Clement v. Draper Mathis & Co.

108 Ala. 211
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedNovember 15, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 108 Ala. 211 (Clement v. Draper Mathis & Co.) 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
Clement v. Draper Mathis & Co., 108 Ala. 211 (Ala. 1895).

Opinion

COLEMAN, J.

Draper, Mathis & Co., a partnership engaged in the mercantile business, filed the present bill to foreclose a mortgage executed by B. A. Clement and his wife Tempy Clement, on certain lands, to secure the. [213]*213payment of their note, payable to complainants. The respondents demurred to the bill as a whole, and also assigned grounds of demurrer to certain parts of the bill. The demurrer to the whole bill was properly overruled. We are of opinion, that the description of certain portions of the land is too vague and indefinite, and the special grounds of demurrer should have been sustained. If the description of the land contained in the mortgage had been accompanied by proper averments of the bill, so as to show that bjr extrinsic evidence, the lands or lots could be definitely located, such averments would have cured the defect. — See Clement v. Pearce, 63 Ala. 284.

The note and mortgage were executed by husband and wife, and it is conceded that the lands and property conveyed by the mortgage belonged solely to the wife. The bill avers that the debt evidenced by the note and secured by the mortgage is the debt of the wife. The defense is placed upon the grounds, first, that the debt is the debt of the husband, and'that the wife became bound as surety for him; and, second, that if the wife was bound as principal for any part of the debt, such part has been fully paid.

We think the evidence fairly establishes the fact that the payments claimed to have been made, were received by the plaintiffs, and the controversy on this point, is as to the application of the payments. There were six bales of cotton received from Tempy Clement, acknowledged by plaintiffs, which entitled Tempy Clement to.a credit of $252.67. The plaintiffs’ evidence tends to show, that they had no instruction as to how the proceeds of this cotton, should be applied, and they applied it to advances made to two of the tenants of Mrs. Clement, upon an agreement with her that she would stand security for them. There is not a particle of evidence offered to show, that Mrs. Clement signed such an agreement in writing, with the written assent or concur-,, rence of her husband to such an agreement. The wife cannot contract so as to bind herself, except it be in writing, and with the written assent or concurrence of her husband expressed in writing, (Code § 2346) ; unless he has complied with section 2350 of the Code, so as to authorize her to enter into and pursue a lawful trade or business. Strauss, Pritz & Co., v. Glass, post herein. [214]*214Independent of this consideration by virtue of the note and mortgage executed May 19th, 1887, there was alien given upon the crop and a stipulation that the first payment made should be upon the note. The law applied the proceeds of the cotton to the debt secured by a lien upon it, unless the mortgagor otherwise consented, and it was upon the plaintiffs to prove the consent, for a different application. The chancellor erred in the conclusion expressed in his opinion that the plaintiffs had authority to apply the proceeds of the cotton to the debt of the tenants.

The material question is whether the debt secured by the mortgage sought ip be foreclosed, or any part of it, was the debt of the wife. We will not undertake to reconcile all the testimony of the complainants and respondents on this question, but will weigh their testi-timony in connection with facts which are unquestionably established. The mortgage to which the wife is a party was executed by her and her husband on the 4th of March, 1887, and to secure a note of $800.00. Of this amount, in January and February previous, the husband had purchased, upon his own credit and which were charged to him solely, for goods and merchandise $347.17 and for a pair of mules $275., a total of $622.17. After these purchases were made and debts contracted by the husband, the complainants learned that B. A. Clement did not own any property in his own right, but that it all belonged to his wife. They thereupon refused to credit him further, and notified him that some satisfactory arrangement must be ma'de for his debt already contracted. The arrangement made was the note and mortgage by husband and wife, on the 4th of March, 1887. The complainants contended, that the sale of the mules to the husband was cancelled, and they then sold the mules to the wife for the same price, $275, which entered into and was a part of the consideration of the note secured by the mortgage. The complainants further contended, that the wife assumed the debt of the husband" for $317.17, and this amount entered into and constituted a part of the consideration of the note for $800. These two amounts, the husband’s account and the price of the mules aggregated $622.17, and the complainants’ contention is that the note was taken at $800 to cover any additional purchases that [215]*215might be subsequently made. There is testimony tending to support this contention. The testimony of B. A. Clement and his wife, Tempy Clement, is positive to the effect, that Draper, Mathis & Co. required security for the husband’s debt and that his wife agreed to become bound as security for his debt, and for their future purchases. That the note was given that day, 4th March, to cover his indebtedness which was secured by the mortgage of himself and wife, and his previous notes and mortgages executed by him individually were surrendered. They show that the wife never assumed as principle the account of $347.67, but that remained his debt, evidenced by the note of himself and wife and secured by the mortgage. When we consider and weigh the depositions of the parties in connection with the note and mortgage and the bills rendered by the complainants to the respondents, the weight of the evidence as to the husband’s account for $347.67 is with the respondents. There is not a word in the note or in the mortgage which in any manner indicates, that the wife agreed to pay or did pay this account of the husband. The only conclusion from reading the note and mortgage alone is that both were jointly liable for the debt. His name appears first on the note and mortgage. The note is referred to as our debt, and throughout, the note and mortgage evidence joint obligation. On the 4th of March, the day of the execution of the note and mortgage and presum ibly after their execution, as the complainants knew, before that day that B. A. Clement owned no property, a bill of merchandise was purchased, and an account rendered of the same, including all previous indebtedness. This bill was made out against B. A. Clement, and not against Tempy Clement. Her name nowhere appears on it. ' Included in the items bought that day is the charge for $347.67, the debt previously contracted by the husband and also the charge for the mules. Every bill of goods purchased from that day forward, was made out against husband and wife jointly.

The evidence in regard to the mules satisfies us, that the wife is properly chargeable with the purchase price. The mortgage itself, sets out the Met, that the mules were her property purchased by her that day, which corroborates the plaintiff’s statement, that B. A. Clement voluntarily consented to return the mules, and that [216]*216the wife became the purchaser of them. . The mules were returned by the wife to the plaintiffs, who agreed to take them at a -valuation of $245. There is no difficulty as to the mules.

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Bluebook (online)
108 Ala. 211, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clement-v-draper-mathis-co-ala-1895.