Cummings v. May

110 Ala. 479
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedNovember 15, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 110 Ala. 479 (Cummings v. May) 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
Cummings v. May, 110 Ala. 479 (Ala. 1895).

Opinion

HARALSON, J.

The original bill was filed in this case in the Hale county chancery court, on the 17th March, 1884, by Cummings, Kinnard and others, who were sureties on the official bond of W. G. Britton, tax collector of said county of Piale, against T. T. May, who was a co-surety with them on said bond; and alleges that on the 25th of October, 1883, a judgment was rendered, in the circuit court of Hale county, against the said Britton and themselves, in favor of the State of Alabama, for the.sum of $4,224.31 and costs, and that, on the 11th October, 1883, a judgment was rendered in said circuit court against them and the said Britton, in favor of the county of Hale, for the sum of $11,223.82 ;• both judgments'being for taxes collected by said Britton [481]*481for the State and county, which he had failed to pay over to them, respectively ; that they had paid said judgment in full to the State, and had paid by way of com-pi'omise of said judgment in favor of the county, the sum of $3,750 ; that May had mortgaged his property to Madison Jones and several other persons,"who with May were made parties defendant.

The bill prays for contribution from May as a co-surety of complainants for his pro rafa share of the money paid by them on account of said judgments ; that an account be taken showing what they as sureties on said bond to the State and county liad paid; to ascertain the aliquot part which the said May ought to have contributed towards the payment of said judgments and costs &e., and that the lien of the State and county growing out of said bond of said Britton, as tax collector, m'ay be declared and decreed to be a first and superior lien over each and all of said mortgages made by said May to said Jones and others ; and that said May be required to pay the amount found to be due and owing to complainants in the premises.

The bill was afterwards amended, in conformity to a decree of the chancery court, striking out all the complainants except appellants, Cummings and Kinnard, and making them parties defendant

On April 1, 1889, a decree ivas rendered on submission of the cause, by special chancellor Benners, holding that, under the facts of the case as disclosed, the complainants were not entitled to contribution from May, on account of moneys paid on the judgment in favor of the county, because, by the terms of the compromise, they had disabled themselves to proceed against Britton, their principal; that they were entitled to contribution on account of money paid in satisfaction of the judgment in favor of the State, after certain deductions proper to be made , that complainants were entitled to subrogation to enforce the statutory lien on May’s property, but that said lien was subordinate and inferior to that of'the two mortgages to Madison Jones and the one to R. Moore & Co., executed prior to January 1, 1883, and in preference to the mortgages executed on and after 1st January, 1883. The decree did not specify the date at which the statutory lien accrued on account of the collector’s default.

[482]*482From this decreee an appeal was taken to this court by the complainants to the November Term, 1890 (Cummings v. May, 91 Ala. 233). We reversed the decree of the chancery court, . holding that May was liable to complainants for one-seventh of the sum paid by ’ complainants and the other sureties in compromise and settlement of the county’s claim against •them, to-wit, $8,750. The proofs as then developed tended to show that they paid this sum to the county.

After the reversal and the return of the cause to the chancery court, the solicitors for the respective parties in vacation entered into the following agreement, which was signed by them, respectively : “It is agreed that, this cause be submitted to the chancellor upon the note of testimony as heretofore noted by the register of this court, for decree in vacation, within sixty days from this date. Dated September 24th, 1891.” On this submission, the cancellor rendered a decree, which is dated the 20th of November, 1891, but which appears by the certificate of the register to have been “filed in office, 28th November, 1891.”

On the 4 th March, 1892, in vacation, the defendant, Madison Jones, filed in said court his petition for a rehearing in said cause, on grounds therein set out. On the 24th March, during term time, the solicitors of the respective parties entered into an agreement in writing, which appears in the transcript, to submit the cause for decree in vacation on that application, but no decree seems to have been rendered on this submission ; and at the Fall Term. 1892, the cause was re-submitted for decree in vacation on said petition. On the 10th January, 1893, the chancellor rendered his decree, holding that the petitioner, under rule 80 of chancery practice, was entitled to file his petition, and on consideration reversed and annulled the former decree, and ordered a reference to the register to ascertain the amounts that had been paid by the sureties, to the State of Alabama and the county of Hale on their respective judgments. The petition of Jones had set up, that instead of having paid the sum of $3,750 on the judgment of the county of Hale, as complainants claimed they had paid thereon, and which had been made the basis of the calculation of the amount that said May, their co-surety on. the tax-collector’s bond, should pay to them on contribution, [483]*483that they had paid only the sum of $1,300» and had been released from the balance of the judgment, by the commissioner’s court of the county, by authority of an act of the legislature passed at the session of 1888-89. The decree sought to be set aside on re-hearing, had been rendered by the chancellor, without a reference to the register, making for himself his own calculations. The chancellor in assigning his reasons for granting the re-henring, stated: “While the application ■ is, perhaps, technically deficient and is carelessly drawn, yet, with its exhibits it shows a payment and a release that have nowhere else entered into the evidence in this cause. They were not necessary to the decision of any point that was necessarily upon the court on such a submission. Had the court pursued the ordinary course and ordered a. reference, such testimony would have been more appropriate to the reference than to the submission. The petitioner has a right to relief by rehearing from so gross a wrong, especially when the court contributed to his surprise and injury and he acted promptly to redress the wrong. The granting or refusing the application rests in the sound discretion of the chancellor.—Ex parte Gresham, 82 Ala. 362. And under such rule, I feel bound to grant the rehearing in order that the basis of contribution by the defendant, May, can be properly ascertained.’’

The petition had been filed in time under rule 80; the complainants had gained an unconscionable advantage under the former decree, which might have been obviated, if a reference had been ordered, when the facts to show it might have been presented, and the granting of said petition and setting aside the former decree were fully justified in the reasons assigned by the learned chancellor, and fully sustained by the authority of this coint, which he cites.

The reference was executed under this last decree, and ascertained the amounts that had been paid by the sureties on the State and county judgments, respectively.

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Bluebook (online)
110 Ala. 479, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cummings-v-may-ala-1895.