93 So. 841 | Ala. | 1922
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *22 This appeal is from a decree sustaining a demurrer. It is urged as the principal objection to the bill that complainant appears thereby to have lost sight of the maxim, "He who comes into equity must come with clean hands." Construing the bill most strongly against the complainant, the fair inference is, that, as a result of inducements offered by his adversary contesting the will — just what does not appear — he agreed to withhold active effort to sustain the will, wherein he was named as executor and which he had propounded for probate, and promised that he would acquiesce in a decree denying probate on the ground of the mental incompetency of testatrix, contestant to adduce the proof to that end. In pursuance of this understanding, complainant discharged his attorney and left the will to its fate. But legatees caused themselves to be substituted as proponents of the will, and thereupon the question of testatrix's competency became the subject of a contest before a jury which was warmly waged, lasted long, and resulted in a mistrial. Afterwards, the effect of the averment is, in the absence and without the knowledge of complainant while he was remote from the county seat and confined to his bed with sickness, proponent legatees and contestant entered into an agreement by which a decree against the validity of the will on a new ground, viz.: That it had been procured by complainant in the exercise of an undue influence over testatrix, was proffered and foisted upon the probate court by a mock trial. The consideration for this agreement moving to the legatee proponents was that they were to receive and did receive their legacies, notwithstanding the decree against the will, and it appears, inferentially, that the reason for contestant's anxiety to have probate of the will denied was that a suit was pending on the equity side of the docket wherein some of the heirs of Mary H. Sherrod sought to set aside, on the grounds of undue influence, fraud, and the incompetency of the grantor, deeds whereby testatrix had made over to Argie Boles, the widow of her son, large tracts of valuable *23 lands, and contestant desired to be relieved of the cloud upon his contentions that would be created by a decree admitting the will to probate.
The maxim that, "he who comes into equity must come with clean hands," is of venerable age and wide application. The rule is thus stated in 1 Pom. Eq. Jur. § 404:
"It is not alone fraud or illegality which will prevent a suitor from entering a court of equity; any really unconscientious conduct, connected with the controversy to which he is a party, will repel him from the forum whose very foundation is good conscience." McCord v. Bridges,
But the maxim has its limitations.
"It does not repel all sinners from courts of equity, nor does it apply to every unconscientious act or inequitable conduct on the part of the complainant." 10 R. C. L. p. 391, § 140.
The maxim invoked against complainant is one of a number of cognate maxims frequently acted upon by courts of equity, among them, in pari delicto, etc. (21 C. J. 182), the effect of which is thus well stated in Clemens v. Clemens,
"Though engaged in an illegal transaction" — hardly so much can be said against the conduct of complainant in this case — "and unable to assert or maintain any rights or remedies founded on the unlawful thing done or intended to be, still the plaintiff forfeited no right or privilege beyond that, or with respect to any other matter or thing not within the purpose of the wrongful act, and not effected by the corrupt intent, or caused or produced in consequence of it. To the extent of his intended wrong he might be without remedy, but in all other respects his rights and remedies are the same as if no such wrong had been done or intended. This is and should be the true measure and extent of all just punishment. Though guilty of a wrong or transgression of the law in one particular, a party does not become an outlaw, or forfeit his right to legal protection in all others, nor lay himself open to the frauds and machinations of others to be practiced and perpetrated against him with impunity."
The maxim affects the equitable relations between the parties with respect to the subject-matter of the litigation. Foster v. Winchester,
In the case here complainant was named in the will as devisee of an half interest in a valuable plantation. On the averments of his bill it may be inferred against him that the inducement held out to him in order to procure his abandonment of all active support of the will was that, if the grants to Argie Boles could be reclaimed, his interest as heir at law would outweigh the interest he would lose as devisee. Complainant's averment is that "he was willing to submit the question [of testatrix's insanity] to the verdict of a jury and abide its decision," and so informed defendant and those who were interested in defeating the probate of the will. True, after the will had been defeated, and defendant had been appointed administrator of the estate of Mary H. Sherrod, it was agreed between complainant and defendant that defendant should resign, that one Bynum should be appointed in his place, and that complainant would sign the latter's bond as administrator, all which was accordingly done; but we do not see that this conduct on his part added to the demerit of his original agreement, for his averment is that at the time he was ignorant of the fact — and in this connection evidential facts are averred — that the ground of contest had been changed and a fraudulent decree foisted upon the probate court. It may be conceded that the facts averred, construed most strongly against complainant, as they must be, notwithstanding his protestations of honest purpose, disclose a sordid motive or even that degree of moral reprehensibility that would ordinarily deny him access to the court of conscience, though probably the court, if the question were between complainant and defendant alone, measuring their comparative guilt would extend relief to complainant as to a party comparatively innocent. Phillips v. Bradford,
But not complainant and defendant alone were affected by complainant's agreement to abandon the will or the fraudulent decree thereby made possible. Morally, if not otherwise, the case of Argie Boles was involved, and, a matter of vastly more importance, the integrity of the probate decree. Complainant by his bill proposes now to repudiate defendant's execution of the agreement which went far beyond the agreement itself, to assume his trust where he laid it down, and to have the court set aside a decree procured by a fraud upon the law. To deny relief in these circumstances would allow the maxim to work injustice and wrong (21 C. J. 187, § 172) — to the extent, at least, the execution of the agreement exceeded the purpose of complainant — and give countenance to the morally reprehensible arrangement between defendant and the proponent legatees would result in still greater offense to morals, good conscience, and public policy. Hobbs v. Boat-right,
As for the force and effect of the probate decree, if rendered in the circumstances averred in the bill, we need only refer to the opinion of this court in Alabama National Bank v. Mary Lee Coal Co.,
Other objections to the bill are mooted in the brief, but some of them are so closely related to the proposition already considered as to require no further statement.
The demurrer seeks to estop complainant on the ground that he agreed to the appointment of Bynum as administrator, a matter to which we have heretofore referred; but this objection to the bill is met and answered by the averment — general it is true, but not objected to on that account — that complainant was "in ignorance of the facts connected with the trial of said contest and the appointment of the defendant as administrator." Knowledge is an essential of estoppel.
Appellant appears to have misconceived the meaning of Evans v. Wilhite,
The demurrer to the bill should have been overruled.
Reversed and remanded.
ANDERSON, C. J., and GARDNER and MILLER, JJ., concur.