43 Ala. 561 | Ala. | 1869
The record in this case shows that the defendant in error, said Quinn, on the 16th day of November, 1867, filed his bill in the chancery court of Montgomery county, Alabama, against R. M. Guthrie, Dixon H. Lewis, and Lehman, Durr & Co., in which he alleges, that said Guthrie, on the 21st day of August, 1867, purchased a horse of him for the sum of one hundred and ninety-five dollars, to be paid on or before the 1st day of November, then next following; that in order to secure the payment of said sum of money, said Guthrie gave him a mortgage or lien on said horse, and his growing crop; that this mortgage was duly executed and recorded as required by law; that at the time said horse was sold as aforesaid, and before the trade, was consummated, appellee had an interview with said Lewis in regard to said trade, and that he then informed said Lewis of the proposed sale of said
The parties defendant were all brought into the court
The chancellor decreed that Guthrie pay the complainant $211.60 and costs; and that this amount be paid out of the proceeds of the cotton and other crops seized in this cause, and sold by consent, and that after the payment of the costs and amount of this decree, with interest from the date of the report, the balance be paid to said Lewis. And in case the proceeds of said crop fall short of paying appellee’s demand and costs, then, that said Lewis pay the balance of the costs so remaining unpaid, out of his share
There can be no doubt as to the complainant’s equity in this case. There is no doctrine of equity more familiar than the right of a mortgagee to go into chancery to enforce the foreclosure of his mortgage, or his lien, in the nature of a mortgage. The surprise would be, that it is doubted rather than that it does not exist.—2 Story Eq. Ch. XXVII, ubique; 1 ib. § 506, et seq.; Ross v. Ross, 21 Ala. 322; Alabama Life Insurance and Trust Co. v. Pettway, 24 Ala. 544; Cullum v. Br. Bk. Mobile, 23 Ala. 797; Boyd v. Beck, 29 Ala. 703. Then the demurrer in this case was without sufficient grounds, and properly overruled.
The answer of the defendant, Lewis, in the court below, is put in without oath. This takes from it the force that it would otherwise have been entitled to, as evidence in the cause, on behalf of the defendant. In such case it merely puts the cause at issue, and is of no more weight as evidence than the bill.—Rev. Code, § 3328; Rainey v. Rainey, 35 Ala. 282. Then it did not require the testimony of two witnesses to overturn the answer and deposition of .Lewis. His denials are fully disproved by the depositions of Quinn and Caldwell. Quinn applied to him for advice when he was about to sell his horse to Guthrie, and Lewis cautioned him not to sell without retaining a lien on the horse, and informed him that Guthrie would be entitled to one-half the crop he was making on his (Lewis’) land, and that “ it would be all right.” This language could not have been reasonably construed to mean less than that the crop would be liable to aid in paying for the horse. The language was addressed to Quinn. It could not be all right to him, if the cotton and corn that Guthrie was making on Lewis’ lands was not liable to the payment of the amount about to be contracted for the horse. Nothing less than this would make it all right with Quinn. If Lewis then had claims against Guthrie for which the crop was liable, it was his duty to have disclosed them. If he failed to do this,
The decree in the court below is affirmed at the costs of the appellant, Lewis, in this court and the court below, and his securities on his appeal bond.