107 Ala. 710 | Ala. | 1894
1. It is provided by statute, that “The claim of the landlord for rent and advances, or for either, may be by him assigned, and the assignee shall be invested with all the landlord’s rights, and entitled to all his remedies for their enforcement. “Code, § 3059. And in the statute for the trial of the right of property, the provision is found, that “This right of trial to property shall include any person who holds a lien upon, or equitable title to such property.” Code § 3004.
In Abraham v. Carter, supra, it was said, “A thing not having an existence actual or potential, but the future acquisition of which is contemplated, if not capable of assignment or sale, is the subject of a valid agreement to assign or sell * * * So a mortgage of the hire or use of slaves, the mortgagor .may hire the next year to make a crop with, and the entire crop he may make the present and next year, though it is only contemplated the slaves may be hired, and the crops planted, has been deemed valid, the lien attaching when the slaves were hired, or the crops grew, binding them from that time. Floyd v. Morrow, 26 Ala. 353; Butt v. Ellett 19 Wall. 544; Sillers v. Leslie, 48 Miss. 513 * * * * In a court of equity, assignment not only of choses in action, but of contingent interests and expectancies, and also of things which have no present, actual or potential existence, but rest on mere possibility only, are supported. The assignment operates by way of present contract, to take effect and attach to the things assigned, when and as soon as they come in esse. Mitchell v. Win
J C. Ballard on Nov. 15, 1890, mortgaged to the Farmers & Merchants Bank, the crops to be grown on his lands in the year 1891, and transferred to said bank, by said mortgage, all his claims for rent and advances during the year 1891. Said mortgage was given, also, on certain mules and wagon, and was to secure a debt of about$l,700. Said Ballard died, afterwards, in August, 1891, and his widow, Sarah A., was appointed as his administratrix. She collected these rents and advances, and paid them over to said bank on its mortgage lien on them. In making these payments, she did what was right and legal to be doin', and what the bank could have enforced by appropriate action, whether the estate of Ballard was solvent or insolvent. The creditors had no right or claim to the proceeds of the crops under lien for these rents and advances, until the bank’s prior right to them was satisfied ; and as the amount collected and paid over was not sufficient to discharge the mort-' gage debt, they were not injured. McNeill v. McNeill, 36 Ala. 110; Loeb v. Richardson, 74 Ala. 312.
The fact that Ballard was not a merchant, but a faiv. mer, and purchased the advances he made to his tenants • from one Bass, by getting Bass to advance them on his credit, did not, in -any way, interfere with, the acquisl--. tion by Ballard of a lien on the crops for the advances thus made. It was he who owned and made the advances
2. The evidence showed, that after all the property-included in said mortgage, except the mules and wagon, was exhausted in discharge of said mortgage debt to the bank, there remained due and owing as a balance thereon, the sum of $59, and this sum, the administratrix paid, in full satisfaction of the mortgage, and that the mules and wagon had been appraised at $315, and sel' apart to her as exempt, by commissioners appointed by the probate court, before any amounts had been paid by her, as administratrix, on said mortgage. There is no proof that there was any other personal property belonging to the estate. The court disallowed this credit to the administratrix, and in this there was no error. She paid this sum, for her own benefit, to relieve property which had been valued and set apart to her as exempt, from incumbrance : and besides, the presumption might be indulged to sustain the ruling of the court, that the commissioners in valuing the property, had reference to the incumbrance on it.
3. The proof tended to show, that said Ballard in his lifetime, — on November 1, 1890, — executed two mortgages on 320 acres of land, to secure two debts, one for $1,700, due the 1st of November, 1894, and provided for the payment of the interest on the debt, annually, on the first days of November of each year ; and the second, for a debt of $170., to be paid in equal annual installments, on the, first days of November, 1891, and ending with the 1st of November, 1894. Each of said mortgages contained the provision, that in case of the failure to make either of said annual payments, as in each provided, the whole debt should become due and payable, and the mortgage should be subject to foreclosure under its power of sale, at the election of the mortgagee . It was also shown, that about the last of the year 1891, the administratrix obtained an order of the court for the sale of the lands belonging to the estate to pay debts, and in the earlier part of 1892, and again in the winter of that year, had offered the' same for sale and could not get a bidder ; that on November 1st 1891, said land was worth about $10 per acre ; that since that time, land had declined in value in that neighborhood, and in
4. It is too clear for consideration, that the debts contracted by the widow in her own name for family supplies, after the date of the death of her husband and her own appointment as his administratrix, were not proper charges against liis estate in her favor on settlement of his insolvent estate by her. Wright v. Wright, 64 Ala. 88. Nor was the $3.75, costs paid by her to a justice of the peace, in an attachment suit against a tenant in the year 1891, a proper credit. The tenant settled by turning over to the administratrix all the property attached before judgment, which was not enough to pay all he owed. She compromised with him, without an oi’der of court, and. paid the costs, which was not a preferred claim.
5. The court properly charged the administratrix with the $50. rent for 1893, with which she failed to charge herself. She rented the land for $150., and gave her personal security to a merchant to advance to the tenant during the year. He failed to make enough to pay the rent and advances. The crops were first appropriated to pay- the advances; and after -this, there was not enough to -pay the $150. rent to 'the estate; by-$50. What the advances amounted to in money, and the
It is unnecessary to consider the other assignments of error, as they are without merit.
These were cross appeals, and as will appear, from-' the errors pointed out, the case must be reversed on each appeal.
Reversed and remanded.