67 Ala. 529 | Ala. | 1880
— One phase of this case rests on an alleged agreement made between Henry Jones, representing Flinn & Jones, the mortgagors, J. W. Hardie for J. W. Hardie & Oo., and W. B. Jones, acting as agent of Mrs. Turner, the appellant. The charges of the bill are that Hardie, who had a mortgage on the cotton, agreed with W. B. Jones that if the latter would not advertise under Mrs. Turner’s mortgage, he, Hardie, would, after satisfying his own older mortgage, turn over to him for Mrs. Turner any surplus that might remain of the proceeds of the cotton ; and that in violation of this agreement, he surrendered to Flinn & Jones twelve bales, the last of the cotton crop produced that year by Flinn & Jones. Mrs. Turner held no mortgage on the cotton, but her mortgage embraced other chatties which were also in the mortgage to [Hardie. The bill charges that Henry Jones was present when this agreement was entered into, and assented to its terms. The bill calls for a sworn answer from the defendants, and both Hardie and Henry Jones answer on oath that there was no agreement to turn over to W. B. Jones any cotton, or proceeds of cotton, or. any thing else not included in Mrs. Turner’s mortgage. Three witnesses are examined — -W. B. Jones, Henry Jones, and Hardie. The first named testifies that such agreement was made. The other two testify as they had answered, denying such agreement. This phase of the bill must fail, even if well averred, because the testimony is insufficient, under the rule, to overcome the denials in the answer. A sworn answer, responsive to the charges of the bill, and denying them, is evidence for the defendant, which can 'be overturned only by the opposing tes-. timony of two witnesses, or one with corroborating circumstances. — 1 Brick. Dig. 738, § 1466.
But there is another answer to this phase of the bill, equally fatal to the relief it seeks. If Hardie, upon a consideration deemed valuable in the law, made the agreement with Jones which the bill seeks to set up, it was only a simple contract to do an act, for the breach of which an action at law could
But it is sought to maintain the present bill, as a suit to have the securities marshalled between the different lien creditors. Hardie & Co. held the elder mortgage, and the debt, to secure which it was given, was past due when the mortgage was made to Mrs. Turner. Each mortgage, to some extent, conveyed the same property, while each conveyed property not embraced in the other. The cotton crop, probably the most valuable of all the chattels conveyed, was mortgaged to Hardie & Co., but not to Mrs. Turner. The mortgagors were insolvent, and the entire property conveyed by the two mortgages was insufficient to pay both debts. In this state of the case there_can be no doubt that Mrs. Turner, if she moved'in time, had the right to have Hardie first exhaust the fund on which he alone held a lien, so as to leave for Mrs. Turner a larger residuum of the property upon which each of them held a lien. — Story Eq. Ju. § 638. But this is an equitable doctrine — -the creature of equity — called into exercise by, and for the benefit of the creditor who is to be profited by it. The fully secured creditor has no interest in the question, and is not required, of his own motion, to take any step to advance the interest of the junior incumbrancer. He must do nothing to injure ¡or embarrass the junior incumbrancer, but he is not required to become active» Till the junior incumbrancer moves in the matter, the elder may do nothing. The debt to Hardie & Co. become due and in default, long before the cotton crop was gathered and prepared for market. Before the present bill was filed, and while much of the cotton remained ungathered, Hardie & Co. had so far foreclosed their mortgage as to sell all of the property on which they and Mrs. Turner each held a lien, had applied the proceeds, and,also the proceeds of the cotton then gathered, as payments on the mortgage debt due from Elinn & Jones to them, and still left a balance of, say $190, due them. "When the present bill was filed, all the property mortgaged to Hardie & Co. and afterwards to Mrs. Turner, had thus been sold, and the proceeds appropriated, as payments on the debt to Hardie & Co.; and the mortgage debt to them was thus extinguished, less the said balance of $190. Of the cotton crop, the proceeds had been applied in the same way, except a remnant of twelve bales. On these, as we have seen, Hardie & Co. held a lien, while Mrs. Turner had none. The lien of Hardie & Co. was only for the $190 — the residue of their debt having been paid. It results from these facts that there was nothing left, on which the doctrine of marshalling could operate. Nothing remained on which Mrs. Turner had
Affirmed.