Whitley & Trimble v. Dumham Lumber Co.

89 Ala. 493 | Ala. | 1889

McCLELLAN, J.

The original bill alleged payment of a mortgage executed by the complainant — appellee here — and McKenzie & Perkins, to the appellants — defendants below; that notwithstanding such payment and satisfaction in full, the defendants had advertised the property covered by the mortgage, all of which belonged to the Dunham Lumber Company, for sale under a power of sale contained in the instrument; that, unless they were enjoined, the sale would be made, and thereby the large saw-mill business of complainant, and a railroad operated in connection therewith, would be stopped, large number of employees thrown out of employment, and complainant be prevented from filling orders and executing contracts it has from and with parties from outside of the State; that its credit and commercial standing with those with whom it has contracts, and in financial circles, will be impaired, and complainant be otherwise irreparably injured and damaged.

Complainant embodies in its bill an offer to redeem its property from said mortgage, if it should be mistaken in its averments of payment and satisfaction thereof, and to pay whatever balance should be found due thereon. The prayer of the bill is for an accounting to ascertain whether any, and, if any, what sum is unpaid, on the mortgage; that the same be cancelled, if found to be fully paid, and if not fully paid, that complainant be let in to redeem therefrom upon *497payment of the balance due, &c.; and that in the meantime defendants be enjoined from proceeding to sell under the mortgage, as they were threatening and preparing to do.

An injunction issued as prayed. Subsequently, the defendants instituted suit in the Circuit Court of Butler county, on the note which evidenced the mortgage debt; and upon this fact being brought to the knowledge of the chancellor, by an amendment in the- nature of a supplemental bill, containing a prayer to that end, the suit at law was also enjoined.

The answer denied the averments of the original bill, as to satisfaction of the debt; and upon these denials a motion was made to dissolve the injunction. This motion was refused, as was also a motion to dismiss the bill for want of equity. Demurrers to the original bill, and to the amendment, were also interposed, and overruled; and on final hearing, it was found that the mortgage debt had been fully paid, the mortgage was decreed to be cancelled, and the injunctions against defendants were perpetuated.

1. There can be no question that the original bill, averring payment of the mortgage debt, and yet offering to pay any balance that might be found due on a statement of the account, and praying, in the alternative, for a cancellation of the mortgage if the debt secured by it should be found to be fully satisfied, or for a redemption from the mortgage, if a balance should be found against the complainant, contains equity. — Fields v. Helms, 70 Ala. 460; Gilmer v. Wallace, 79 Ala. 464.

2. The denials in the answer of the fact of payment and satisfaction did not entitle the defendants to a dissolution of the injunction of the threatened sale. The fact of payment was not essential to that aspect of the bill which sought an accounting and redemption from the mortgage, and the injunction was properly retained for the purposes of redemption, aside from the prayer for cancellation on the theory of satisfaction. In either aspect of the case, complainant was entitled to have the sale restrained until a final disposition of the case, in order that whatever right it should be adjudged to have, whether the right to cancellation or the right to redeem, might be effectuated. The answer contains no denial of any fact necessary to complainant’s right to redeem.

Moreover, this case comes especially within the doctrine of Harrison v. Yerby, 87 Ala. 185, in which it was held *498that the Chancery Court is invested with wide latitude in •acting upon motions to dissolve injunctions on the denials of the answer; and that whenever it appears that a continuance of the writ will probably cause less injustice and inconvenience to the defendant, than would result to the complainant from its dissolution, this discretion is well exercised in denying the motion for dissolution. — Chambers v. Ala. Iron Co., 67 Ala. 353; Columbus & Western Railway Co. v. Witherow, 82 Ala. 190; Kinney v. Ensminger, 87 Ala. 340.

3. The Chancery Court having thus rightfully acquired jurisdiction of the controversy, and restrained the sale under the mortgage, it had the further right, as a matter of course, to protect and effectuate its jurisdiction by enjoining the suit at law, instituted after bill filed, for the purpose of having one of the chief questions involved in the chancery case adjudicated and determined in the law court. — North-western Railway Co. v. Barnett, 65 Ga. 601; Hadfield v. Bartlett, 66 Wis. 635; 10 Amer. & Eng. Ency. of Law, 908-909.

