Downing v. Woodstock Iron Co.

93 Ala. 262
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedNovember 15, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 93 Ala. 262 (Downing v. Woodstock Iron 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
Downing v. Woodstock Iron Co., 93 Ala. 262 (Ala. 1890).

Opinion

McOLELLAN,- J.

— J. & W. W. Draper purchased the land in controversy at a sale made under a decree of the Chancery Court enforcing a vendor’s lien in favor of Alexander against one Harrison, the vendee, and W. P. Downing, the vendee of Harrison. Tire price paid was $220.00, being the amount of said decree and costs, and the balance due the purchasers on a mortgage covering the land, executed by Downing to them. The purchasers took the register’s deed, and satisfied their mortgage. Soon afterwards, the Woodstock Iron Company, acting through its secretary and treasurer, Samuel Noble, paid the Drapers $200 for the land, and took a quit-claim .deed, absolute in form. All this occurred early in the year 1878. The present bill was filed by Downing, March 14, 1889, for the purpose of having the deed irom Draper to the Woodstock Iron Company declared a mortgage from him to said company, for an account ascertaining the amount due thereon, and for redemption therefrom. It is alleged that the Drapers, as a concession to Downing, in appreciation of the hardship it was on him to have to pay a balance of j>urchase-money due the original vendor, after having fully paid his immediate vendor, agreed to abate their claim to the extent of $20.00, and to allow redemption on‘payment of the balance of $200; that Downing borrowed the money necessary to avail himself of this proposition from the Woodstock Iron Company, and to secure the re-payment of it, the company took the quit-claim deed from the Drapers, and agreed that Downing should have all the time he wanted to .re-pay the principal, provided he would pay ten per cent, interest thereon annually. The pur[265]*265chase or redemption money was paid directly by the company to the Drapers.

Waiving all other considerations for the present, it will first be discussed whether the agreement between the complainant and the defendant, relied on to give to the absolute deed from the Drapers to the Woodstock Iron Company the character of a mortgage from the complainant to the defendant, is supported by the evidence. It has been over and over again said by this court, that to entitle a complainant to the relief here prayed, the testimony going to establish the essential facts must be consistent, strong and convincing. — 2 Brickell’s Dig., pp. 271-2, §§ 318, 323-329; 3 Brick. Dig., p. 659, § 384; Kraus v. Dreher, 84 Ala. 319, and citations.

The agreement, if any was made, was a'verbal one. It was made, if at all, between Downing and Samuel Noble as treasurer and secretary of the defendant corporation. Noble died before the filing of the bill., Having acted in this matter as a fiduciary representative of the Woodstock Iron Company, the testimony of the complainant himself, offered to prove conversations and transactions by said Noble in the premises, can» not be considered. — Mobile Savings Bank v. McDonnell, 87 Ala. 736.

The testimony of the witness Stocks must also be excluded. That went only to show a conversation between complainant and a third person, in which were detailed the terms of an arrangement which the complainant said he had made with the defendant through Noble, and at which neither Noble or other representative of the defendant was present. It was manifestly incompetent evidence, and can not be taken into view in reaching a conclusion upon the issue of fact involved here. The only remaining testimony as to the fact and terms of an agreement between Downing and Noble is that of Gentry and Couch. They say they were present when the arrangement was made between Downing and Noble, more than ten years before the time of giving this evidence; that complainant offered to sell the land to Noble, who declined to buy; that he then told Noble he could redeem the land from the Drapers by paying $200.00 — less than they had paid for it — and asked . Noble to lend him the money for that purpose; that Noble at once agreed to do so, and thatDowning should keep the money ■ as long as he wanted it, or should “pay it back when he got ready,” meantime paying interest at ten per cent, per annum; and that, by Noble’s direction, the Drapers were on the same day told by Downing to go to the office of the company, “with their papers against Downing,” and get the money. There are several infirmative circumstances attaching inherently and [266]*266otherwise to this testimony. In the first place, the facts testified to transpired, as we have seen, many years before these depositions were taken, and it is scarcely probable that they were accurately remembered by witnesses having no occasion to charge their memories with them. The agreement to which they depose is not a reasonable one, and not such an one as would probably have been entered into. Enough appears in this record to justify the inference that this corporation was a borrower, and not a lender of money, and that a part of its ordinary business was the purchase of land, such as that in controversy. It is not easy to believe, on the evidence of Gentry and Couch, that its general lines, of business were departed from in this instance, in such sort as put it in the attitude of refusing to enter into negotiations looking to the acquisition of this land, and of volunteering to lend money to Downing, between whom and the corporation, or Noble, no such relations appear to have existed as would account for such a change of policy. Moreover, had its business been to lend money, it surpasses belief that it would have made this loan to complainant, under an agreement with him that he could keep the money as long as he wanted it. It is much more probable that these witnesses have contorted an agreement of Noble to buy the land from Drapers, subject to Downing’s right of redemption upon payment of the purchase-money and ten per cent, per annum, in order that the latter might get the benefit of Drapers’ abatement, if he should exercise his right to redeem, into the very extraordinary contract they depose to, than that this extraordinary agreement should have been in fact entered into.

The theory of the delendant, that the transaction involved only a sale to the company with the -privilege of redemption in complainant, finds support also in the facts of the prior transaction between these parties in view of the register’s approaching sale. Precisely the same facts are alleged and attempted to be proved in that connection, going to show that Noble agreed to lend Downing money to buy in the land, &c., as are alleged and attempted to be proved with respect to the. later transaction. And yet it is clear that Noble did not understand that he was malring a loan of money to be secured by a mortgage, or a deed operating as. a mortgage, on the land. On the contrary, being unable himself to attend the sale, he sent a letter by Downing to his attorney, directing him to buy the land in a certain event, and have title made to the company, and stating, “We buy the place so as to accommodate Mr. Downing, so as to give him a chance within two years to-redeem it.” Then, too, the subsequent conduct of the parties. [267]*267tends to support defendant’s theory. Complainant continued in possession only two years — the time during which he might have redeemed — and then of his own motion abandoned the land. This can not be satisfactorily accounted for upon any other hypothesis than that he supposed he had no longer any interest in it. Granting there was a necessity for him to take up his residence at another place only three-fourths of a mile distant, it by no means follows that such necessity also involved the abandonment of this land.

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Bluebook (online)
93 Ala. 262, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/downing-v-woodstock-iron-co-ala-1890.