Brooks v. Moody

25 Ark. 452
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJune 15, 1869
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 25 Ark. 452 (Brooks v. Moody) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brooks v. Moody, 25 Ark. 452 (Ark. 1869).

Opinion

Wilshire, C. J.

This was a bill filed, by Francis H. Moody, in the Pulaski chancery court, against William Brooks and J. B. Rogers, the object of which was to enforce a vendor’s lien upon'certain lands, sold and conveyed by Moody to Brooks, reserved in the deed of conveyance.

The facts, as appears from the transcript of’ the record, are briefly as follows:

Moody, on the 29th day of December, 1865',' sold to Brooks an undivided one-half interest in certain lands situated in Pulaski county, for the sum of $25,000, to be paid as follows: $1,000 paid down, upon the execution and delivery of the deed of conveyance by Moody to Brooks; $10,000 to be paid in sixty days; $9,000 in ninety days, and $5,000 in one year after the date of the sale; the first two of the deferred payments to bear interest at ten per cent, after due, and the last one at seven per cent, from date.

Upon the payment of the first one thousand dollars by Brooks, Moody and wife executed and delivered to him a deed in fee simple to the undivided half interest in the lands described in the deed, reserving a lien on the lands conveyed, .to secure the payment of the unpaid balance of the purchase money.

The first two of the deferred payments were paid by Brooks, but he refused to pay the last payment of $5,000, and Moody filed his bill to enforce his vendor’s lien reserved in the deed.

Rogers answered, disclaiming any interest in the land, and was thereupon discharged. Brooks answered, and set up as a defense that, at the time the lands were purchased, Moody represented that they were free from incumbrance, and that Moody and wife, by their deed, covenanted that they were •seized in the one undivided half interest in the lands described in their deed, “of an indefeasible estate in fee simple, free from all incumbrances,” &c.; and that the lands conveyed by Moody and wife to him were not free from all incumbrances, but that they were incumbered, together with the other undivided one-half of the described lands, belonging to one Peter Hanger, by a mortgage, executed by Moody and Hanger to Gordon N. Peay, as receiver of the Real Estate Bank of Arkansas, to secure the payment of the sum of $11,163, which they owed said bank for the purchase of said lands, and that, though the record of said mortgage showed that it had been paid off by Moody & Hanger, it had not, in fact, been legally paid -off and discharged, as a lien upon said lands, but had been paid in Arkansas war bonds, in the year 1862; that the receiver of said bank was not authorized to receive such bonds in payment of a debt due to said bank, and therefore the mortgage had not been legally paid off and discharged, &c. And Brooks, further answering, declared his willingness to pay the residue of the purchase money when the land should be cleared from its incumbrances, but averred his belief that he could not safely do so until then, as the complainant was in such failing circumstances that it would be impossible to make such sum out of him, if he' should now pay it, and the mortgage should finally be declared valid, and a subsisting incumbrance upon the land, and asked to have his answer taken as a cross-bill, &c.

The complainant replied to and answered the answer and cross-bill of the respondent, Brooks, :and admitted that he represented, at the time the sale was made, that the lands were free from incumbrances, and that he so covenanted with the respondent, but denied that the lands were incumbered at that time, in the manner alleged in the respondent’s answer, and concluded with a demurrer to the cross-matter - set up in the respondent’s answer.

Upon this state of pleading the cause was set down for hearing at the October term, 1867.

At the term of the chancery court, at which the cause was set to be heard, defendant, Brooks, asked leave to file a supplemental answer and cross-bill, and accompanied his application with an affidavit as to the merits of the defense sought to be. set up by him. The court below overruled the defendant’s application, and proceeded to hear the cause, and rendered a final decree against Brooks for $5,792, &c., &c. The defendant excepted to the ruling and. decree of the court, and appealed to this court.

The only question presented by the transcript of the record for our determination is, whether the court below erred in refusing to allow the appellant to file his supplemental answer and cross-bill at the time he applied to do so ?

The transcript does not contain a copy of the supplemental answer and cross-bill, sought to be filed by the appellant in the court below, and we can not look beyond the application and affidavit accompanying it,' to determine whether the defense sought to he set up by it was sufficient.

The appellant, by his application, states that he expected to show, by his supplemental answer and cross-bill, that the premises sold by the appellees to him, at the time of the sale, were, and are now, largely incumbered by a mortgage, executed by one Thomas Thorn, in the year 1840, to the Real Estate Bank of Arkansas, to' secure the said bank and the State of Arkansas, for bonds issued by said State to said bank, to the amount of seven thousand two hundred dollars, and that the State of Arkansas has already commenced a proceeding of foreclosure on said mortgage.

This application was accompanied with the affidavit of the appellant’s solicitor, M. W. Benjamin, Esq., who stated substantially that upon an examination made by him, since this cause was set for hearing, he found most of the land, conveyed by the appellee and wife to the appellant, was incumbered by the mortgage referred to in the appellant’s application, executed by Thomas Thorn to the Real Estate Bank, and that the State of Arkansas had instituted proceedings to foreclose said mortgage, &c.

It is insisted, by counsel for the appellee, that it was entirely a matter of discretion in the court whether the appellant be allowed to file his supplemental answer and cross-bill.

We think it is true that the defendant must have obtained leave of the court to file his supplemental answer and cross-bill, but the Chancellor, we think, does not possess the discretionary power of denying a defendant the right to avail himself of a meritorious defense.

It appears by the application of the appellant, and the affidavit of his solicitor, that he was not advised of the existence of the defense sought to be set up by the supplemental answer and cross-bill until after the cause was set down for hearing.

It is laid down as an established rule of equity pleading, that, where a fact which may be of advantage to a defendant has happened subsequent to his answer, it can not with propriety be put in issue by amending bis answer; but if it appears to the court, on the hearing, that it may be of advantage to a just and equitable determination of the rights of the parties, the proper way seems to be to order the cause to stand ■over until a new bill, in which the facts can be brought before the court, and to a hearing with the original suit. Story's Eq. Pl., sec. 903.

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Bluebook (online)
25 Ark. 452, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brooks-v-moody-ark-1869.