Gafford v. Speaker

125 Ala. 498
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedNovember 15, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 125 Ala. 498 (Gafford v. Speaker) 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
Gafford v. Speaker, 125 Ala. 498 (Ala. 1899).

Opinion

TYSON, J.

The bill in this cause was filed for the purpose of having certain conveyances cancelled as a cloud upon the title of complainant to the land described in the bill. Her right to do so depends, in a large measure, upon whether she has established by the evidence that the debt secured by certain mortgages executed by her and 'her husband upon the land, was her debt or the debt of her husband. The bill alleges that on the 27th day of May, 1896, she joined her husband, as his security, in the execution of a note and mortgage for $2,310, ujxm the land to one Keeling; that on the ‘25th day of March, 1897, Keeling sold the land under the power of sale in his mortgage, to Kreth, who sold the land to the Gaffords.

It cannot be doubted that if the mortgage to Keeling was given wholly as security for a debt of the complainant’s husband, it is void as contravening the express inhibition of the statute. — Code, § 2529; Richardson v. Stephens, 122 Ala. 301; Price v. Cooper, 123 Ala. 392. And the burden of proving this affirmative issue, as [504]*504tendered by tbe allegation of tbe bill is upon tbe complainant. Has she done so? There is no dispute but that the land attempted to be conveyed by the mortgage was her property. It is also without dispute that this was all the property she owned and that her husband was insolvent and owned no property. It was further without dispute that the mortgage to Keeling was given to satisfy and discharge a former mortgage executed by the complainant and her husband to Kreth on the 20th day of June, 1891, and which had been transferred by Kreth, to him for a valuable consideration paid. The loan made by Kreth was negotiated by one Adams as the • agent of the complainant. Adams was applied to and employed by the husband of the complainant as her agent. The mortgage to Kreth shows upon its face to be rnad'e to secure a debt due to him by the complainant as principal, and not as security for her husband. The execution of this mortgage is admitted by the complainant, both in her pleadings and testimony. She swears, however, that the debt secured by it was. the debt of her husband, and this she knew because she owed nothing on her property; that she paid Dupuy $2,500» for it which she derived from a sale of her property on the South Highlands; that she knew that the $2,000 secured by this mortgage was used by her husband to pay his debts; that she received no benefit from it and that it was borrowed for the purpose of paying his debts. This is in substance all of her testimony on direct examination. Her husband swears that the $2,000 was borrowed for himself and used by him in his business; that his wife executed the mortgage as his security; that she did not authorize him or anyone else to borrow the money for her; that the Keeling mortgage was to take up the Kreth mortgage; that his wife got the money which she paid for this property from a sale she made of other property. This, in substance, is all of his testimony upon direct examination. It is, in fact, all the testimony upon which complainant relies to establish that the debt was the debt of her husband and not hers. It Is needless to say that they are both interested in the result of this suit and that their testimony must be [505]*505■weighed in the light of that interest. One would suppose from this testimony that all the complainant did or had to do with the transaction was to execute the note- and mortgage at the request of her husband; yet, the evidence discloses that Kreth drew his check for the $2,000 on the American National Bank, payable to the-order of the complainant and her husband and delivered, it to Adams, the agent who negotiated the loan for her. That Adams delivered this check to her and her husband, which they indorsed, and that she and her husband went to the bank and drew the money on it.

But this is not all. One would also -conclude from this-testimony that the complainant paid the cash to Dupuy when she purchased the property of him, and yet, the record discloses that she gave to him a mortgage upon it to secure two notes, one for $500, payable September 1, 1S86, and the other for $1,250, May 13, 1886; the date of' this mortgage being the same as that of the date of the-deed of Dupuy to her, to-wit, May 13, 1886. This mortgage, was satisfied of record on the 20th of June, 1886. How it was paid, we are not informed 'by either of theseAVitnesses. But the inference is irresistible that the larger portion of the debt secured by it was paid out- of' the proceeds of a check drawn by M. C. Thomas on the First National Bank of Birmingham to the order of the complainant, of date May 13, 1886, indorsed by her- and paid by the bank on the 14th, and this may, in a measure, account for the mortgage given by the complainant to Thomas on -this property for $2,000, of date February 15,, 1890, and which remained unsatisfied of record until June, 25, 1898; and also account for the check given by him payable to her order for $762.75, of date February 15, 1890', and indorsed “Mrs. Bertha Speaker, per A. Speaker,” all of which the complainant professed to kn-OAV so little about. In addition to-the recitals in the Kreth mortgage.showing the debt it was made to secure Avas the debt of the complainant, there -are also recitals in the mortgage to Keeling showing, at least, that the debt secured by it was a joint debt of hers and her husband, and in the lease contract which: she made with Kreth, after his-'purchase at the mortgage-[506]*506sale, for flic rental of this property, she recognized bis title to it, and of necessity the validity of the Keeling mortgage. The recitals in these instruments, the execution of which is not denied ¡by her, made at a time when the transactions to which they relate were being had — admissions solemnly made in writing, recognizing the validity of the mortgages executed by her — tend strongly to show that the debt secured by the mortgages was hers, not that of her husband, and are certainly confirmatory of the acts of her husband and Adams, who acted for her in negotiating and procuring the loan from Kreth.

In treating of the subsequent acts and conduct of the complainant and in giving force to them as evidential facts, we do not -do so upon any assumption that she is bound by them on the principle of ratification by her of having become the surety for her husband. For if it be true that the debt was not hers, but her husband’s, the mortgage securing it being absolutely void, she could not be held to a ratification of it. — Pettit’s Admr. v. Pettit’s Distributees, 32 Ala. 288; Butler v. Lec, 11 Ala. 855; Shipley et al. v. Eastwood, 9 Ala. 198; Swann v. Miller, 82 Ala. 530. But her acts and conduct subsequent to the execution of the mortgage assailed as invalid, if inconsistent with her testimony impeaching the validity of them on the ground that they were made to secure her husband’s debt, may be properly considered for the purpose of determining what credit or weight, if any, should be given her testimony. And this observation is also applicable to the testimony of her husband.

From June, 1891, to 'May, 1896, nearly five years, the complainant, without complaint,- without a protest, and with full knowledge of its existence, permitted Kreth to hold and own a mortgage upon her property, and in May, 1896, executed the Keeling mortgage in renewal and discharge of the Kreth mortgage, which she permitted to remain as an ostensible incumbrance upon her homestead; and more, sbe permitted, without a word of objection, ber land to be sold'at public sale and to be bought by Kreth, and then to become bis tenant for six-[507]

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Bluebook (online)
125 Ala. 498, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gafford-v-speaker-ala-1899.