128 Ala. 198 | Ala. | 1900

TYSON, J.

The hill in this case was filed to have a 'Certain deed executed by the complainants’ father to the respondent declared a mortgage and to redeem the property conveyed by it. It is Avell settled in this State that a court of equity has jurisdiction to entertain such a hill and to grant the relief sought. To this end parol evidence is admissible to conA'ert an instrument appearing on its face to be an absolute conveyance of either real or personal property, into a mortgage, by proof that the parties intended it to operate only as security for a debt. The ground on which a court of equity proceeds in receiving parol evidence to sIioav an absolute eonAmyanee to have been intended as a mortgage only, is, that it would he a fraud to permit the grantee to hold the property discharged of the trusts and conditions originally attached to the conveyance, and which he promised to perform. — 2 Brick. Dig. 271, §§ 316-317. “Whenever a deed absolute on its face is thus treated as a mortgage, the parties are clothed with all rights, are subject to all the liabilities, and entitled to all the remedies of ordinary mortgagors and mortgagees. The grantee may maintain an action for the foreclosure of the grantor’s equity of redemption; the *200grantor may maintain an action to redeem and to compel a reconveyance upon his payment of the debt secured. If the grantee goes into possession, he i-s in reality a mortgagee in possession, and as such is liable to account for the rents and profits.” — 3 Pom. Eq. Juris. § 1196.

These principles applied to the averments of the bill in this case demonstrate the want of merit in the motion to dismiss it for -want of equity predicated upon the theory that complainants liad an adequate remedy at law.

It is only necessary to say of the allegations of the bill in which the respondent is charged with having procured the deed by fraud, imposition and duress, that they are unsupported by the evidence.

The relief granted, as shown by the decree of the chancellor, is based wholly upon the proposition that the -conveyance from the -complainants’ father to the respondent, a deed absolute on its face, -was intended merely as a security for -a debt — a mortgage. And, indeed, it is the only possible relief that -could have been granted under the --averments of the bill, and the prayer. lit may be well doubted whether the evidence was of such a character as that it can he -said that the -deed was intended as a -security for a debt. — Tenn. Coal, Iron & Railroad Co. v. Wheeler, 125 Ala. 538; 28 So. Rep. 38; Knaus v. Dreher, 84 Ala. 319, and authorities therein cited. But if we concede that the evidence was sufficient, the defense of the statute of limitations of ten years invoked by the answer of the respondent will -defeat the relief sought. This bill was filed on the 10th day of March, 1898. The deed assailed was executed on the 18th -day of July, 1885, and recorded on the same day. The evidence without dispute shows that the respondent for more, than ten years preeed'ing the filing of the bill, without an account of rents and profits or other recognition of complainants’ equity -of -redemption within that period, had been in ,the¡ possession of the property -conveyed to him -claiming it as his -own and dealing with it as sncli. The, bill shows that the complainants were1 each over twenty-*201one years of age at the -date of its filing. Neither the pleadings nor the evidence, shows when the complainants, respectively, reached their majority. There is, therefore, nothing averred or shown, which filings the case within the exception allowing three years additional time to infants, after arriving at the age of twenty-one years, to bring suits. — Code, § 2807. But independent of this, notwithstanding the. evidence is meagre with respect to the age of the youngest one of the complainants, Act it does appear that he Avas between eight and ten years of age Avhen their mother died. And while the evidence is silent as to the date of her death, it is inferentially sliOAvn that it occurred 'before the deed in controversy was executed. From this date, he must haA*e been between twenty-one and twenty-three years of age AAdien the bill Avas fill1!. The other three complainants being older, it is fair to assume that certainly one of them was more than .twenty-four years of age. Indeed the evidence1 shows that the complainant Fortunatas Noll, during the years 1885 and 1886 resided in the city of New York, and the inference to be drawn from the letters which he wrote the respondent during those years, is, that he was over the. age of twenty-'one years at that time. At any rate, he Aims old enough to leave the parental roof and assume the responsibility of making his own living. So, it may be fairly said that the fact is, so far as lie is concerned, affirmatively sIioavu that he was over the age of tAventy-four years when the bill was filed.' This being true, unquestionably his right to maintain this .suit Avas barred. As he cannot recoA^er, the others, cannot, upon the familiar principle that all complainants must be entitled to recover or none can.

Under any aspect of the case, the defense of the statute of limitations was clearly made out by the evidence and the respondent was entitled to a decree. McCoy v. Gentry, 73 Ala. 105; Coyle v. Wilkins, 57 Ala. 108; Byrd v. McDaniel, 33 Ala. 18.

The decree of the chancery court avíII be reversed, and a decree avíII be here rendered dismissing the bill.

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