mortgagee was induced to rely, which renders Mrs. Curry’s repudiation of them, if they had proceeded from her, tortious in its nature. They (those referred to by counsel) are the covenants of seizin, warranty of title and against incumbrances usually found in deeds and mortgages of real estate, and are purely contractual in their nature. It has never been supposed that the breach of one or all of these covenants, influenced by no other misrepresentation of fact, constituted a fraud on the part of the covenantor which justified dealing with him as a tort feasor.
The chancellor’s decree was not in accord with our views and must be reversed. The cross bill of the defendant company, to marshal the assets was dismissed by the chancellor, and there is no cross appeal; hence, that matter is not before us. A cross bill is essential to obtain the relief sought. The dismissal was, however,
lleversed and remanded.