Clark v. Sipple

84 A. 1, 10 Del. Ch. 51, 1912 Del. Ch. LEXIS 36
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedJuly 30, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 84 A. 1 (Clark v. Sipple) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Chancery of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clark v. Sipple, 84 A. 1, 10 Del. Ch. 51, 1912 Del. Ch. LEXIS 36 (Del. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

The Chancellor.

The bill is brought by a mortgagor against the administrators of the mortgagee, alleging that during the life of the mortgagee the debt was not only paid in full, but, by mistake of the mortgagor and through fraud of the mortgagee, overpaid; that a scire facias action had been brought on the mortgage in the Superior Court claiming the whole amount of the mortgage to be due, with interest practically from the date of the mortgage; that under the rules of law regulating the trial and proof in such actions at law the payments cannot be shown; and that the books and papers of the mortgagee, in the possession of the administrators, contain material evidence of such payments. No receipts were given for the alleged payments, except a very early one. The prayers are (1) for discovery, (2) for an accounting and repayment of the amount overpaid, and (3) for an injunction against proceeding in the suit at law.

In substance the answer denies the payments, except of a very small sum on account of interest; that the complainant was not precluded from making any proof or introducing any evidence in the action at law which could be made or introduced if testimony be taken in the Court of Chancery; and that the books, etc., of the deceased contain no entry, note or memorandum of any kind of any payments on account of the bond or mortgage, and no evidence of any kind as to any payment [53]*53for or on account of the principal or interest of the debt. It is further' alleged that the complainant is not entitled to any equitable relief, and the defendants ask the same benefit of this defense' as if there had been a demurrer to the bill. But the answer, irregularly perhaps, but actually, questions the jurisdiction of the court on the general ground that there is a full, adequate and complete remedy at law, or as the statute expresses it, a “sufficient” remedy. As the court must always consider, whenever and however raised, and even on its own initiative, its right to adjudicate a cause, and does so preferably in limine, the question of jurisdiction has been considered without having been thoroughly argued. This question will be Considered as though raised by demurrer or plea, admitting the facts well pleaded in the bill.

A rule for a preliminary injunction was issued and at the hearing thereof affidavits were submitted, and those of Mary Grantland and Robert J. Clark throw some light on the probability that some payments were in fact made b.y the mortgagor to the mortgagee, the amounts so paid not being stated. Independent of the question of jurisdiction, the affidavits of the complainant make such a showing as entitles her to the relief of a temporary injunction, notwithstanding the answer and the supporting affidavits made by the two defendants.

Prehminarily it should be observed that any statutory disqualification of the mortgagor to testify to the making of payments to the mortgagee in his lifetime applies alike to suits at law and in equity, and the other difficulties of the complainant as to making proof of the facts alleged exist in both courts alike, for in substance the rules of evidence are the same in these courts. If the memoranda kept by the mortgagor of the payments are not admissible in the pending suit at law, they would not be in this court. So, too, the mortgagor could obtain in the court of law the relief sought here. Proof of payment would constitute a defense in the action of scire facias and entitle her to a judgment against foreclosure. It is agreed that she could not in that suit obtain a judgment against the administrators of the mortgagee to recover the amount overpaid, and that an action of assumpsit by her against the admin[54]*54istrators of the mortgagee would be proper and necessary for this purpose. Two suits are, therefore, necessary to give her at law all the relief’ she here seeks. It is clear that in each of said suits at law the mortgagor could obtain the same kind of process for obtaining and producing before the court evidence to sustain and prove the facts she here relies on, as she could in this court. Rev. Code, c. 107, §13, as amended in 1895, p. 799.

■In the case of Sparks v. Farmers' Rank, 3 Del. Ch. 225, the complainant, after answer, obtained an order requiring the defendant to produce books, etc., for inspection of the complainant, and the form of the order is given in the report of the case. By Chancery Rule 24, a similar remedy is given to the defendant, without resorting to a cross-bill for discovery. A similar procedure prevails in the Superior Court under the Code provision. 1 Woolley on Delaware Practice, §580.

For the complainant it was urged that in Chancery the complainant could by subpoena duces tecum obtain production before an examiner, of the books, etc., of the mortgagee, with ampler opportunity to inspect them than if so produced at law. But in this there is a mistake. The production of a document in the possession of the adverse party cannot be compelled under a subpoena duces tecum in equity more than it can at law. Campbell v. Johnston, 3 Del. Ch. 94, 97.

The defendants say that the bill is not sustainable as a bill for an accounting, because there is no relationship established between the mortgagor and the administrators of the mortgagee, other than that of debtor and creditor, and there is no such complication in the dealings between the parties as would uphold such a suit. This is probably a correct view. Ordinarily an action at law would be the proper remedy for the . recovery of money paid by mistake on the part of the debtor, or through fraud of the creditor, and in this case would be adequate for the complainant to recover the amount overpaid to the mortgagee.

Does this court have jurisdiction because two suits are necessary to give to the complainant the full relief to which she is entitled if the allegations of the bill are true? If the suit at law upon the mortgage had not been begun, this court [55]*55might rightly take jurisdiction on that ground. Such a bill would be in the nature of a bill of peace. Authority for this would be found in Murphy v. Wilmington, 6 Houst. 108, 140, 22 Am. St. Rep. 345, a case in the Court of Errors and Appeals. “Bills of peace,” says another authority, “have been sustained by the court to settle the rights of parties in a single suit, in cases where the questions to be determined were questions of fact, or mixed questions of law and fact.” So also if that suit had not been begun and the bill had been one for discovery, in aid of a proceeding to obtain the entry of satisfaction on the record of the mortgage, and in aid of an action of assumpsit to recover back the overpayment, or for any other cause the jurisdiction of this court had been properly invoked, then this court might have retained jurisdiction of the whole controversy. As the court said in the case last cited:

“A court of equity, on a bill being filed for a discovery, will sometimes proceed to take jurisdiction of all matters in controversy between the parties, instead of sending them to a court of law, and thus avoid circuity of action.”

This would continue to be true, notwithstanding that by statute courts of law may grant in cases pending there discovery to either party, for this statute did not withdraw from the Court of Chancery the power to give discovery.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Stoeakels v. Peoples Nat. Bank of Laurel
75 A.2d 433 (Superior Court of Delaware, 1950)
Bovay v. H. M. Byllesby & Co.
12 A.2d 178 (Court of Chancery of Delaware, 1940)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
84 A. 1, 10 Del. Ch. 51, 1912 Del. Ch. LEXIS 36, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clark-v-sipple-delch-1912.