Bray v. Comer

82 Ala. 183
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedDecember 15, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 82 Ala. 183 (Bray v. Comer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bray v. Comer, 82 Ala. 183 (Ala. 1886).

Opinion

STONE, C. J.

— The Peopled Bank was a corporation for banking purposes, located and doing business in Eufaula, Alabama. H. C. Hart was its president, and A. A. Walker was its cashier. On July 3, 1878, -Hart executed his note payable to the bank, due at five months from date, for the [185]*185sum of ten thousand four hundred and twelve 50-100 dollars, and contemporaneously executed to the bank a mortgage on real estate, to secure its payment. The mortgage was duly probated and recorded. This note and mortgage were traded and assigned by the bank to Woods, who gave in its purchase ten thousand dollars- in money, which the bank received. The note matured, was not .paid by Hart, and the bank, before its suspension or failure, after noticed, paid to Woods about six thousand dollars on the note.

On January 9, 1879, Hart executed to the bank four promissory notes, each for the sum of seven thousand five hundred dollars, due severally at nine, ten, eleven, and twelve- months, and executed a mortgage on real estate to secure their payment. This ■ mortgage was also duly probated and recorded. An effort was immediately made to negotiate these notes for the bank’s use, the bank being embarrassed, but it failed ; and on January 14, 1879, the bank suspended payment, and became insolvent.

Under a power of .sale contained in the mortgage first executed, Woods sold a part of the property therein conveyed, and from the proceeds realized the balance — some four thousand dollars and interest — due to him on the note he had purchased of the bank. He then re-transferred the note and mortgage to the bank.

A receiver was appointed to take possession of the assets of the insolvent People’s Bank, and to administer the same, who entered upon the discharge of his duties. Each of the mortgages executed by Hart contained a power of sale, and under them the receiver was proceeding to make sale of the property conveyed in them, in payment of the debts they purport to secure. One H. M. Comer claimed the property by a title which is subordinate to that of the bank’s receiver, if the said mortgages are valid securities. The validity of Comer’s claim is not disputed, except that it is claimed that the mortgages confer a prior and paramount lien on the property. Comer and Hart’s personal representative (Hart had died) contend that the bank’s receiver can assert no rights under the mortgages, their contention being that the notes and mortgages were executed for accommodation, and upon no consideration moving from the bank to Hart. This presents the material issue of fact in this cause, upon which witnesses gave parol testimony, and the chancellor ruled against the claim of the receiver. There are bills and cross-bills, but the case resolves itself at last into the inquiry stated above.

The proof is clear and full that,, soon after the bank was organized, Hart and the successive firms of which he was a [186]*186member kept running accounts with the bank, which were unsecured, save by the shares of stock he held therein. He was in the habit of making over-draugh'ts, and this was kept up until the bank’s suspension. At the time the first note and mortgage were executed- — July 3, 1878 — he was indebted to the bank in a sum equal to, or greater than they expressed. And on January 9, 1879, when the second batch of notes and mortgage were executed, Hart’s indebtedness to the bank was the full sum of forty thousand dollars, the amount represented by all the notes and both the mortgages. So, as matter of fact, there was a consideration, valid in law, and sufficient to uphold the notes' and mortgages.

It is clearly the law, that a subsisting debt from Hart to the bank was a sufficient consideration to uphold both the notes and the mortgages. — Rutledge v. Townsend, 38 Ala. 706; 1 Jones on Mortgages, § 611; Byles on Bills, 127; 1 Story on Bills, § 192; In re Carew, 31 Beav. 39; Percival v. Frampton, 2 C., M. & R. 180; Currie v. Misa, L. R. 10 Exchequer, 153. And the execution of the papers imports a consideration. — 1 Jones on Mortgages, § 613; Code of 1876, § 3035; Bolling v. Munchus, 65 Ala. 558; Goetter v. Head, 70 Ala. 532. It results from what we have said, that the burden of disproving a consideration for the notes and-mortgages rested with Comer, who antagonized the right of the receiver to foreclose the mortgages.

The precise form in which the defense is presented, does not deny that Hart owed the bank for over-draughts, to the full amount the notes and mortgages represent. The contention is, that the papers were executed by him with no reference to his indebtedness to the bank, but simply for its accommodation, to enable it, by their sale, to relieve itself of the embarrassments it was then laboring under. And, in this connection, it is claimed as part of the agreement, that if the paper was negotiated, the bank was to meet it at maturity; and if not negotiated, then the notes and mortgages were to be returned to Hart. The following authorities are relied on as justifying this defense: Wilkerson v. Tillman, 66 Ala. 532; Edwards v. Dwight, 68 Ala. 389; Reader v. Helms, 57 Ala. 440. The argument takes a further step, and contends that the notes and mortgages béing made and received as accommodation paper, they can not be upheld by proof of a valuable consideration, not had in contemplation by the parties. There can be no question, that if a mortgage be made to secure a particular debt, or designated liability, it can not, without more, be interpreted as a security for another and different liability. — Marcus v. Robinson, 76 Ala. 550; Clark v. Oman, 15 Gray, 521; Tucker v. [187]*187Alger, 30 Mich. 67; Beardsley v. Tuttle, 11 Wis. 74; Bacon v. Gottrell, 13 Minn. 194. The present case is different. There is no attempt here to enlarge the terms of the mortgage, so as to make it embrace a contract, or rather the evidence of a contract, other than that described. It is conceded that the two mortgages were executed to secure the' payment of the four notes described in them. The isolated proposition asserted is, that although there was^a consideration, valuable and adequate to uphold the notes, in fact the agreement upon which they were given leaves them without consideration to stand on.

From the organization of the bank until its failure, one and the same person was its cashier and chief manager. There were a president, vice-president, and board of directors ; but, from all that appears in the record, the functions of the bank were performed largely, if not chiefly, by the cashier. And his testimony in favor of Comer’s version of the transaction is the chief reliance of that side of the controversy.

The testimony of the cashier is positive, and without qualification, that all of Hart’s notes and mortgages were given without consideration, and as mere accommodation, to enable the bank to borrow money, with an agreement that, if the notes could not be used, they, with the mortgages, were to be returned to Hart; and if discounted, or disposed of, they were to be paid by the bank when due. This, he testifies, was an agreement made simply with himself, without any knowledge, or assent, or participation on the part of any of the directors.

There are many facts and circumstances calculated to weaken, if not to destroy, the force of this testimony.

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82 Ala. 183, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bray-v-comer-ala-1886.