86 So. 399 | Ala. | 1920
Bishop, the appellee, filed this bill against W. S. Fortson, Bank of Albertville, J. R. Sherman, and W. A. Fortson. Its object is to disaffirm foreclosure, under power of sale, of a mortgage executed, to secure balance of purchase money of the land described in the bill, by Bishop to W. A. Fortson and assigned through other respondents to appellant, and to redeem. The mortgage did not authorize the mortgagee or his assignee to purchase at the sale, and hence disaffirmance and redemption are the appellee's due. The decree correctly so concluded. The contested questions, touching the amount to be paid on redemption, presented by the assignments of error, arise out of the fact that at the time Bishop bought the land from W. A. Fortson and received his warranty deed there was an outstanding superior seasonably registered mortgage on a part of the land, executed by W. A. Fortson and wife to Mrs. P. F. Pope, securing a note for $450, with interest. Before the maturity of Bishop's note and mortgage to W. A. Fortson, he assigned this negotiable note, secured by the mortgage, to the Bank of Albertville, the bank assigned to Sherman, and Sherman, after maturity, assigned to W. S. Fortson, appellant.
The disaffirming redemptioner, under the thus re-established equity of redemption resulting from Bishop's mortgage to W. A. Fortson, invoked the court to so adjust, to toll, the amount necessary to effect such redemption by the amount necessary to satisfy the Pope mortgage — superior and outstanding *526
at the time Bishop purchased the land from W. A. Fortson — to which Bishop appears to have succeeded by a conditional assignment from Mrs. Pope. The basis of Bishop's claim is predicated of the breach of warranty in the deed (Code, § 3421) from W. A. Fortson to Bishop because of the outstanding, superior incumbrance imposed upon part of the land by the earlier mortgage executed to Mrs. Pope by W. A. Fortson, Bishop's grantor — a covenant that was breached as soon as made. 3 Mich. Dig. Ala. Rep. p. 780 et seq. Both W. A. Fortson and W. S. Fortson were alleged and proven to be insolvent. If the appellee's note and mortgage, under which the redemption is sought, had remained the property of the mortgagee, instead of being assigned, as stated, this appellant, Bishop, the redeeming mortgagor, would have been entitled to a reduction in the amount necessary to effect redemption to the extent of the amount of damages consequent upon the breach of W. A. Fortson's warranty, resulting from the fact that there was an outstanding, superior mortgage held by Mrs. Pope. Conner v. Smith,
The Bishop note to W. A. Fortson was a negotiable instrument. The mortgage securing its payment was an incident to the note, and in the hands of an innocent purchaser was imprest with the same character and quality of right that a bona fide purchaser of the note could claim in an action at law upon the note. Thompson v. Maddux,
In the seventh paragraph of appellants' answer it is averred:
"That for a valuable consideration, and before maturity, it [i. e., the note and mortgage given by Bishop to W. A. Fortson] was assigned by the said W. A. Fortson to the Bank of Albertville," and "that for a valuable consideration, and before maturity, the Bank of Albertville assigned it to James R. Sherman, who thereafter assigned it for a valuable consideration, but after maturity, to this" appellant. (Italics supplied.)
Having taken the assignment after maturity, the appellant's right to the protection he asserts must be determined with reference to Sherman's character as a holder in due course, invested at the time the instrument was assigned to him (Sherman) by the bank with the right attaching to a holder in due course. Code, § 5013. It was not averred or shown that appellant or Sherman or the bank was a party "to any fraud or illegality affecting the instrument," within the purview of Code, § 5013. Brannan's Uniform Negotiable Instruments Law, pp. 204 et seq., and notes.
It appears that the assignment of the note and mortgage to Sherman was effected before maturity. The taking by Sherman of the note and mortgage as only collateral security for a pre-existing debt due him from W. A. Fortson, the mortgagee, did not operate to prevent Sherman from being a holder in due course. Vogler v. Manson,
"The title of a person who negotiates an instrument is defective within the meaning of this chapter when he obtained the instrument, or any signature thereto, by fraud, duress, or force and fear, or other unlawful means, or for an illegal consideration, or when he negotiates it in breach of faith, or under such circumstances as amount to a fraud." Section 5010.
"To constitute notice of an infirmity in the instrument or defect in the title of the person negotiating the same, the person to whom it is negotiated must have had actual knowledge of the infirmity or defect, or knowledge of such facts that his action in taking the instrument amounted to bad faith." Section 5011.
"A holder in due course holds the instrument free from any defect of title of prior parties, and free from defenses available to prior parties among themselves and the enforced payment of the instrument for the full amount thereof against all parties liable thereon." Section 5012.
The evidence before this court does not even tend to establish either actual knowledge on the part of Sherman of a defect in the title of the instrument (note) when acquired by Sherman (27 Cyc. pp. 1324, 1325), or the presence at that time of any of the other conditions defined in Code, §§ 5010, 5011, which would or did preclude Sherman's becoming a holder in duecourse. In the circumstances shown by the record the burden of proof was imposed by the provisions of Code, § 5014, upon Bishop to refute the presumption the law now attaches to the conditions disclosed by this record.
The fact that the superior, outstanding mortgage, executed by W. A. Fortson to Mrs. Pope, had been seasonably recorded at the time Bishop purchased the land from W. A. Fortson and received his warranty deed, *527 the statutory (Code, § 3421) covenant against incumbrances being breached when made, did not operate to characterize the title to the negotiable instrument, executed by Bishop to W. A. Fortson, and acquired by Sherman before maturity, as defective within the purview of the cited statutes. The mortgage being but an incident, attaching and attending rights created by or resulting from the negotiable character of the Bishop note, the rights of the parties were and are determinable and measurable with reference to the negotiable instrument, and not with qualifying reference to the law of mortgages, or to the effect, in other circumstances, that is consequent upon the seasonable registration (under Code, § 3367 et seq.) of such conveyances of real estate.
These considerations conduce to a conclusion at variance with that prevailing in the trial court. Its decree is affected with error with respect to its ascertainment of the amount necessary to effect redemption under the Bishop mortgage. The decree is reversed, and the cause is remanded for further proceedings in consonance with this opinion.
Reversed and remanded.
ANDERSON, C. J., and SOMERVILLE and THOMAS, JJ., concur.