67 Ala. 274 | Ala. | 1880
— The original bill is filed by the appellee to enforce a lien on lands for the payment of the purchase-money. There are numerous causes of demurrer
. 1. That Glidden is without interest in the subject-matter of the suit, and is, therefore, improperly joined as a defendant.
2. That the bill is multifarious, seeking an account and settlement of the partnership which had existed between the complainant, Curry, and the respondent, Clabaugh, and the enforcement of a lien on the lands for the payment of the individual notes given by Clabaugh to Curry for the purchase-money thereof.
3. That it is shown by the bill that the contract between Curry and Clabaugh, by which the former conveyed the lands to the latter, was illegal and void.
1. That the remedy to enforce the lien for the purchase-money of the lands is barred, because an action at law for the recovery of the purchase-money, as well as an action of ejectment for the recovery of the lands, is barred.
5. That the bill does not seek to subject the lands to the payment of the purchase-money, but the shares of the capital stock of the Alabama Iron Company, which the company had contracted to give Ware in the purchase of the lauds.
We shall notice the causes of demurrer, in the order in which they have been stated.
1. It is unnecessary to consider whether Glidden is not so connected with the contract between Ware and the Alabama Iron Company, for the purchase-money of the lands, that he stands in something more than the relation of a mere agent, contracting for a disclosed principal, and would be consequently a proper,-if not a necessary party to the bill. Eor, if he stands in the relation of a mere agent, who, within the scope of his authority, has contracted for, and has so contracted as to bind the principal,' and is improperly joined as a defendant, the misjoinder is matter available to himself only for his dismissal from the suit, and is not matter of concern to his co-defendants, who can sustain no injury from it. No rule of equity pleading and practice is better settled, than that misjoinder of defendants, is an objection available only to the defendant improperly joined. — 1 Brick. Dig. 753, § 1689. Glidden not having appeared or demurred, there is no merit in the demurrer of the appellants, his co-defendants, resting upon this ground.
2. The demurrer for multifariousness is founded in a misconception of the objects, averments, and prayer of the bill. These are all to be considered in determining whether a bill is multifarious. — Carpenter v. Hall, 18 Ala. 193. The bill has a single object, and to that alone is its prayer directed. The
3. Nor is there any merit in the objection, that the agreement under which Curry made the conveyance of the legal estate in the lands to Olabaugh, was illegal. The deed was made to enable Olabaugh to enter into an arrangement with the agents of the government of the Confederate States for the manufacture of iron, the parties expecting that thereby Olabaugh would be enabled to realize funds to pay the purchase-money. That arrangement was never perfected, and if it had been, it would not have affected the liability of Olabaugh to pay the purchase-money, nor lessened Curry’s rights or remedies to enforce its payment. It is not from the agreement, purely voluntary on the part of Curry, by which the deed was executed, that Olabaugh became liable to pay the purchase-money, or that Curry became entitled to receive and demand it. The liability, and the right sprung from the contract of sale made some time prior to the execution of the deed, and not from the subsequent agreement when the deed was executed, Gurry claims, and can derive no aid from this subsequent agreement in enforcing the lien a court of equity raises for the payment of the purchase-money. The test by which to ascertain whether a contract impeached as illegal, is capable of enforcement, is whether the plaintiff requires the aid of an illegal transaction to support his case. If he does not — if he has rights originating in a transaction, not offensive to law, and has a right of recovery independent of an illegal transaction, such transaction, though he may have participated in it, can not be employed to defeat him.— McGehee v. Lindsay, 6 Ala. 16; Gunter v. Leckey, 30 Ala. 591; Walker v. Gregory, 36 Ala. 180. This cause of demurrer was properly overruled..
4c. The fourth ground of demurrer has been of frequent consideration in this court, and ought to be regarded as settled finally and conclusively, if repeated judicial decisions can put to rest any vexed question, giving peace and security to the community, which ought not to be moved or disturbed.
