96 Ala. 369 | Ala. | 1892
A contract which stipulates for tbe payment of a greater rate of interest than eight per cent, is tainted with an evil and unlawful intent in such sort that, while tbe payor, if be invokes equitable interposition upon it in bis behalf, must do equity by offering to pay tbe legal rate of interest, tbe payee, when be becomes tbe actor in a court of equity, must always remove tbe taint by an offer to abate tbe whole of tbe interest, since tbe principal is all that be is entitled to recover, and without such abatement be can not be said to come into the court with clean bands. And
The bill, as originally exhibited, prayed for both reformation and foreclosure of a mortgage. Subsequently, it was amended, so as to limit its averments and prayer to the matter of reformation. To the bill as thus amended it was demurred, that “the bill having been filed to revise a mortgage and foreclose same, can not now be amended so as to revise the same, and invest the plaintiff with title under his mortgage.” This demurrer was sustained. This was error. Both the reformation of instruments, and the foreclosure of mortgages, are distinct grounds of equity jurisdiction. We do not understand that, when a mortgagee invokes the jurisdiction to reform his mortgage, he must also seek its foreclosure. Even where the mortgage debt has matured, and the right of foreclosure has accrued, there might be adequate reasons for an election on the part of the mortgagee to ask no relief beyond the reformation of the instrument, especially when, as in this case, the mortgage contains a power of sale under which foreclosure might be much less expensive.
Nor do we conceive that the ruling under consideration derives any aid from the fact that this amendment, by which the prayer for foreclosure was eliminated, also souglxt relief in addition to reformation, by means of the cancellation of an outstanding legal title to an undivided interest in the land held by certain of the respondents. Whether the allegations of the bill were sufficient to entitle complainant to this special relief, is not a question presented by this demurrer. Its theory is that, conceding their sufficiency in the abstract, they can not be brought forward by an amendment to the bill; which is the same as to say, that a com
As we have said, whether tbe averments of the bill originally, or as amended, were sufficient to make a case for tbe cancellation of tbe legal title to an undivided interest in tbe land which was held by some of tbe respondents, is a different question. .Other demurrers were addressed to this point, and sustained by the court. Tbe case made by tbe bill in this connection is tbe following: J. T. Pearson purchased tbe greater part of tbe land in controversy from John F. and Jennie Williams, wbo were man and wife, and paid with bis own funds, at tbe time of tbe transaction, |()(56 of tbe $1,000 purchase-money. Without any directions or request to that effect on tbe part of Pearson, tbe vendors conveyed tbe land by warranty deed to Pearson and hi.v wife, Medora Pearson, and their heirs forever. After tbe death of Medora Pearson, J. T. Pearson paid tbe balance of tbe purchase-money out of tbe loan which tbe complainant’s mortgage was made to secure, and which was intended to cover said land and a parcel of seventeen acres which Pearson bad acquired from another source. It appears by tbe bill that tbe Williams deed was signed in Texas, Pearson and wife residing and being at tbe time in Alabama; and it is averred that they made no demand for a conveyance to
The decree of the Chancellor is reversed, and the cause is remanded.