Harwell v. Lehman, Durr & Co.

72 Ala. 344 | Ala. | 1882

BRICKELL, C. J

A bill in equity, instituting suit between citizens of the State, must be filed in the district-of the residence of a material .defendant; or, if the purpose is to enjoin proceedings in other courts, it may be filed in the district in which such proceedings are pending; or, if the subject-matter of suit is real estate, it may be filed in the district in which such real estate (or a material part thereof) is situated.— Code of 1876, § 3760. A bill, disclosing on its face that it is not filed in the proper district, is subject to demurrer, or may be' dismissed on motion. If the fact does not appear on the face of the bill, a plea in the nature of a plea in abatement is the appropriate mode of presenting the objection.—Campbell v. Crawford, 63 Ala. 392.

The present bill by a junior mortgagee, for the foreclosure of a mortgage on real and personal property, was filed in the district of the residence of the senior mortgagees, who are made parties defendant; the property being situate, and the mortgagor and assignee of the senior mortgage residing, in another district. The averments of the bill are, that the debt of the senior mortgagees has been largely reduced by payments, and that by some arrangement between them and one Driver, without having parted absolutely with all interest in the mortgage, the latter obtained from them possession of the mortgage, and claims some interest under it, the nature of which is unknown. The plea avers the residence of the mortgagor, and of *346Driver, and the locality of the property, to be in another district than that in which the bill is filed, and a transfer of the mortgage to Driver, upon a condition which was not performed untirafter the bill was filed The plea was overruled by the chancellor.

The purpose of the statute, in limiting suits in equity to the residence of a material defendant, as has been heretofore explained, like that of the statute limiting personal actions at law to the county of'the permanent residence of afreeholderor householder, is, that parties may not bo drawn into litigation in localities distant from their residence. In courts of equity, the general rule, founded on the highest considerations of public policy, is, that all persons materially interested in the subject-matter and object of suit, however numerous they may be, must be made parties. — Story’s Eq. PI. § 72. In their absence, the court can not render a decree which will be final and complete, silencing all future controversy, avoiding the necessity for a multiplicity of suits; nor can the court be certain that the decree it renders is founded on a consideration of the merits of the whole case, and that injustice may not result from it. Courts of law are, ordinarily, satisfied when the parties having the legal, though it is separable from the beneficial interest, are drawn before them; and, generally, have not power to require the presence of other parties. As the rules of a court of equity may require the presence of numerous parties, having different places of residence, the statutory limitation is met, whenever the bill is filed in the district of the residence of a material defendant. There are necessary and proper parties to a suit in equity — parties in whose absence the court will not proceed, and parties who may be properly brought before the court, without subjecting the bill to the objection of misjoinder. The present case may be employed as an illustration. The purpose of .the bill being the foreclosure of a junior mortgage, a sale of the property mortgaged, free from incumbrances or both mortgages, the senior and the junior, the ascertainment of the real amount of the senior mortgage debt; the court could not, and would not, proceed to a decree in the absence of the senior mortgagee — he-would be a necessary, indispensable party. But, if he had assigned the mortgage and mortgage debt absolutely and unconditionally, parting with all interest, the assignee would become the necessary, indispensable party, and the mortgagee would be, at best, merely a proper party.—Prout v. Hoge, 57 Ala. 28. It is the residence of a necessary, as distinguished from a mere proper party, which is the element of the jurisdiction of the court — a party having a real interest in the suit, and against whom a decree is sought.—Lewis v. Elrod, 38 Ala. 17. The senior mortgagees were, when the bill was filed, par*347ties of this description, according to the averments of the bill,, and the averments of the plea. They had parted with the mortgage, not absolutely, but upon a condition which might never be performed. It is more proper to say, that they had merely agreed to part with it, if Driver made the promised payment to them. Until the payment was made, they remained the mortgagees, having the exclusive right to receive payment of the mortgage debt. The performance of the condition by Driver, subsequently to the filing of the bill, could not retro-act, and divest the court of a jurisdiction which had rightly attached.

Affirmed.

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