123 Ala. 336 | Ala. | 1898
This is a bill in one aspect to set aside and annul a judgment entered upon a statutory award. The grounds upon which the right to the relief prayed in this connection is rested are stated in the tenth paragraph of the bill, as follows: “That it was the agreement and intention of the complainant (the Dunham Lumber Co.) and of the said W. 0,. Holt (the respondent) to'submit every existing difference between them, equitable as well as legal, to the said hoard of arbitration, and that upon such agreement and understanding, and on account thereof, complainant agreed to submit existing differences to a board of arbitration, including the suit in the circuit court of Butler county. That the said suit was dismissed by the said W. C. Holt under said agreement and understanding. That if the said articles of submission do not embrace the said $6,185.82 received by said Holt for or on account of the complainant, the omission to embrace the same therein was the unintentional mistake of the scrivener of said articles of submission, or ’it was the intentional omission and fraud of W. C. Holt. • That TV. (I Holt stated to the complainant at the time of signing said articles of submission that said matters were included in the. articles to be considered by the said arbitrators on said submission, and complainant so believed uptil upon the objection by W. C. Holt before the arbitrators, and the'refusal by said arbitrators to consider and pass upon said matters. That said matters were a subsisting defense on the part of the conn plainant to the said YV. C. Holt’s right of action upon which lie commenced his suit in the Butler circuit court, and Avas a legal subsisting off-set or defense to the debt or the demands which the arbitrators ascertained that the complainant Avas indebted to the said TV. C. Holt.” The effort here is obAdously to aver mistake or fraud, one or the other but neither affirmatively. So that the averment of each must be sufficient or neither is averred. It may be that the aArerment of mutual mistake in the terms of the submission as committed to writing is
The bill, however, -has equity in another aspect. It alleges that Holt has a judgment against the complainant in the sum of about fifteen hundred dollars, which he is proceeding to enforce, that Holt is justly indebted to complainant on account extraneous to the judgment in the sum of over six thousand dollars, and that he is utterly insolvent and that he owns no property liable to the demands of complainant and subject to process for the collection of debts under the laws of the State. And on these facts there is an appropriate alternative prayer, for relief by way of setting off Holt’s indebtedness to complainant so far as necessary in satisfaction of Holt’s judgment against complainant, etc., etc. These facts presented a case for equitable interference and relief.—Martin v. Mohr, 56 Ala. 221; White v. Wiggins, 32 Ala. 424; Watts v. Sayre, 76 Ala. 397, 400. And it follows that the decree of the chancellor sustaining the motion to dismiss the bill for want of equity must be reversed. A decree will be here entered overruling that motion and allowing respondent thirty days in which to demur, or plead to, or answer the bill.
Neversed and rendered.