88 Ala. 417 | Ala. | 1889
It appears from the writings, which are made exhibits to the bill and answers, that Mrs. Lammons puchased the land in controversy, December 17, 1883, from the Southern Development Land and Immigration Company, at the price of one hundred and fifty dollars, one-third of which was paid in cash, and for the other two-thirds she gave two notes of fifty dollars each, payable, respectively, on the 17th day of June and December, 1884. The company gave her a bond, conditioned to make titles on the payment of the notes, and on their payment executed a conveyance in her name, December 8, 1884. On March 21, 1884, Mrs. Lammons and A. A. Lammons, her husband, executed to appellee the mortgage which he seeks by the bill to foreclose, to secure a note for four hundred dollars, made by both of them, and payable June 1, 1885. In defense of the bill, Mrs. Lammons sets up, that the land is her statutory separate estate, which she is incapable of mortgaging. The transactions occurred before the passage of the act of February 28,1887, defining the rights and liabilities of husband and wife, and are therefore governed by the principles of the common law, and the statutes regulating the separate estates of married women, then in force.
It may be conceded that the chancellor erred in decreeing a trust resulted to complainant, and on this basing his right to a foreclosure of the mortgage. — Bolman v. Lobman, 74 Ala. 507; Chapman v. Abraham, 61 Ala. 108. If admitted to be erroneous, it would not necessarily avail a reversal; for, independent of this, there are considerations and equitable principles, on which the correctness of the final decree may well be founded.
It is true, a married woman may purchase land during coverture, with the assent of her husband, or, if without his assent, subject to his disaffirmance seasonably expressed)
Affirmed,