189 Ala. 24 | Ala. | 1914
In a cause pending in the city court of Anniston, equity side, wherein R. J. and W. T. Dickie were parties complainant and J. F. Thrasher, J. E. Hughes, and the Anniston City National Bank
The facts necessary to be considered, as they appear in the hill and its exhibits, may be fairly stated as follows: Complainant Blake, to secure the purchase price of a livery business he had sold to the Dickies, took 30 notes of $100 each, payable one in each of the 30 months next to follow, and a mortgage on a tract of land and the live stock, vehicles, and harness oppurtenant to the business. These notes and the mortgage securing them he then pledged to the Anniston City National Bank as collateral to secure his personal note of $1,500 to the bank. Afterwards, the Dickies having defaulted in the payment of the two notes first to fall due, complainant, acting with the full consent of the bank, “sold and conveyed unto J. F. Thrasher and J. E. Hughes all of his rights, title, and interest in and to the notes and mortgage of the said R. J. Dickie and W. T. Dickie,” in consideration of $200 presently paid — which, we may suppose went to the bank — and their 28 joint notes for $100 each payable to complainant one in each of the 28 months next to follow. The petition for leave to file the bill ,of in
However, this assignment and 'transfer does not appear in the transcript before us. Complainant then assigned his Thrasher-Hughes notes to the bank as further security for his indebtedness, thus, as the bill avers, restoring to the bank the pledge of the Dickie notes and mortgage as security for complainant’s debt. Afterwards Thrasher, Hughes, and the bank, proposing to exercise an option with which the mortgage armed the mortgagee to declare all the notes due upon default in payment of any of them, were proceeding to foreclose the Dickie mortgage by a sale under the power, when' the Dickies filed their bill to enjoin the sale as an abuse of the power- and upon that bill procured a preliminary injunction. Pending a final disposition of that suit, the Dickies defaulted on other notes falling due, whereuppn Thrasher, Hughes, and the bank again proceeded to advertise a foreclosure sale. Again they were enjoined by a decretal order made upon the filing of a supplemental bill, the order providing, however, that the Dickies should pay into the registry of the court the amount of their notes past due and other notes as they fell due, and that the injunction should stand so long only as they should continue to do so. In the meantime, also, the original bill
Reading the petition for leave to file the bill of intervention with the bill itself, it appears that the bank, C. F. Douglass, G. A. Costello, L. M. Abbott, R. J. Dickie, and W. T. Dickie, conspiring to put complainant’s rights in the Dickie mortgage and the Thrasher-Hughes notes beyond his reach and power of enforcement, have made and procured an assignment of these securities to “C. F. Douglass, attorney,” alleged to have acted as agent, for the Dickies, that Douglass assigned them to Costello, and that they háve been “shifted” back to the bank. What part Abbott may have taken in these transactions is not made to appear by the record before us. Further it is averred that, while these securities were in possession of Costello under the circumstances above stated, complaining intervener tendered to him the amount of his note to the bank, thereby restoring his legal ownership,. notwithstanding his tender was refused. It is further shown that the bank denies possession or ownership of these securities, and the conclusion is that the defendants will not foreclose the pledge of other collateral deposited in the bank for the security of the debt which complainant contracted with thé bank.
Complainant is not a mere intervener, seeking participation in the • relief prayed in the original cause. His relief is sought on an equity independent of and antagonistic to that sought in the original cause, to which he is not a party, and must be awarded, if at all, on an original bill of intervention in the nature of a cross-bill.—Renfro Bros. v. Goetter, Weil & Co., 78 Ala. 311; Ex parte Printup, 87 Ala. 148, 6 South. 418; Talladega, Mercantile Co. v. Jenifer Iron Co., 102 Ala. 259, 14 South. 743. Such a bill, when allowed and filed, is not a mere accessory to the original cause. It asserts an equity in the subject-matter of litigation, independent of the claims of the parties to the original cause, and not brought to the attention of the court by the pleadings in that cause, but which must needs be adjudicated along with the original cause, to the end that complete justice may be done. We would say, adopting here the analogy of rule 102 of chancery practice, made in cases of supplemental bills and bills of revivor, that it need not recite the pleadings and proceedings of record in the original cause, but may adopt them by reference, whereby they become a part of and necessary to a full. understanding of the record of the intervening cause. Proceeding on the new record so made, the court will have’ before it all matters of controversy between the parties to the- two causes thus effectually consolidated, and be able to settle all equities in one decree. • • - - ,
Complainant, appellee, by way of argument to sustain the ruling on demurrer, makes in his brief extended quotations from the testimony taken in the original cause. This testimony is not before us, and, if it were, it would not constitute a part of the record of the original cause in such sort that we might look to it in passing upon the demurrers to the bill of intervention.
It will appear from the foregoing statement of the record before us that we are not in a position to pass upon the ruling which appellants have sought to bring under review. Appellants contend that the bill is multifarious, as conjoining unrelated matters and that in
Affirmed.