Hook v. First Nat. Bank of Reform

89 So. 466, 206 Ala. 321, 1921 Ala. LEXIS 75
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJune 30, 1921
Docket2 Div. 765, 765A.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 89 So. 466 (Hook v. First Nat. Bank of Reform) 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
Hook v. First Nat. Bank of Reform, 89 So. 466, 206 Ala. 321, 1921 Ala. LEXIS 75 (Ala. 1921).

Opinion

MILLER, J.

A. J. Hook files this bill of complaint against J. J. Horton, S. G. Swain, and the First National Bank of Reform.

On the 11th day of Blay, 1920, complainant purchased certain timber in Wilcox county, Ala., from J. J. Horton and S. G. Swain for the sum of $5,000 cash, and notes and mortgage on said timber for $37,500, and $5,000 note and mortgage on property in the state of Kentucky, making total consideration for the timber $47,500. That Horton and Swain and the wife of each executed to complainant a warranty deed to the timber, and covenanted therein that the title was good and it was free from incumbrance; and they represented and stated at the time he bought the timber that the title thereto was good. The bill alleges that the $5,000 Kentucky mortgage also secured $3,000 note given Horton and Swain. This $3,000 note was given and included in the mortgage for any money advances they might make him under a contract under which they agreed to advance him $10 per thousand feet board measure on all well-manufactured pine lumber out of timber, and stacked on the millyard near Camden, Ala.

This contract or copy of it is attached to the bill. It was executed July 24, 1920. The complainant avers it was breached by said Swain and Horton, that they failed and refused to make further advances, “basing said refusal on the claim that the complainant had sold a car of the lumber on which said respondents had a lien to secure said advances.” Complainant avers that in fact he did sell a ear of said lumber, because it was necessary for him to do so in order to obtain the money to pay laborers, for which they had a lien for cutting and hauling timber, but avers that said action on his part was not a bréach of the contract, and, if it was, it did not authorize Horton and Swain to rescind the contract; that he was damaged thereby in loss of profits and equipment, and asks the court to fix the amount of his damages, and that he is entitled to have his said $3,000 security given them therefor canceled; that his damages will fully pay the same.

The bill also avers that the First National Bank of Reform claims that said Horton and Swain, on March 23, 1920, made and executed a mortgage on said timber to H. H. Blobley and A. J. Godfrey to secure $20,000, evidenced by five promissory notes for $4,000 each, and that this mortgage was filed for record in the probate office of Wilcox county, Ala., on BIay-5,1920; that the respondent First National Bank of Reform claims to own said notes and mortgage by transfer and assignment. This mortgage was being foreclosed by the bank; a temporary injunction was requested and granted, restraining said bank from foreclosing this mortgage. Complainant avers that he does not know whether said mortgagees paid or unpaid; if unpaid what amount is justly due; that it secures a reasonable attorney’s fee, and that amount is uncertain; that if the mortgage is unpaid,' and a valid charge on the property, said J. J. Horton and S. G. Swain, or one of them, practiced a fraud upon him when they, or one of them, represented and stated to him that the title was good; that he desires to rescind, and does rescind, said contract of purchase of said timber for fraud, and is entitled to have the cash paid them returned to him, and the said notes and mortgage given- by him securing the balance of the purchase money surrendered up to him and canceled, and “if the said Swain and Horton have assigned or otherwise disposed of said notes and mortgages, or any of them, .that he is entitled to recover from them such amount as will enable him to pay off the same”; and, if “he is not entitled to a cancellation and surrender of said notes and mortgages, and a return of the $5,000 paid by him, that he is entitled to recover the damages to which he may be entitled, which, he avers, is the amount of the consideration paid, viz. $47,500, with interest thereon, * * * for a breach of their said warranty contained in the deed.”

The complainant makes no clear and un *324 conditional offer to pay the debt of the mortgage held by the said Bank of Reform. In section 6 of the bill on this subject is the following:

“He avers that if he is not entitled to a rescission of said transaction with said Swain and Horton, and a cancellation of the notes and mortgages given to secure the unpaid purchase money, and a restoration to him of the cash paid, and is not entitled to damages for the breach of said warranty, he is entitled to redeem said property from the holder and owner of the mortgage oil which Exhibit D is a copy, and in such event he hereby offers to redeem said property from said mortgage, such offer being made, however, only in the event that he is not entitled to a rescission as hereinabove averred or to damages for the said breach of warranty as hereinabove averred.”

The court dissolved the temporary injunction on motion of respondent First National Bank, of Reform, and sustained the bank’s demurrer to the bill. These two decrees of the court are assigned as error by complainant. The court overruled the demurrers of Swain and Horton to the bill and to certain parts of the bill, and this is assigned ds error by them.

[1] The complainant could not be, under the averments of the bill, a bona fide purchaser for value of the standing timber without notice of the mortgage held by the bank. The mortgage claimed by the bank, given by J. J. Horton and S. G. Swain to H. H. Mobley and A. J. Godfrey, bears date-March 23, 1920 — a copy is attached to' the bill as an exhibit. It was filed and recorded, as shown by its indorsement, in , the probate office of Wilcox county, Ala., on May 5; 1920. The deed to this timber to complainant was executed by Horton and Swain on May 11, 1920. This was five days after the foregoing mortgage was filed and recorded. The filing and recording of the mortgage in the proper office operated as notice of the contents. Section 3373, Code 1907.

[2] There must be allegation and proof to get relief. They must correspond. Both must be sufficient. Both are necessary. Am. F. L. Mtg. Co. v. Sewell, 92 Ala. 163, 9 South. 143, 13 L. R. A. 299. Does this bill allege facts clearly and concisely and unconditionally? We think it does not. The bill neither admits nor denies the debt or validity of the bank mortgage. It neither admits nor denies that the bank owns the mortgage and debt. It neither admits nor denies that the mortgage is a subsisting lien on the timber. It avers that it does not know whether said mortgage is now unpaid or -not. It avers that the bank claims the mortgage as owner; that the bank “claims it is a valid charge upon said property.”

[3, 4] The mortgage described as claimed by the bank must secure a valid debt, and be a prior valid lien on the property sold and conveyed to the complainant before there could be a breach of the covenant of warranty that the title was good and free from incumbrances. The burden is on the complainant to make these allegations aver these facts, and the bill fails to do so unconditionally. The bill does not aver that the bank mortgage is paid or unpaid. It makes no unconditional offer to redeem or pay the mortgage debt.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Wittmeir v. Leonard
122 So. 330 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1929)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
89 So. 466, 206 Ala. 321, 1921 Ala. LEXIS 75, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hook-v-first-nat-bank-of-reform-ala-1921.