Gilmer v. Morris

80 Ala. 78
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedDecember 15, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 80 Ala. 78 (Gilmer v. Morris) 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
Gilmer v. Morris, 80 Ala. 78 (Ala. 1885).

Opinion

SOMERVILLE, J.

The view of this bill most favorable to complainant is that of one filed for the purpose of redeeming certain shares of corporate stock alleged to have been deposited with the defendant by way of pledge or collateral security; or, more accurately speaking, to hold the defendant liable for the appreciated value of the stock, upon the ground that he had sold it without authority and without any notice to the complainant, who claims to be the owner and the pledgor. It is very questionable, however, whether the allegations of the bill will bear this construction, if subjected to proper criticism, and construed with requisite strictness against the pleader. The deposit of stock is averred and proved to have been made [81]*81in the early part of the year 1871. The bill was filed on the seventh day. of July, in the year 1884, or more than thirteen years after the original deposit. There is neither averment nor satisfactory proof of any- recognition, on the defendant Morris’ part, of any existing trust relationship between himself and the complainant intermediate between the time of the original transaction and the filing of the bill. In the year 1881, the defendant sold the stock in controversy, it being then of less value than the amount of his pecuniary demands claimed to be secured by it. After that time it appreciated rapidly in value, and is shown by the evidence to have reached eight times its par value.

The bill was, on the hearing of the cause, dismissed by the chancellor' as barred by lapse of time, and the complainant brings this’appeal.

It is our opinion, after a very careful consideration of the law and facts of the case, that the bill was wanting in equity as an attempt to enforce a stale demand, and that the decree was free from error. Considering the transaction, in the first place, as a mere ordinary pledge of stock, rather than as partaking of the nature of both a pledge and a mortgage, as it may well be construed to be, we nevertheless deem the complainant’s right of redemption' to be barred by the lapse of time.

It is true that we find the rule declared in the old books, and reiterated in many adjudged cases, ancient and modern, that if no time of redemption is fixed by the parties, the pledgor has his lifetime within which to redeem, unless quickened by notice, or through the intervention of a court of equity. This principle, however, is not in harmony with the more modern, and as we consider, the sounder and better rule, which is to exact of all claimants in cases of this character, analogously to the redemption of mortgages, the exercise of reasonable diligence in the enforcement of their equitable demands, at the risk of being debarred of all relief. It may be, as often said in the text-books, that, strictly speaking, the statute of limitations does not run against a pledgor, in an ordinary case of pledge, unless there is shown to be an adverse possession by the pledgee, brought home to the knowledge or notice of the pledgor. But staleness of demand, which is a defense peculiar to courts of equity, rests on another, though no donbt analogous principle, which is to visit on one, who sleeps on his rights, the fruits of his own negligence and infirmity of purpose. 2 Story’s Eq. Jur. § 1884. The doctrine of staleness may properly be said to be founded in its origin upon a sound public policy, which has a just regard for the preservation of the peace of society. It is of the utmost moment that there [82]*82should be some end to law suits, an unreasonable encouragement of which is disastrous to the welfare of any government. Hence, reasonable diligence in the assertion of one’s rights in the courts is properly exacted, not less than the exercise of conscience and good faith.” — Nettles v. Nettles, 67 Ala. 599.

The growing importance of trade and commerce, with the increase of the means of rapid transit and speedy communication, have tended in modern times to shorten the period allowed by courts of equity beyond which a demand is considered stale on the ground of laches. The common law is no rigid system of unbending iron rules, but the elasticity of its principles is daily yielding to the growing wants of an advancing civilization. A rule of absolute repose has accordingly been adopted, in comparatively modern times, which is applicable to all human transactions open to judicial investigation, and by common consent, is fixed at a period of twenty years.— Garrett v. Garrett, 69 Ala. 429. The doctrine of staleness accommodates this rule to the equities of each particular case. If it were otherwise, the numberless mercantile and other transactions of our populous towns and cities would, in due course of time, oppress the courts with a burden of litigation which they would be incapable of enduring. No sound reason is perceived why the redemption of pledges should constitute an exception to this salutary principle. There is nothing in the relation of pledgor and pledgee which makes an invasion of the general rule, as applicable to them, either proper or desirable. And such, in our judgment, is the current of authority among the law writers, and especially the more recent ones. We accordingly find in Story on Bailments the principle asserted, that while prescription or the statute of limitations does not run against a pledgor’s right of redemption, yet that “ after a long lapse of time, if no claim for redemption is made, the right will be deemed to be extinguished, and the property will be held.to belong absolutely to the pawnee.” “Under such circumstances,” it is added, “a court of equity will decline to entertain any suit for the purpose of redemption. A like rule is adopted in the common law in cases of mortgages.” — Story on Bailments (8th ed.), § 346. So in the recent treatise of Mr. Schouler on Bailments, after asserting that modern prescription, as applicable to pledges, runs rather by lapse of years than the uncertain span of human life, and that “ time puts an absolute barrier to the pursuit of all such remedies, irrespective of the living or dead,” the author further observes: Strictly speaking, the statute of limitations does not run against a pledge; but, inasmuch as it runs against the pledgee’s enforcement of the secured debt or engagement, so will equity decline to entertain the pledgor’s bill for redemp[83]*83tion if he or his representative bring it unreasonably late; for the property will then be conclusively presumed to have vested in the pledgee.” — Schouler’s Bailments, 225. The same principle is recognized by other authorities, in language but slightly different.- — Wood on Lim. Actions, p. 54, § 22; McGlenny v. McGlenny, 49 Amer. Dec. 738; Whelan v. Whelan, 26 Ohio St. 131; Colebroke on Coll. Securities, § 132. In White Mountain R. R. Co. v. Iron Co. 50 Vt. 57, the reason for extinguishing the pledgor’s' right to redeem, in such cases, seems to have been placed on the theory that an unreasonable delay in asserting it “ raises the presumption that the pledgor has relinquished his title in satisfaction of the debt.” Another, and perhaps equally good reason is, the running of the statute of limitations against the pledgee operating to bar the enforcement of his debt against the pledgor personally. — Schouler’s Bailments, 224-225. This is upon the principle that courts of conscience favor the feature of reciprocity in its enforcement of equitable rights.

What lapse of time shall be regarded as rendering a pledgor’s right of redemption stale can not of course be formulated into any fixed rule applicable to all cases.

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Bluebook (online)
80 Ala. 78, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gilmer-v-morris-ala-1885.