131 Ala. 263 | Ala. | 1901
Susan Lunsford and her husband each owned in their respective rights vacant lots on 21st Street, between Second and Third Avenues in the city of Birmingham, Ala. These lots were contiguous and adjacent to each other. On these lots her -said hu-sband, George Lnnsfo-rd, built a large brick hotel, known as the Lunsford Hotel. On thisi property the appellant Susan Lunsford and her husband gave to appellee a mortgage ¡to -secure the payment of the loan of $25,000 made by appellee. The present bill was filed by Susan Lunsford on July 28th, 1895, -seeking to have said mortgage executed by her and her husband on their property -cancelled in -so far as it -cover® her portion of the said
The question here presented is purely one of fact. The law of the case is simple and without trouble. If the complainant executed the mortgage merely as surety for her husband in obtaining (the loan, then, under the statute which provides that the wife shall not become surety for her husband, the mortgage as to her would be null and void. The defendant denies the allegations of the bill, upon which coanplainant rests her equity and claim for relief, and upon this issue, so made, the burden of proof is upon the complainant. — •G-afford v. Speaker, 125 Ala. 198; Hamil v. Mortgage Company, 127 Ala. 90.
The complainant relied upon her own testimony, given in two separate depositions, and the testimony of her son-in-law, J. 1Í. Copeland, and her son, W. G. Lunsford. The last two- named witnesses did not claim to have any personal knowledge as to how and beween whom the loan was made, and itheir testimony simply tended to show that Mrs. Lunsford did not need the money, and that Mr. Lunsford did need it; and that he used it after it was borrowed.
If the loan in fact was a joint loan to Mrs. Lunsford and her husband, it is wholly immaterial and unimportant whether Mrs. Lunsford needed the money, or whether Mr. Lunsford used it after it was borrowed. Mortgage Company v. Thornton, 108 Ala. 258; Gafford ■v. Speaker, supra ■ Hamil v. Mortgage Company, siopra. And in this connection, it may be further stated that it is unimportant whether the application for the loan was made orally or in writing, or whether Mr. and Mrs. Lunsford were both present at the time the application was made for the loan, if the application as made was for a joint loan and a joint loan in fact was made.
The defendant, in support of his answer, gave his own deposition, and had examined as witnesses in his be
The evidence without conflict shows that the defendant Harrison, at the time the loan was made by him in 1892 resided, and still resides, in the city of Philadelphia, Pa., and he has never been to Birmingham. The complainant, Mrs. Lunsford, never saw 'him, and the loan in question was obtained by Steiner Brothers of Birmingham and by J. M. Gummey & Sons of Philadelphia, their associates, both of whom were employed and paid by the Lunsfords. B. Steiner testifies, and there is no contradiction, that about June or July .of 1892 Mr. George Lunsford came to the hank and asked him if he could obtain a loan for himself, Lunsford, and his wife on some property on 21st Street between 2nd and 3rd Avenues, to he known as the Lunsford building, and which is the property here in controversy; that he informed Mr. Lunsford that he did not have any one right there and then who would take such a Mg loan, but that he would communicate with some of his correspondents. Ait this time Steiner knew nothing about Mr. Harrison, the respondent, and had never heard of him. Steiner wrote J. M. Gummey of Philadelphia in reference to the loan, upon an agreement to divide his commission, to be paid by the Lunsfords, equally with Gummey, which he did. Gummey replied that lie would take the loan and afterwards instructed that the bond and mortgage be made to C. C. Harrison. Steiner turned the papers over to J. W. Bush, the attorney, who was also paid by the borrowers, ami he prepared the papers as directed. Mrs. Lunsford and Mr. Lunsford executed the papers, which are produced in evidence. The bond for $25,000, with interest coupon, was signed by both, she signing first. The bond recites that, “We, Susan Lunsford and George Lunsford, of the
It cannot be doubted from (the evidence that the application as made to the respondent Harrison for the loan was for a joint loan to Mr. and Mrs. Lunsford and that this application was made to him through their agents and not his. In our opinion the overwhelming weight of the evidence tends to show that the loan was jointly obtained by Mrs. Lunsford and her husband; and the burden of proof under the issue being upon her to show that the loan was not joint, and that she was merely the surety of her husband, her unsupported testimony, especially when weighed in the light of her former admissions to the contrary, is not enough to overcome the
The decree of the chancellor will be affirmed.