102 Ala. 346 | Ala. | 1893
This bill is filed by the Decatur Land, Improvement & Furnace Co., a corporation, against Martha E. Joseph, a married woman. It seeks the foreclosure of a mortgage executed by the respondent upon, and to secure the purchase money for, two certain town lots, which she had bought from the land company.
By answer, cross bill and pleas three lines of defense are attempted. In the first place, it is insisted that the sale to the respondent was void .for that at the time it was made the lands of which these lots were a part had not been surveyed and platted, and a plat or map thereof filed and recorded in the office of the probate judge as required by the act of February 28th, 1887. — Acts 1886-87, p. 93. This act, in the opinion of the writer, has reference to lands in incorporated towns ; and he thinks it is a sufficient answer to the respondent’s contention in this connection to say that, whether this sale be considered to have been made in October, 1887, when negotiations began and some oral understanding was reached, or in May, 1888, when the transaction was fully con
The attempted defense of coverture is equally without merit. The bill seeks no personal decree against Mrs. Joseph, but only a foreclosure of the mortgage and sale of the premises to pay the secured debt. This debt being for the purchase money of the land, it is' of no consequence that the respondent is and has all along been a married woman, and had not been relieved of the disabilities of coverture in respect of this transaction by the assent in writing of her husband to her entering into it. Crampton v. Prince, 83 Ala. 246, and cases there cited; Wadsworth v. Hodge, 88 Ala. 500, 7 So. Rep. 194; Ramage v. Towles, 85 Ala. 588, 5 So. Rep. 342; Bogan v. Hamilton, 90 Ala. 454, 8 So. Rep. 186.
And if it be conceded that the decree was technically irregular, or even erroneous, in that it in terms foreclosed the mortgage, against which the plea of coverture was good, instead of declaring and effectuating complainant’s vendor’s lien, as might have been done under the prayer for general relief, the irregularity .or error is wholly without injury to the appellant — since the relief actually granted is precisely that to which complainant was entitled upon a declaration and enforcement of the lien for purchase money — and would not require or justify a reversal.
That the statements of Bond, granting he made them as respondent’s evidence goes to show, were not known or believed by him to be false, or that, to speak more accurately, he did not know it was not the company’s expectation, opinion and purpose to build the hotel, grade the drive and improve and maintain the park, but on the contrary he believed that these expectations and purposes were entertained and would be realized and executed, we have no sort of doubt. It is unreasonable to believe that the company engaged as it was in building up a town, having laid off the site into streets, alleys, parks, lots, &c., and having graded other streets which connected immediately with Prospect Drive in such way as to leave a material unevenness in its level, and that of such other streets, did not intend to grade that street also. It is even more unreasonable to conclude that the company had no intention of laying off, beautifying and maintaining the lot opposite those purchased by respondent as a park, when it is shown that that lot had been by it irrevocably dedicated to the public for that purpose, and that work to that end was actually prosecuted by its landscape architect. And it is absurd to suppose that the company did not expect or intend that a hotel should and would be erected, as stated by Bond, when it is considered that the lot had been reserved from sale for that purpose, and that the company, as matter of established fact, expended a large sum of money in making excavations for the foundations of the structure in ac
We do not find from the evidence that any statement made by Bond acting for the company was in its nature an engagement to carry out the expectations and purposes of the company in respect of the street, the park and the hotel, or either of them, or a promise that the street should be graded, the hotel built or the lot made into and maintained as a park, but, to the contrary, our conclusion is, as we have indicated, that in all he said he was' but calling attention to the expectations and purpose of the company, which he and the company believed would be realized and effectuated, to the improvements in question as matters proper to be considered in estimating the value of the property : the probability, the bona fide expectancy, belief and intention that these improvements should and would be made, and not the assurance, of a contractual nature, to that effect, constituting the element of enhancement of value. And his statements being, as we find, true in respect of the existence and entertainment of such bona fide expectations, opinions, belief and intention on the part of the company, and hence not being made to deceive, the respondent is not entitled to relief against complainant’s vendor’s lien either by way of a rescission of the contract or .through recoupment of alleged damages.
This conclusion might perhaps be rested on other or additional grounds, but we content ourselves with what has been said, and affirm the decree of the city court.
Affirmed.