Head v. Sellers

37 So. 2d 664, 251 Ala. 453, 1948 Ala. LEXIS 775
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedNovember 12, 1948
Docket6 Div. 597.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 37 So. 2d 664 (Head v. Sellers) 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
Head v. Sellers, 37 So. 2d 664, 251 Ala. 453, 1948 Ala. LEXIS 775 (Ala. 1948).

Opinion

SIMPSON, Justice.

The main question on this appeal is whether the plea in abatement — Plea A — set up sufficient facts to show that the bill of complaint was prematurely filed seeking the foreclosure of a pledge of certain personal property as security for the two unpaid notes set out in the bill. The trial court held that the plea was sufficient and was proven, and made a decree abating the suit, from which plaintiff has appealed to this court.

Those two notes were the last of a series executed by appellee to appellant representing the balance of the purchase price of thirteen shares of stock of the Baggett Transportation Company, a corporation. They were due respectively on or. before January 2, 1946, and January 2, 1947.

The bill was filed February 8, 1946, alleging that the maturity of said notes was accelerated and that they actually matured before the dates named for maturity because of a contemporaneous contract executed between the parties, whereby appellant sold appellee said stock, which provided, as security for payment, (a) that appellee, the maker of the notes, pledged to promptly apply on their payment sixty per cent of the net income received 'by him from a partnership between himself and J. D. Baggett, which had a school book contract with the State of Alabama; and (b) that, as and when received, seventy-five per cent of all dividends paid on said stock (thirteen shares bought by him from appellant, also pledged as security) at any time prior to the date said debt was paid in full should be applied to the payment of the notes evidencing the debt; and (c) that all salaries paid him by the corporation-before the debt is paid in full in excess of-$60 per week should be considered and treated as dividends, seventy-five per cent of which should be applied in payment of said indebtedness. Said money, in each case, was t-o be applied to the next matur-. ing note (See Section 3 of contract).

The bill then alleges that prior to January 2, 1946, appellee had received large sums from all three of those sources which should have been applied to the payment of the debt, but which were not so applied; that if said money had -been so applied, it would have fully paid the notes prior to January 2, 1946, and (by an amendment) prior to the time when a tax liability was asserted against the said corporation by the Commissioner of Internal Revenue April 19, 1945. The notes contain an acceleration clause that upon default in the pay *457 ment of one of said notes all notes remaining unpaid shall become immediately due .and payable as of the date of the first default to occur.

The defense to abate the suit is founded on rights claimed under Section 4 of the contract, which provided that if certain unknown and contingent liabilities against the company should later arise, Head, the vendor of the stock, should be required to make certain credits on the notes. Section 4 is:

“(4) It is understood that the purchaser has paid and agreed to pay the above sums, [the amounts represented by the stock purchase notes] for said stock, relying upon the books of the Company as to the present condition of the company. It is expressly agreed that in the event liability for taxes of any kind (including income taxes) not now known by the Purchaser to exist, and not now shown by the books of the Company as a liability, shall later be assessed and paid and in the event liability for violation of any law (including the Federal Motor Carrier Act, 1935, as amended [49 U.S.C.A. § 301 et seq.]) shall be imposed or asserted by any Federal agency or by any Court on the complaint of any Federal agency (including the Interstate Commerce Commission) or by anyone else claiming under such a law, and said liability shall be paid by the Company, either under order of Court or by compromise, then and in that event Beverly P. Plead, Jr., shall credit on the next maturing note held by him thirteen-fortieths (13/40ths) of such additional liability so imposed on the company and paid by it. In the event, however, said notes have been paid in full prior to the discovery of such additional liability, the Vendor shall be under no obligation to make good the same.

“In the event the amount to be credited hereunder shall exceed the balance then remaining unpaid on said notes, there shall be no obligation on the part of the Vendor to pay such excess.”

Appellant advances first the proposition that dividends on pledged stock during the pendency of the pledge belong to the pledgee and that the pledgor holds the same as trustee for the pledgee and subject to the pledgee’s lien which may be enforced in equity, and cites First National Bank of Anniston v. Wellborn, 237 Ala. 183, 186 So. 549, 550; Garvy v. Blatchford Calf Meal Co., 7 Cir., 119 F.2d 973, 975 ; 41 Am.Jur. 608, § 34; Peoples-Pittsburg Trust Co. v. Saupp, 320 Pa. 138, 182 A. 376, 103 A.L.R. 849; 67 A.L.R. 485; National Bank of Commerce v. Equitable Trust Co., 8 Cir., 227 F. 526, certiorari denied, 239 U.S. 648, 36 S.Ct. 221, 60 L.Ed. 485; Jones on Collateral Securities >and Pledges (3d Ed.), § 398. But this principle could have but limited, if any, application to the situa-i tion here presented. The relationship of the respective parties with regard to the dividends rests not upon the general rule of law, but is fixed by the contract. It is on the contract that appellant bases his right, and just what that right 'is is determinable by a proper construction of the contract.

The major contention of the appellant, the theory upon which he proceeds ,for relief, is that he is entitled to the benefits of the equitable maxim that equity regards that as done which ought to be done. It is his insistence that since the appellee, by the contract, obligated himself to apply the dividends from the sources indicated, in the proportions stipulated, to the payment of his notes, and since he did receive dividends in substantial amounts which should have been paid over to appellant, as and when received, but failed to so pay them, for the purpose of fixing the status of the parties equity will treat the payments that ought to have been made as actually having been made and at the times they should and could have been made. The maxim asserted by appellant has been applied by this court in a variety of situations. Some of our cases are: Copeland v. Warren, 214 Ala. 150, 107 So. 94; City Garage & Sales Co. v. Ballenger, 214 Ala. 516, 108 So. 257; Kirkland v. O’Kelley, 218 Ala. 68, 117 So. 420; Jefferson Lumber Co. v. Powers, 223 Ala. 63, 134 So. 464; Bishop v. McPherson, 232 Ala. 594, 168 So. 675; Dowling v. Sollie & Sollie, 234 Ala. 630, 176 So. 340; Winston v. Winston, 242 Ala. 45, 4 So.2d 730.

Whether the doctrine is applicable hinges, of course, upon the existence of a *458 duty, and that, in this case, is determined by the contract. As was said in Jefferson Lumber Co. v. Powers, supra, [223 Ala. 63, 134 So. 467] “the stated maxim ‘cannot be invoked to create a right contrary to the agreement of the parties, or in disregard of essential conditions for which the parties have stipulated.’ ” See, also, 19 Am.Jur. 315, § 456.

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Related

Uhlhorn v. Reid
398 S.W.2d 169 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1965)
Sellers v. Head
73 So. 2d 747 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1954)

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Bluebook (online)
37 So. 2d 664, 251 Ala. 453, 1948 Ala. LEXIS 775, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/head-v-sellers-ala-1948.