Hall v. Gordon

66 So. 493, 189 Ala. 301, 1914 Ala. LEXIS 143
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedNovember 7, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 66 So. 493 (Hall v. Gordon) 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
Hall v. Gordon, 66 So. 493, 189 Ala. 301, 1914 Ala. LEXIS 143 (Ala. 1914).

Opinion

McCLELLAN, j.

Statutory ejectment, instituted by appellee against appellant to recover premises in the town of Hayneville. If the mortgage executed by Mary R. Gordon and George P. Gordon to W. P. McGaugh was not invalid, because violative of the statute (Code, § 4497), which provides that “the wife shall not, directly or indirectly, become the surety for the husband,” then the title of the appellant, arising from or consefquent upon the foreclosure of that mortgage, should have prevailed in this cause. The burden of proof to avoid a mortgage of the wife’s property, because given to secure the payment of the husband’s debt, is upon the assailant of the instrument.—Interstate Bank v. Wesley, 178 Ala. 186, 59 South. 621; Elkins v. Bank of Henry, 180 Ala. 18, 60 South. 96.

In Hollingsworth v. Hill, 116 Ala. 184, 185, 22 South. 460, 461, it was said: “The payment by the wife of a [303]*303debt of the husband with money belonging to her separate estate is not the malting of a contract by the wife within section 349 of the Code of 1886 (section 4497 of the Code of 1907) ; but it is a disposition of personal effects of the wife, within section 348 (section 4494 of the present Code). The wife and the husband jointly may apply her money to the payment of a debt, by parol or otherwise, and it is of no consequence that the debt is that of the husband.”

See. First Nat. Bank v. Moragne, 128 Ala. 157, 161, 30 South. 106.

She may create by note, secured by mortgage of her property, her own primary obligation to pay another a sum of money, and then devote the sum so received by her to the payment of a debt of the husband; or, she may utter such promise to pay. and so secure it, and thereby and therewith pay and discharge or Imy her husband’s debt, substituting her own primary responsibility for that the husband’s creditor held, but surrendered in consequence of his (creditor’s) satisfaction, against the husband—Giddens v. Powell, 108 Ala. 621, 19 South. 21; Mohr v. Griffin, 137 Ala. 456, 34 South. 378, and other authorities therein cited; Farrow v. Cotney, 153 Ala. 550, 45 South. 69.

George E. Gordon was superintendent of education for Lowndes county. As such officer he had contracted with teachers serving public schools in that county for sums in excess of that available, for the school year, to compensate teachers engaged. This made it necessary, as he believed it, and as he was advised, for him to have funds with which to meet the excess of funds stipulated in the contracts with the teachers. As appears, his obligation was to the teachers, and that was to pay them the amounts stipulated in their contracts. The sum needed for this purpose was approximately [304]*304$800. Mrs. Gordon, fully advised, we may assume, of her husband’s stated financial necessities, and who owned in her own right the land in question, executed on July 20, 1909, to W. P. McGaugh, along with her husband, George E. Gordon, a promissory note for $750, and secured its payment, upon its maturity on November 1, 1909, with a mortgage on the property described in the complaint. The husband joined in the execution thereof. In the instrument it was provided that any excess sum left from foreclosure, after satisfying the obligation thereby secured, should be paid to Mary R. Gordon. The mortgage was subordinate to a like instrument given to the Fourth National Bank of Montgomery; and Willis Brewer, “for value received,” subordinated his superior mortgage to that thus made to W. P. McGaugh. Neither George R. Gor-' don nor Mary R. Gordon were, on July 20, 1909, when these instruments were executed to McGaugh, indebted to McGaugh in any sum. McGaugh did not then have the money to make, nor did he then make, a loan on the note and mortgage. Nor was either of them then indebted to the Bank of Hayneville. On the 13th day •of August, 1909, some 24 days after the execution and delivery of the note and mortgage to McGaugh, Mc-Gaugh assigned and transferred and delivered to the Bank of Hayneville the note and mortgage of July 20, 1909, to him, “as collateral security for the payment of my [McGaugh’s] note, bearing even date herewith and payable to the Bank of Hayneville, at Hayneville, Ala., on the 1st day of January, 1910, in the sum of $616.05.” As additional security of his note, Mc-Gaugh assigned, etc., a note and mortgage given him (McGaugh) by Carlinne W. and J. H. Higgins. The Gordon mortgage was foreclosed by the bank under the power to that end.

[305]*305It is manifest that the note and mortgage operated in no sense to create or establish for Mary B. Gordon or her property any relation of suretyship for any indebtedness then existing from George E. Gordon, the husband, to W. P. McGaugh, for the reason there was no such indebtedness due or owing by George E. Gordon to McGaugh. It is equally as manifest that the instruments signed by the wife on July 20, 1909, to McGaugh, did not have the effect to create or establish any relation of suretyship for her, or about- her property (here involved), as respected the teachers, with whom Gordon, as an officer, had contracted. And it is likewise clear that at the time the note and mortgage were executed there was no indebtedness by George E. Gordon to the Bank of Hayneville, so as to subject the status to the doctrine of Lamkin v. Lovell, 176 Ala. 331, 58 South. 258, based upon the finding of fact in that- instance that Harris was the merely agreed conduit through which, by previous understanding, the mortgage, conveying the wife’s property, passed to Knight, Yancey & Co., the husband’s creditor by previously and then existing obligation as for the husband’s indebtedness to the company. So, when the bank loaned McGaugh $616.05 on his note to it, and McGaugh assigned to the bank the instruments of July 20, 1909, the consideration, as between McGaugh and the bank, was the indebtedness of McGaugh to the bank; and there was not thereby and then brought into being any indebtedness by George E. Gordon to the bank of which his wife could have been or was related as surety. The indebtedness created on August 13, 1909, ivas an indebtedness from McGaugh to the bank. Indeed, it appears from the record Avithout basis for doubt that the bank, though so requested, Avould not make a loan to the Gordons. The loan Avas made to [306]*306McGaugh, he affording his own responsibility and another item of collateral in addition to the Gordon note and mortgage. The sum made available by this loan of the bank to McGaugh was placed to the credit of Mrs. Gordon on the books of the bank; she indorsing the check therefor made in her favor by McGaugh on the next day, August 14, 1909. The .money thus came to her; and what she permitted to' be thereafter done with it, even to its application to the satisfaction of her husband’s obligations to teachers he had engaged, could not avail to avoid the mortgage she had thus executed. She had not and did not become surety, directly or indirectly, for any debt of her husband to the teachérs, for to pay a husband’s debt is the wife’s right in the disposition of her property. There must be a debt of the husband before there can be a surety therefor.

The statute inhibits securing, by her or with her property, a primary obligation resting on the husband; but it does not forbid her incurrence of a single or joint primary obligation, to satisfy or to secure which she may pledge or incumber her separate property.

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Bluebook (online)
66 So. 493, 189 Ala. 301, 1914 Ala. LEXIS 143, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hall-v-gordon-ala-1914.