54 So. 172 | Ala. | 1910
If the complainant has a plain and adequate remedy at law, a court of equity cannot be resorted to as a substitute. The bill avers that the respondent converted complainant’s property after the mortgage had been paid. If this was done, the talcing was tortious, and she could bring detinue for the specific recovery of same or trover or trespass for the taking or conversion thereof. Of course, there are cases where the complainant has only an equitable title and the respondent has the legal title, in which courts of equity will take jurisdiction; but, if the mortgage was paid, the statute (sectiou 4899 of the Code of 1907) revested the title in the mortgagor, and the plaintiff does not aver any facts which would indicate that she cannot establish the payment of the mortgage debt in a court of law, as there is not su.ch a complication of accounts claimed as would need a court of equity to settle. On the other hand, if the respondent got the property under a writ of seizure, she could have shown payment of the mortgage debt and have defeated a recovery, and, if improperly decided against her in the justice court, she had the right' to appeal, and, in the absence of some equitable right, she cannot resort to the chancery court, merely to revise the rulings of a court of law. It was held as far back as Harrison v. Hicks, 1 Port. 423, 27 Am. Dec. 638, that, where the mort
Our court, in discussing the rights to equitable relief against judgments in courts of law, in the case of Noble v. Moses, 74 Ala. 616, in speaking through Som-erville, J., says: “There can be no controversy as to the general rule on the subject. It is settled to be that the fraud which is imputed to the plaintiff in the judgment, and for which alone a court of equity will intervene to vacate or enjoin, must be fraud in the rendition or procurement of the judgment itself.—Cromelin v. McCauley, 67 Ala. 542. Or, as expressed by Mr. Story, The fraud must have been practiced in the very act of obtaining the judgment’ — there must be ‘fraud in its concoction.’ — 2 Story’s Eq. Jur. § 1575. Fraud as to transactions antecedent to the judgment, such as would merely have constituted a good defense to the action, and not connected with the proceedings by which it was obtained, is deemed insufficient. — Freeman on Judgments, §§ 489-490; Story’s Eq. Jur. § 1574. The nature of the fraud, too, must be such as is utterly repugnant to honest intentions. It must, in a sense, be shown to be actual and positive. To this end there
There seems to be a well-defined distinction between fraud practiced in the rendition and procurement of a judgment, “in the very act of obtaining the judgment
The case of Chambers v. Crook, 42 Ala. 171, 94 Am. Dec. 637, contains expressions that would indicate that a judgment obtained on false evidence relates to the actual procurement of the judgment, and that it can be
A close analysis of this case, however, will show that the court was dealing with a bill to set aside a statutory award, and the statute there considered and referred to (2721) made the award conclusive and required tiie court to enter it up as.made and to issue judgment upon it, and the court said: “And the party against whom the award is found can make no defense at law, unless he can prove that the arbitrators are guilty of fraud, partiality, or corruption in making it.” The court doubtless proceeded upon the idea that the complainant did not have an adequate chance in a court of law of meeting and disputing the testimony used before the arbitrators; but should this case be construed, so as to extend the expressions to bills filed to vacate or enjoin judgments of courts of law, it would be in direct conflict with many more recent decisions of this court. In the case of Weems v. Weems, 73 Ala, 462, the ground upon which the bill was based was that the judgment had been obtained upon the false testimony of the plaintiff, and the court held that the complainant was represented in the court of law by his guardian and' charged the complainant with the neglect or failure to defend against the judgment. It'is also evident that the case of Chambers v. Crook, supra, does not apply to cases of this character and should be confined to the facts there considered, as we do not find it cited in any subsequent cases. On the other hand, in the case of Collier v. Falk, 66 Ala. 223, the opinion is in line with the present holding, notwithstanding the Crook Case was relied upon by the complainant in filing the bill. Says counsel in brief: “The bill in this cáse was filed, principally, on the authority of Crook v. Chambers, 42 Ala. 171, 94 Am. Dec. 637, to which the attention of the court is particularly invited.” Yet
Tbe chancellor found that tbe mortgage was paid, and. the evidence may have justified tbe conclusion, and, with this fact established, tbe result of the present bold-ing can well be termed “a bard case”; but tbe complainant bad her day in tbe court of law, she bad every opportunity of showing that the instrument was paid and with tbe right of appeal to a higher court and jury, and she was not prevented from pursuing this course through accident or surprise or by tbe act or conduct of Hardeman. . The established rules of law cannot be departed from or equitable principles disregarded in order to save some particular case that may appeal to tbe sympathy or conscience of a court. Hard cases should not be made quicksands of the law, in which tbe law is either hidden from sight or smirched beyond recognition.
The bill is in no sense one to redeem.
The decree of the chancery court is reversed, and one is here rendered dismissing the bill.
Reversed and rendered.