Eads v. Murphy

52 Ala. 520
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJune 15, 1875
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 52 Ala. 520 (Eads v. Murphy) 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
Eads v. Murphy, 52 Ala. 520 (Ala. 1875).

Opinion

BRICKELL, C. J.

1. The statute declares, “ No demurrer in pleading can be allowed but to matter of substance which the party demurring specifies ; and no objection can be taken or allowed which is not distinctly stated in the demurrer.” R. C. § 2656. The construction this statute has received conforms to its language: that when a demurrer is interposed, the court cannot consider any other objection than is specifically stated. Cotton v. Rutledge, 33 Ala. 116 ; Holley v. Younge, 27 Ala. 203. However insufficient the pleading may be in other respects, if it is not obnoxious to the particular objections assigned, the demurrer must be overruled.

2. The demurrer interposed seems to us to be founded in a misconception of the character and construction of the fourth plea. The gravamen of this plea is not the want of title in the vendors to the lands sold, nor a breach of their obligation to convey, aS' they had covenanted in the bond for title. The substantial ground of defence is, that the defendant after the making of the note, the foundation of suit, offered to make payment ,to the payees, and demanded a conveyance of the lands, and then, at the request of the payees, deposited the amount with a third person, to be paid them on the making by them of a conveyance. , If such an agreement was made before the assignment of the note to the appellees, or before notice to the appellant of the assignment, it was valid, and being performed by the appellant is a bar to this suit. Parties before or after the consummation of a contract may annul, rescind, modify, or change it at pleasure, and no other consideration is necessary to support the change or rescission or modification, than the mutual agreement of the parties. 1 Brick. Dig. 394, § 233. This agreement being performed by the appellant, was as to him executed. He was discharged from liability on the note, and the right of the payees was to the money he had deposited. This right was conditional, dependent on the making of a conveyance of the lands. The plea may be defective, in not averring this agreement was made before the assignment of the note to the appellees, or before notice of it to the appellant. That, however, is not a cause of [525]*525demurrer assigned, and we cannot consider it. The plea was not obnoxious to any one of the causes of demurrer specified, and the court therefore erred in sustaining the demurrer.

3. The fifth plea was obnoxious to the specific causes of demurrer. It is pleaded in bar of the action, and avers only that the consideration of the note was the purchase-money of lands; that cotemporaneous with the making of the note, the payees gave a bond to make a good title on. the payment of the purchase-money; that after the maturity of the note, the appellant tendered to the payees the money due thereon, and demanded a conveyance of the lands, which they refused to make. The plea, as we have said, is in bar of the action. It is not a plea averring a right to damages, because of the payees’ breach of the bond for title, and offering to set them off against the plaintiff’s recovery. Such a plea would in effect acknowledge the justice of the plaintiff’s demand, and set up an opposing demand to counterbalance it. This plea denies the justness of the plaintiff’s demand, and sets up facts which are supposed to be in destruction of it. As a plea in bar it cannot be sustained. It does not aver that there has been a rescission of the contract of purchase of the lands, nor an eviction, nor an abandonment of possession. It simply avers that the payees failed to keep their covenant to make title. No principle is better settled in this court than that a vendee of lands, who has gone into possession, accepted a bond for title, and given his notes for the purchase-money, cannot at law resist a recovery on the notes, so long as the contract of purchase is unrescinded and he remains in possession. George v. Stockton, 1 Ala. 136 ; Helvenstein v. Higgason, 35 Ala. 259. The demurrer to this plea was properly sustained.

4. The sixth plea is a plea of set-off, and avers the consideration of the note was the purchase-money of lands, which the payees bound themselves to convey to the appellant on the payment of the purchase-money ; that at the time it was payable, the purchase-money was tendered, and a title demanded, which the payees failed to make ; that thereby the appellant had sustained damages to the amount of one thousand and sixty dollars, which he claims as a set-off.J The plea is bad, because it does not aver that a conveyance was prepared and tendered to the vendors for execution. The duty of preparing and tendering the conveyance under our decisions rests on the vendee, and he cannot place the vendor in default without having performed it, or alleging some sufficient excuse for the failure. 1 Brickell’s Dig. 311, 569. The insufficiency of the plea in this respect is not, however, assigned as a cause of demurrer. jJThe objections taken, so far as this plea is concerned, resolve themselves into this: that the demand preferred as a [526]*526set-off is for unliquidated damages, which, are not the proper subject of a set-off. This was certainly true under the statute of set-off existing prior to the Code. Then, only debts on which an action of debt, indebitatus assumpsit, could be maintained, were the proper subjects of set-off. Unliquidated damages, though arising out of the breach of contract, and though the law furnished the criterion by which they were to be measured, could not be sustained as a set-off. Hence, in Dunn v. White (1 Ala. 645), and in Cole v. Justice (8 Ala. 793), it was held the payment of an outstanding incumbrance by a purchaser of land, with a covenant either express or implied from the vendors against incumbrances, could not be set off against a recovery of the purchase-money. The Code has relaxed the severity of the former statutes, and authorizes the set-off of not only mutual debts, but liquidated or unliquidated demands, not sounding in damages merely. R. C. § 2642. A demand does not sound in damages merely, if, when the facts on which it is based are ascertained, the law measures them accurately by a pecuniary standard. Holley v. Younge, 27 Ala. 203. In this case, a set-off of the amount paid by a vendee in extinguishing an outstanding vendor’s lien, an incumbrance on the premises, was allowed, in air action for the recovery of the purchase-money. In Gibson v. Marquis (29 Ala. 668), damages for a false representation as to the liability of the lands to overflow were declared a proper matter of set-off, in an action on the note for the purchase-money. The same ruling was reaffirmed in Kannady v. Lambert, 37 Ala. 57; Salter v. Phillips, 38 Ala. 382. In Bell v. Thompson (34 Ala. 633), and in Nelms v. Prewitt (37 Ala. 389), a demand for damages, on account of the vendor’s breach of warranty and a deficiency in the quantity of land sold, was held a good set-off, in an action on the notes for the purchase-money. In Martin v. Wharton (38 Ala. 637), it is asserted that a cross demand growing out of a defect in the vendor’s title is available as a set-off, in an action on the notes for the purchase-money, although the purchaser is in possession.

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Bluebook (online)
52 Ala. 520, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eads-v-murphy-ala-1875.