56 Ala. 157 | Ala. | 1876
We do not think, under the pleadings in this cause, that any question can be made, denying Mrs. Brown’s right to maintain this suit. She avers that the note is hers, and makes Rooney and Mrs. Grigg defendants to the suit; and they, in their answers, admit the truth of this, and every other averment of the bill. This estops them from setting up any claim to the note, and renders it unnecessary that Mrs. Brown should offer any proof of her ownership. — McLane v. Riddle, 19 Ala. 180, and authorities cited.
2. The allegations in the answers, charging that, in making the sale, Rooney misrepresented the quantity of timbered land, and the freshness of one of the cultivated fields, are not sufficiently proved to justify us in reversing the chancellor’s decree on this account. The testimony is too nearly balanced to enable us to affirm that we are convinced the chancellor erred in this finding. Hence, we can not find that the purchaser is entitled to any abatement of the purchase-price, on account of the alleged misrepresentations.
3. The only remaining question is as to the alleged alteration of the note which is the foundation of the present suit. The answers of Lamar and wife contain a plea of non est factum; the special ground of the plea being, that after the note was executed, it was altered, without the authority or consent of the makers, by adding to it the words “with half legal interest till maturity.” This alteration, according to the Alabama rate of interest, would increase the amount of the indebtedness seventy-seven dollars, when the note matured. The testimony for complainant below, appellee here, is as follows: Rooney testified, that the signatures to the note and mortgage are in “the hand-writing of Mrs. Kate Lamar and of A. R. Lamar, and that he did see them sign the said mortgage and note: that witness, and Wiley Williams, the said A. R. Lamar and Kate Lamar were present at the signing of said note and mortgage.” Wiley Williams was an old resident lawyer of the city of Columbus, Georgia, and died in that city about three years before Rooney’s deposition was taken, June 4th, 1873. “ The whole of said note
The testimony for defendants, Lamar and wife, consisted of their own depositions, given April 8th, 1873. A. B. Lamar testified, as follows: “ The note sued on is not the note I gave for the lands. The note sued on contains the following words, ‘ with half legal interest till maturity.’ I never gave or signed any note containing said words. The note I gave did not contain any agreement to pay any interest whatever. Some days after the original transaction, and after the signing and delivery of the note, Lawrence Booney met me on the street, and asked me to consent to have the words, ‘with half legal interest till maturity,’ inserted in the note; giving as a reason, that O. S. Grigg was dissatisfied that the note bore no interest; and that he, Lawrence Booney, would pay one-half the interest, if I would pay the other half. I' declined.” He then admitted that the said words were in the hand-writing of Wiley Williams, the same “who drew the original note and papers.” Mrs. Kate Lamar testified: “ The note sued on is not the note I signed and gave for the land. The note I signed had nothing in it about interest, and the words, ‘with half legal interest till maturity,’ were
The description of the note in the mortgage, is as follows: “Eor the purpose of securing the payment of a certain promissory note, bearing even date with these presents, by which note the said Albert Lamar as trustee for his wife, and the said Mrs. Kate Lamar, promise to pay, twelve months after date, to the said L. Rooney and Mrs. Olivia S. Grigg, or bearer, the sum of nineteen hundred and twenty-five dollars, given in part consideration of lands purchased of them,” &o.
One fact, testified to by Mr. Rooney, we think weakens his testimony somewhat. He says, “ the words, ‘ with half legal interest till maturity,’ were not written at the same time the balance of said note was written.” Yet, he offers no explanation of this rather unusual fact. If such change was made in the writing, some reason or explanation could be given, why it was omitted in the first instance; and it could be shown when, and under what circumstances, the words were added. He remembered the controverted words were not written at the same time as the balance of the note. He certainly could have stated why this had so occurred. The reason for a change of the writing from the first draught, would quite as naturally impress itself on the memory of the witness, as would the fact of such change. The witness knew defendants had set up in defense, and in sworn answers, that the words, ‘ with half interest till maturity,’ had been, without authority from them, inserted in the note, after they had executed and delivered it. This plea by defendants was calculated to reflect on the integrity of Rooney, and would necessarily stimulate the zeal of the witness to furnish every corroborating circumstance in support of his version of the transaction.
The fact that, in the description of the note given in the mortgage, the disputed clause of the note is not mentioned, is another circumstance to be weighed in this cause. Two witnesses, against the credibility of whose testimony nothing has been called to our attention, and we have found nothing in the record to cause us to distrust them, testify the very opposite of the witness Rooney, and that the words, ‘with half legal interest till maturity,’ were inserted in the note after it was executed and had passed from their hands. We are convinced that the chancellor erred in his finding on this, the most material issue in this cause.
Coming to the conclusion, that the note in suit was altered after its execution and delivery to the payees, in the particular above pointed out, without the authority of the makers, the consequence is, that the note is entirely annulled as an
The decree of the chancellor, so far as it reforms the mortgage, is free from error. The testimony convinces us, that the true numbers of the land intended to be conveyed are, the north-east quarter, the east half of the north-west quarter, and the north-west quarter of the north-west quarter of section thirty-four (34), and the north-west quarter of section thirty-five (35), in township eighteen (18), range twenty-nine (29), east. To the extent that it reforms the writings, the decree of the chancellor is affirmed. In all other respects, the bill is without proved equity, and the decree of the chancellor is reversed. Let the appellee pay the costs in this court, and in the court below.