McCall v. Hall

62 So. 68 | Ala. | 1913

McCLELLAN, J.

The appellee bought a tract of land from appellant’s intestate, giving him a promissory note for $1,000 as tbe purchase price thereof. After intestate’s death tbe note could not be found, but its original existence and amount are -not tbe subjects of dispute. Tbe administrator exhibited this bill against tbe grantee-payor, seeking tbe declaration and enforcement of a vendor’s lien for tbe unpaid purchase money. Tbe only matter of real controversy was tbe amount of tbe unpaid balance of tbe purchase money.

It appears from tbe evidence with satisfactory certainty that tbe note stipulated for usurious interest. There was a plea setting up usury, tbe sufficiency of which, as a plea of usury, does not appear to have been tested in tbe chancery court. Tbe argument against its sufficiency cannot be considered on this appeal, since tbe objection on that account was not first made in that court.

*193The result from the evidence supporting the substance of the plea (whether that pleading was deficient or not) Avas that the matter of interest on the debt was eliminated. Whatever payments were made served to diminish the principal of the debt.

On the issue of amount of the payments made, the Avife of the appellee was the chief witness, for appellee. Not having been shown to have any pecuniary interest in the transaction between , her husband and intestate, she was competent to testify in the premises. — Glover v. Gentry & Moore, 104 Ala. 222, 229, 16 South. 38.

The report of the register, to whom the court referred the inquiry of the amount due by the defendant on the note, ascertained that there was a balance of $337.75. The credits, or offset, allowed were based upon payments aggregating $295, $47.25 for burial expenses and for tombstone, and $120 arrears on the board account of the intestate.

The complainant filed a paper setting forth his objections to the report of the register in the particulars that, the amount of the note Avas tolled by $285 of payments found to have been made thereon, and the sum of the board account. This paper does not, in any degree, conform to the rule with respect to exceptions to such reports. It omits entirely any notation of the evidence upon which the exception relied. — Rule 93, Ch. Prac.; Civil Code, p. 1556; Code, § 3161; Warren v. Lawson, 117 Ala. 339, 23 South. 65; and other authorities noted under the rule and statute cited. There is nothing to properly invite review here of the register’s findings and report, as confirmed by the chancellor.'

The decree is affirmed.

Affirmed.

All the Justices concur, except Dowdell, C. J., not sitting.