57 Ala. 423 | Ala. | 1876
The chancellor did not decide the question of payment,, but ruled, in effect, that that question, in this proceeding, was immaterial. In this he erred. The administrator, as-we have' shown, had a clear right to recover the lands in ejectment; and, in the absence of full payment of the purchase- - money, or tender and refusal, the complainants in this suit,., not having done equity, were not entitled to an injunction,. or to a decree for title.—Tonig v. Moore, 4 Stew. & Por. 347; Kizer v. Lock, 9 Ala. 269; Brewer v. Brewer, 19 Ala. 481; Pulliam v. Owen, 25 Ala. 492; Bell v. Thompson, 34 Ala. 633; Gentry v. Rogers, 40 Ala. 442.
Again, the record contains what purports to be credits, signed “ Jno. L. McRae,” on the two notes of $1,903.33 1-3 each. If his handwriting to these credits were proved, they show that said McRae himself collected the whole of the note second due, and that he entered a credit of $392.85 on the note third and last due. They show further, that the very day after he received from Campbell the check for $1,000 on the Eastern Bank of Alabama, he entered a third and last credit of $607.15 on the note second due, and the above credit of $392.85 on the note third due. Now, it so happens that these two sums — $607.15 and $392.85 — make precisely $1,000. It is difficult to conceive a motive for dividing this payment into two credits, except that it overpaid the second note, by the sum credited on the third. Yet, John L. McRae testifies that he left “these notes” with McKenzie for “ safe keeping,” and that when he testified— April, 1871 — the amount due from Campbell, “not counting-the $1,000 in Confederate money paid by Tom Cannon, was-two notes of $1,903.30 each, with interest on them from day of sale.”
Reversed, and bill dismissed without prejudice.