109 Ala. 651 | Ala. | 1895
1. Originally, a plaintiff voluntarily taking a non-suit could not maintain a writ of error or appeal, however erroneous may have been the rulings of the court, or the proceedings prior to the non-suit ; and this for the reason that a final judgment only would support a writ of error or an appeal. The present statute authorizes a plaintiff submitting to a non-suit, in consequence of adverse rulings of the court, to revise such rulings on appeal, if to them exceptions be reserved: — Code, § 2759. The uniform construction of the statute has been that it relates exclusively to rulings of the court which can properly be introduced into the record only by a bill of exceptions. The rulings of the court on the pleadings, which -necessarily form part of the record, are not within the purview of the statute. Palmer v. Bice, 28 Ala. 430; 3 Brick. Dig. 678, § 5. Of consequence, the assignments of error drawing in ques
2. The demurrer was not directed to the entire complaint, but only to the special count. The common counts remained, and on them the trial was had. The evidence which was rejected, and the rejection of which forms the matter of the bill of exceptions, if relevant, had a tendency to support only the count for money had and received. The count may be supported by evidence that the defendant has money which, ex aequo et bono, belongs to the plaintiff; or, in view of the tendencies of the rejected evidence, to state the proposition less generally, that the defendant has obtained money from the plaintiff “by duress, extortion, imposition, or talcing any undue advantage of his situation.” — 2 Green. Ev., § 121.
A summary of the facts the rejected evidence was intended to show is that on the 1st day of September, 1890, at a sale under a decree of the Court of Chancery foreclosing a mortgage on lands executed by the plaintiff, the defendant became the purchaser, received a conveyance, and entered into possession. During his possession he made permanent improvements, a statement of the value of which he had,prior to 31st August, 1892, rendered to the plaintiff; or rather by his counsel been furnished to the counsel of plaintiff,on request. On the 31st August,1892, the plaintiff tendered to the defendant, for the purpose of the statutory redemption of the lands ,the purchase money he had paid, with ten per cent, per annum thereon, and all other lawful charges,accompanied by a notice in writing, that he deemed the value of the improvements, as claimed by the defendant, excessive; that payment of it was made under protest; and that he demanded an arbitration to ascertain the value of the improvements,and nominated a particular person as a referee on his part. The defendant postponed receiving the money tendered on that day, saying he had made other improvements since the statement furnished the plaintiff; and that on the next day he would be in the city of Mobile and attend to the matter of redemption. On the next day, a statement in writing of the value of the'improvements as claimed by the defendant was furnished the counsel for the plaintiff including also a statement of the other sums necessary to a redemption, accompanied with the statement that the defendant would not consider any offer to redeem unless a
4. A party proposing to redeem, under the statute, lands which have been sold under execution, or under a decree of the Court of Chancery, is required to pay, or tender payment, not only of the purchase money, with ten per cent, per annum thereon, but all other lawful charges, and of these charges is the value of all permanent improvements put on the premises by the party in possession, after the title was acquired by the preceding sale. If the parties cannot agree on the value of the improvements, ‘‘each must appoint a referee to ascertain the value thereof ,who ,if they cannot agree, must appoint an umpire, and they must make their award within three days,which is final between the parties.” — Code, § 1889. If the party proposing to redeem declines to nominate a referee, he must pay the value put upon the improvements by the person in possession ; if the latter refuse, after the appointment by the former,to make an appointment of a referee, he forfeits all claim to compensation for such improvements. — Code, § 1890. The right to redeem is statutory, and the party proposing to exercise it must pursue the statute-. There are no equivalents 'or substitutes for its requirements. The value of permanent improvements, made during the time the estate is burdened -with the light of redemption, must be paid by the parties proposing to redeem. The purpose of the statute, in this respect, cannot be iniátaken. It is intended to prevent litigation as to the value of the improvements, delaying redemption, or incumbering the title of the purchaser with inchoate, or imperfect claims to redeem, until the value of the improvements may be ascertained and settled by litigation in the courts. — Posey v. Pressley, 60 Ala. 243; Cramer v. Watson, 73 Ala. 127. The purchaser,or whoever may have succeeded to the possession, has the more accurate information of the character and value of the improvements, if any have been made ; and it is his duty, on request, to furnish the party offering to redeem information of the character and value of such improvements. When the information
5. The principle is general that money voluntarily paid, on a demand as of right, with full knowledge of the facts, in the absence of fraud or imposition, cannot be reclaimed in law or equity. — 18 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law, 214; Trustees v. Keller, 1 Ala. 406; Town Council v. Burnett, 34 Ala. 400; Raisler v. Mayor, 66 Ala. 194. The payment may be made under protest, but the mere fact of the protest will not render it involuntary; there must be fraud or imposition, or coercion in fact or in law, to convert it into an involuntary or compulsory
Money may be wrongfully exacted as a condition upon which there is a delivery of goods, or the surrender of the possession of lands, wrongfully withheld, to which the party receiving it is without right. Such a payment is involuntary or compulsory-^it is made under
It .may be, the more appropriate method of testing the sufficiency of the rejected evidence to support a recovery would have been a demurrer to it,after its introduction or the request of an instruction that itwould not authorize a recovery,rather than objections to its relevancy or admissibility. Sustaining the objections,if erroneous,was not of injury to the plaintiff, for if the evidence had been admitted,it would have been a duty to sustain a demurrer to it,or,on request,to have instructed the jury that it would not support a recovery.
Let' the judgment be affirmed.