Keeble v. Jones

65 So. 384, 187 Ala. 207, 1914 Ala. LEXIS 537
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedApril 16, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 65 So. 384 (Keeble v. Jones) 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
Keeble v. Jones, 65 So. 384, 187 Ala. 207, 1914 Ala. LEXIS 537 (Ala. 1914).

Opinion

SAYRE, J.

Appellant pledged to appellee a policy of insurance on his (appellant’s) life to secure the debt of another. A little more than 20 years afterwards ap[210]*210pellant filed Ms bill to redeem, offering to pay any balance due upon tbe debt, including, as we read tbe bill, interest to date. The court below, bolding that appellant bad slept too long, sustained a demurrer. Hence this appeal.

Tbe bill avers that in 1890 tbe Keeble Company, a corporation, borrowed a sum of money from appellee, to be repaid January 1, 1891, and to secure tbe same transferred, assigned, and delivered to him certMn real and chattel mortgages, and tbe debts thereby secured, tbe aggregate value of such securities being equal to or largely in excess of tbe indebtedness secured, and in addition appellant, who was then tbe manager of tbe company, did “transfer, assign, and deliver” to appellee, “as collateral security” for tbe company’ debt a certain policy or contract of insurance upon appellant’s life. Tbe full meaning of tbe relation between tbe parties, in its inception, is to be determined upon tbe facts stated above and their necessary and reasonable implications. In 1892 appellant foreclosed some or all tbe mortgages, and credited tbe collections upon tbe Keeble Company’s debt, so that, at tbe time of tbe filing of this bill and all along, the reserve value of tbe policy greatly exceeded tbe debt due to appellant, though tbe latter be calculated with interest. Appellant is unable, however, to state tbe amount due upon tbe debt, that being a matter within tbe knowledge of appellee only, and seeks an accounting to ascertain tbe same in order that be may redeem. In tbe same year, appellant having failed to* keep up bis- annual premium payments, appellee surrendered tbe assigned policy and received in lieu a paid-up policy, payable at appellant’s death to bis personal representative. We think there can be no doubt that the substituted policy should be regarded as having been accepted and held during tbe life of tbe pledge for [211]*211the joint account of appellee and the assured, according to their respective interests, and subject to the same right- of redemption as the policy surrendered.—Dungan v. Mutual Benefit Life Insurance Co., 46 Md. 498. The policy was “assigned,” but there was no conveyance of title in the substantial form of a mortgage; that is, there was no conveyance upon condition or defeasance expressed in an instrument of conveyance. The assignment, in these circumstances, witnessed merely appellant’s special right and title as pledgee.—Cortelyou v. Lansing, 2 Caines, Cas. (N. Y.) 200; Jones on Pledges, § 9.

Pledge is a species of the generic subject of-bailment. A bailee holds a relation to his bailor analogous to that of a tenant to his landlord. The bailment lasts until the object for which it was made is accomplished, and during its life the bailee cannot deny the superior title of his bailor.—Benje v. Creagh’s Adm’r, 21 Ala. 151; Lay’s Ex’r v. Lawson’s Adm’r, 23 Ala. 377. The pledgee’s interest is a special property to retain the subject of the pledge for the security of his debt. According to the common-law authorities, his special property and precarious possession under his contract is never converted into an absolute title by the unaided effect of time. Hence there is ■ no limitation of the pledgor’s right to demand and recover the subject of the pledge on payment of the debt secured. The pledgee’s remedies against an indefinite prolongation of the relation after default have always been and are now ample in the case of a pledge of chattels, properly so called, or stocks and bonds, which are treated as mere symbols of tangible property. Always he could call upon the pledgor to redeem, where no time for redemption was fixed by contract, and he could foreclose by public sale after reasonable notice.—Jones on Pledges, § 602 et [212]*212seq. In the case of ordinary choses in action, evidences of debt, no special ground of equitable appeal intervening, he was bound to hold and collect when due.—Jones on Pledges, § 651 et seq. Now the statute provides a remedy in all cases, cumulative in some, by sale after prescribed notice.—Code, § 3301 et seq. In all cases the overplus of proceeds, after payment of the debt secured, belongs to the pledgor, and may be recovered by an action for money had and received; the statute of limitations beginning to run against such action from the time of the receipt of the money.-—Hancock v. Franklin Ins. Co., 114 Mass. 155.

While.the law of pledges falls under the head of bailment at common law rather than under any general doctrine of equity, courts of equity, have been accustomed to take cognizance of cases arising out of the collateral assignment, of securities upon acknowledged grounds of equitable jurisdiction. In that jurisdiction, for just reasons arising out of the contract 'and the status of possession created by the acts of the parties, the pledgee is considered to hold as a trustee for the joint account of himself and the pledgor.—Joliet Iron & Steel Co. v. Scioto Fire Brick Co., 82 Ill. 548, 25 Am. Rep. 341.

“The responsibilities of the pledgee to the pledgor are similar to those of a trustee, first, to collect and apply the securities at their maturity to the payment of the debt, in the case of promissory notes and bills of exchange, though sale may be made where the collateral securities are long-time negotiable bonds; and, secondly, to pay over the surplus, if any, to the pledgor. The pledgee is also likened to a trustee, as he may not deal with the trust property so as to destroy or impair its value.”-—Colebrooke, Coll. Secur. § 87.

As for the statute of limitations, the pledgee is entitled to retain possession, notwithstanding the statute [213]*213may have barred the original debt, since the statute, defeating simply the remedy upon the debt, does not operate to discharge the debt or the pledge.—Colebrooke, Coll. Secur. § 101.

When the pledgor goes into equity to redeem he is bound by the customary principles of that jurisdiction. Hence it is held that he must do equity and that the 'equitable right to redeem may be defeated by laches. In Gilmer v. Morris, 80 Ala. 79, 60 Am. Rep. 85, it is said to be the modern doctrine that “after a long lapse of time,” if no claim for redemption is made, the property will be presumed to have vested absolutely in the pledgee, becanse the pledgor has slept on his rights; and that was the theory upon which this case was decided against appellant in the court below. The judgment against the relief sought in Gilmer v. Morris, supra, so far as it was rested upon the doctrine of laches was unquestionably controlled by the special circumstance that, pending the pledgor’s quiescence of nine years, and shortly before the bill was filed, there had been an extraordinary and most impressive rise in the value of the stock pledged. Said Somerville, J., speaking his individual view of the law of the case:

“Each case must necessarily depend upon its own circumstances, having regard, not alone to the mere question of time, but also to the circumstances and relative situation of the parties, the nature of the property pledged, whether stationary or fluctuating in value, and other facts affecting the justness or equity of the right asserted.”

Stone, C. J.,

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Bluebook (online)
65 So. 384, 187 Ala. 207, 1914 Ala. LEXIS 537, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keeble-v-jones-ala-1914.