4. The view we have taken of the questions considered above, some of which, perhaps, need not have been decided, leaves but one point open in the case — -namely, whether the draft of B. B. McKenzie on Raymond was taken by the mortgagees, Whitley & Trimble, as an absolute payment pro tanto of the mortgage debt. On this issue, McKenzie being jointly bound with the Dunham Lumber Company for the debt secured by the mortgage, the presumption of law is, that the draft was not given and received .as a payment on the debt, but only as a means of raising funds to be applied to the debt as a payment when realized; and the affirmative of the issue is, therefore, upon the complainant. The company, in other words, must affirmatively show that the paper was a payment of the mortgage debt, to the extent of its amount.—McWilliams v. Phillips, 71 Ala. 80; Lehman v. McQueen, 65 Ala. 570.

McKenzie swears that Whitley. & Trimble, after satisfying themselves of the solvency of Raymond, upon whom the paper was drawn, took the draft in absolute payment of so much of the mortgage debt. On the other hand, Trimble testifies that the draft was not taken in payment at all, but only for the purpose of raising money to be applied when collected to the debt. Whitley corroborates Trimble in respect to subsequent conversations and transactions between them and McKenzie, in reference to the amount for which the draft was drawn, which conversations and transactions, *499as testified to by them, tend to show that the draft was not taken in payment, nor considered as a payment, in the first instance, or afterwards. In respect to these matters, Whitley’s evidence is somewhat discredited by a former deposition given by him in the cause, in which he was not nearly so full and explicit as on this reference. McKenzie, in rebuttal, contradicts all this evidence, or so explains what occurred, or was said, as to make it entirely consistent with the theory that the draft was a payment. So stands the issue on the testimony of these witnesses; and if this were all the evidence in the case, we could not affirm that the mortgage debt was reduced pro tanto by this transaction.

But the complainant was very strongly supported by the following facts and circumstances, appearing from papers' put in evidence: (1.) The face of the draft, less discount, is entered on the back of the mortgage, as of date the day after it was drawn, along with and following two other items which are shown to be proper credits on the secured debt, and to constitute the only large payments that had been made up to that time. (2.) The amount of the draft was charged to the defendants, as a payment on the mortgage debt, in a statement of the account which appears to have been rendered by complainant to defendants more, than a year after it was drawn; this statement showing a balance due to complainant, which could have been the case only on the assumption that the draft was a payment; and though the statement was delivered to, and kept by defendants, no objection to it was seasonably made, nor at all in fact, except by taking steps long afterwards to sell under the mortgage. (3.) Several months after the draft was drawn, and after it had been dishonored, the defendants rendered three several statements of the account to the complainant, and in each instance credited the net value of the draft as a payment thereon, and, so treating it, drew down a balance of which, and of which only, they demanded payment; and this balance was afterwards fully paid by the complainant. (4.) On January 2, 1888, an account'for $137.98 was presented by the complainant to the defendants, and accompanied by a request to “please remit,” which could have been accounted for only on the assumption that the mortgage debt had been fully paid, especially as theretofore accounts of this character had been credited on that debt; and this account was received by defendants, and though not paid, no objection was ever made to it, or to its request for remittance. (5.) *500And finally, the fact that the net value of the draft in controversy was credited on the books of defendants as a payment on the mortgage debt, as of its date.

We can not escape the conclusion to which these facts drive us, that the draft was taken by the defendants as an absolute payment on the mortgage debt, and to that extent released the Dunham Lumber Company and its property from the debt, and the lien by which it was secured. It is admitted that the balance of the original mortgage debt, after deducting the amount of this draft, had been fully paid. This conclusion may be safely rested on the evidence adduced before the register which was not open to any tenable objection, and wholly without consideration of any testimony, the relevancy or admissibility of which is even questionable. We, therefore, deem it unnecessary to go into a consideration of the objections and exceptions filed to the register’s report, and passed on, expressly or impliedly, by the chancellor in the final décree.

The decree of the chancellor confirming the results reached by the register, holding the mortgage debt to have been-fully paid and discharged, so far as the complainant or its property was liable therefor, cancelling the mortgage, and perpetually enjoining the suit at law and sale under the power, is free from error, and is in all things affirmed.

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