There was formerly much discussion as to the nature, effect, and operation of statutes of limitation upon contracts falling within their influence; whether these statutes -were, as in those statutes, borrowed from the statute of 21 James 1, ch. 16, in terms directed more particularly to the forms of action, which must have been pursued to enforce performance of the contract, or, as under our present statute, directed particularly to the character and evidence of the contract. It is now the received doctrine that the contract is not ex
The principle which preserves liens, notwithstanding statutes of limitation operate to bar remedies on the debt, corresponds precisely to' the principle that the creation of such liens does not arrest or prevent the operation of the statute as to remedies upon the debt. That principle prevails alike in courts of law and equity. It is quite a mistake to suppose, as is insisted in the argument of appellant’s counsel, that it is peculiar to courts of equity. Statutes of limitations operating only on remedies, not on the obligation of
The case of Higgins v. Scott, 2 Barn. & Ad. 413, was the case of a lien of an attorney, enforced by the court of King’s Bench, though the debt was barred by the statute of limitations. The case of Spears v. Hartly, 3 Esp. 81, before Lord Eldon, while Chief Justice of the Court of Common Pleas, was referred to by counsel. It was an action of trover, brought in 1800, to recover certain merchandise, upon which the defendant, a wharfinger, claimed a lien for a balance of general account due in 1790. As actions for the recovery of this balance was limited to six years, it was contended he could not retain possession of the merchandise for its payment. But Lord Eldon held that as statutes of limitation related only to the remedy, not creating any presumption of the payment of the debt, the wharfinger, by virtue of his lien, could retain the goods until the debt was paid. In Edwards on Factors, § 76, speaking of the lien of factors, which is essentially a legal, as distinguishable from an equitable lien, the principle, as it prevails in reference to either lien, and in courts of law or of equity, is tersely stated : “The lien remains good, notwithstanding the debt has been barred by the statute of limitations. This is because the statute does not discharge the debt, but only bars the remedy by an action. The rule must be different where the statute is construed as simply raising a presumption of payment from the lapse of time.”
The case of Bank of Metropolis v. Guttschlisk, 14 Peters, 19, is another instance of the application of the principle in courts of law. Without the knowledge of the bank, a principal debtor had conveyed real estate in trust for the protection and indemnity of his indorser, against whom the bank obtained judgment, but suffered the statute of limitations to bar all remedies for its enforcement. Then being informed of the deed of trust, the bank procured a sale to be made by the trustee, became the purchaser, made a sale of the lands, and the action was against the purchaser for the recovery of
It is not insisted that the bill shows there has been any discharge, any payment of the purchase-money of the lands. The whole argument is, that as it is shown the purchase-money was due by simple contract for more than sit years, during which there was no legal impediment to a suit at law for its
It is urged that a different principle ought now to be adopted in courts of equity, as it is expressly declared by statute, that the statutes of limitation shall apply to suits in equity. But the mandate of the statute is fully satisfied, when statutes of limitation have in courts of equity, and in reference to suits in equity, precisely the same operation and' effect they have in courts of law in reference to legal remedies. When, if the right was legal, capable of enforcement by a legal remedy, that remedy would not be barred ; a corresponding remedy in equity, for the enforcement of a right cognizable only in equity, cannot be barred. We have considered this question much more fully than we would have deemed necessary or proper in view of the former decisions of this court, if it was not so apparent the principle and reason of those decisions was misapprehended and misunderstood. The principle and reason is, that remedies for the enforcement of liens or securities for the payment of a debt, are distinct from and independent of remedies at law or in equity founded on the debt. only. The one may be barred by the statute of limitations directed against it, without affecting the remedy for the other, as to which the statute is silent. It is not material whether the right or lien is legal or equitable, express or implied. Numerous examples will readily suggest themselves to the professional mind. A mortgagee has three remedies which he may pursue concurrently, or at such intervals as he may elect. The debt may be by simple contract and barred within six years. It would not be supposed, if he suffered this bar to be created, that he was barred of an
It is shown by the bill that the Alabama Iron Company, though purchasing without notice of the lien asserted by Curry, had not paid the purchase-money or received a conveyance of the legal estate. In England, the rule seems to be inflexible, that a purchaser will not be protected against outstanding equities, until be has fully paid the purchase-money and received a conveyance of the legal estate. So long as in either of these particulars the traosaction is incomplete, notice of the equity will not only preclude him from proceeding further, but will deprive him of all right to protection for whatever may have been done without notice. The rule generally adopted in the courts of this country is less stringent. The party seeking to fasten a trust, or other equity on the legal estate, is compelled to do equity. If in good faith, without notice of the trust or equity, the purchaser has made partial payments of the purchase-money, or has made improvements enhancing the value .of the lands, compensation, indemnity to him, must be approved by the
We have considered the several causes of demurrer, and do not find any one of them well taken. The decree of the Ohancellor must of consequence be affirmed.