143 Ala. 669 | Ala. | 1904
The bill shows that the’ appellees, Jefferson and Swaine, who were complainants below, executed a mortgage to the appellant, Sadler, who was one of the respondents below; that a settlement was had in the fall of 1897, which showed a balance due by said complainants of $1470.00.
Complainants admitted this settlement to be correct, and ratify it in the bill, but they aver that, at the time such settlement was made, it was agreed that if they “Accepted said settlement they should have time to pay said balance. That orators should continue to occupy and cultivate the said lands at the stipulated rental of $300.00 per annum; that the said rents, less interest on said balance and taxes due and paid by Sadler on said lands, should be applied to the payment of said balance due on said mortgage debt, and that when said debt was thus discharged tike said mortgages should be satisfied^ and orators’ title to said land clear.”
As the prayer of the bill is for an accounting, and the complainants allege that they are ready and willing to pay any amount- which may be found due on said mortgage, it is immaterial whethere there was any consideration for said contract, or whether it amounted to a binding obligation at all.or not, for, outside of the indefinite-agreement that they should have time, (without specifying how much time), the remainder of the so-called agreement was nothing more than the application of payments, after reducting the interest and taxes, to the payment of the mortgage debt, which would be the regular course without any agreement.
The deed from Sadler to Bailey, of October, 1900, operated not only as a conveyance of tihe legal title, but as an assignment in equity of the mortgage debt. — Hooper & Nolen v. Birch, 138 Ala. 423; Welsh v. Phillips, 54
This question was very thoroughly considered in the Welsh case, supra, which has been followed by succeeding cases’, and is supported by other authorities. — 1 Jones on Mortgages, § 808.
The appellants insist that the foregoing cases do not apply, because in them the mortgagees who conveyed were in possession of the premises. The decisions are not based upon any peculiar efficacy of the possession of the land, in transferring, in equity, the mortgage debt.
In the Welsh case, Chief Justice Brickell says, “If the mortgagor is permitted to remain in possession, he is the mere tenant at will of the mortgagee.”- — p. 314. So that his possession would really be the possession of the mortgagee.
In the Cook case, supra, the parties who made the conveyance as mortgagees were not in possession, yet Chief Justice Brickell says, “The conveyance by the heirs or devisees of Scott * * * * would, in a court of equity, operate an assignment of the debt secured by the mortgage.’’ — p. 461.
It results then that Sadler, having conveyed away all of his interest, the advertisement and sale of the premises under the mortgage should have been by his vendee, Bailey, and not by him; consequently, the advertisement and sale by Sadler were void.
It- results then, when Bailey purchased from Sadler with notice, he simply held the land as mortgagee, subject to- the equity of redemption in the complainants, and when the British & American Mortgage Company took the mortgage from Bailey, with all the previous mortgages and deeds on record showing just what his title was, they took it with notice of all the equities of complainants.
It is claimed by appellants that the complainants in the bill are estopped from setting up the claim, because 'they were tenants of the respondent Bailey, and could not deny the title of their landlord. This principle is undoubtedly correct with reference to the title of the landlord at the inception of the tenancy, but it does not
The above case of Davis v. Williams is made the subject of a lengthy and able note in 89 Am. St. Rep., p. 64, in which the above principle is endorsed (p. 76) and it is also further stated, that the tenant, of course, is “Not estopped to show that the relation does not exist.”— People v. Howlett, 76 N. Y. 574. Also, “Where the relation does not, in fact, exist, the gratuitous payment of rent, will not estop one in possession of real estate from showing the true character in which he holds.” — p. 65. Also, “The tenant may show just what his relationship to the landlord originally was,” and even where he has made .a. conveyance of the land “May show it was intend ed to operate as a mortgage,” “And where a grantor of land agrees to pay rent, without prejudice to his rights, pending the hearing of a suit * * * * * the continued occupancy and payment of rent will not estop him from asserting title in himself against the lessor.” — pp. 109, 110, citing Sartwell v. Young, 126 Mich. 304; 85 N. Y. 729; see also Fhelton v. Carroll, 16 Ala. 148 and Randolph v. Carlton, 8 Ala. 607.
In the present case, whether the1 so-called agreement, at the time of the settlement, was or was not sufficiently definite and supported by a sufficient consideration to form a binding contract, the allegations of the bill show that the mortgage was never cancelled, and that the agreement, or understanding, between the parties was not a lease at all, but merely a method of adjustment, by which the mortgage debt was to be paid. The mere fact that they called the three hundred dollars, which was to be
Sadler is a proper party defendant as one of the parties who held the property in succession, and from whom an accounting is claimed for the payments which he received, and which it is claimed should be credited on the mortgage.
The bill is single and not multifarious, seeking only the redemption and the proper application of credits on the mortgage.
Tbe decree of the court is affirmed.