Lehman, Durr & Co. v. Van Winkle & Co.

92 Ala. 443
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedNovember 15, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 92 Ala. 443 (Lehman, Durr & Co. v. Van Winkle & Co.) 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
Lehman, Durr & Co. v. Van Winkle & Co., 92 Ala. 443 (Ala. 1890).

Opinion

McOLELLAN, J.

The original contract between E. Van Winkle & Oo. and Belser & Parker did not provide for the reservation by the former of the title to the machinery supplied to the latter. Neither did it involve the extension of the times of payment thereunder beyond the period within which ■suit would have had to be instituted for the effectuation of the lien of material-men. Van Winkle & Co., therefore, so long as ■this continued to be the contract of the parties, were in a position, upon the deliveiy and erection of the machinery and the consequent accrual of their debt, to perfect their lien as material-men by taking the statutory steps to that end. This right, however, they lost when, on December 11, 1885, new, or modified, contract was entered into, which extended the time of payment of one or more of the notes for the purchase-money beyond the latest date at which suit could be brought to enforce the lien (Lane v. Jones, 79 Ala. 156); and which in terms reserved the title to them — the retention of title being inconsistent with the theory of a lien, since it is not conceivable that one may have a lien upon property which absolutely belongs to him. The mortgage -of December 4, 1885, by Belser & Parker to Lehman, Durr & Oo. covered this machinery as well as most of the mortgagor’s other property; and while it was secondary to complainant’s inchoate lien, and could have been postponed in its operation upon the machinery and the lot of land upon which the same had been, or was being erected, to the satisfaction of that lien, had it been perfected instead of being waived and abandoned by the novated contract of December 11, it was superior to any right complainants acquired by the subsequent reservation of title to themselves. In other words, the mortgage took immediate effect upon the machinery, subject only to the inchoate lien, and that being displaced and lost, it at once operated upon this property without obstruction. It is not to be supposed that VanWinkle & Oo. would have so changed their original contract as to have divested themselves of all right to charge the property with the payment of the purchase-money, had they known that to be the effect of the contract of December 11,1885, and that Belser & Parker were insolvent. The mortgage of December 4, 1885, would have apprised them both of the impotency of the new [447]*447contract to charge the property, and of the fact of the insolvency of their debtors, and consequent worthlessness of their personal claim against Belser & Parker. The bill alleges that the novation, involving, when taken in connection with the mortgage, and on the assumption of its validity, such disastrous results to complainants, would not have been entered into by them had they been advised of the existence of the mortgage. They say, therefore, thatJ the concealment, as they allege, of the mortgage was a fiaud upon them, in that thereby they have been drawn into this vital and detrimental change of their contractual relations towards Belser & Parker, and towards the property involved therein ; and they file this bill, not to enforce a lien, for on the facts alleged they have no lien, but to have the mortgage declared void, as to them, and the property embraced in it, or the proceeds of such of it as has been sold by Lehman, Durr & Co., subjected to the payment of their claim, which, as now presented, constitutes them simple contract creditors of the mortgagors. The demurrers, from the overruling of which this appeal is prosecuted, present only two points, which are discussed in the arguments of counsel, or which need be adjudged here.

The first objection to the bill is, that its averments do not show that Belser & Parker owe any debt to complainants, for that, it is insisted, under the novated contract of December 11, they had an election between two inconsistent rights, the pursuit of either of which would defeat the other; that these rights were, on the one hand, to enforce their money claim against Belser & Parker as a debt, which would operate the confirmation of title to the property in them, and, upon the other, to in-oceed for the recovery of the property in specie under the clause in the notes which reserved the title to complainants, Avhich Avould operate to extinguish the debt; and that the complainants have elected to proceed in detinue for the property itself, instituting suit to that end against Belser & Parker in the fall of the year 1886, as shoAvn by the bill. If this were all that appears by the bill bearing on the point, it may be admitted, for the purposes, of this case, though we expressly refrain from deciding the point, that the debt was-thereby extinguished, and, of consequence, the complainants-now have no standing in the Chancery Court.—Dowdell v. Empire Co., 84 Ala. 317.

But it- is not all. On the contrary, the bill explicitly avers that Yan Winkle & Co., some time in the Spring of 1886, commenced an action of assumpsit on the notes against Belser & Parker and Lehman, Durr & Co., for the purpose of enforcing a contractor’s lien to the amount of the notes then due, but [448]*448shortly afterwards dismissed the suit, on advice thai no lien existed. Here, in our opinion, was an unequivocal election to treat the property as that of Belser & Parker, subject to alien, the existence of which was, as we have said, wholly inconsistent with the retention of title in the vendors, and to rely solely ■upon the money obligations the vendees had taken upon themselves. The election, moreover, was made, according to these averments, when every existing fact which could have militated against the course complainants chose to pursue must have been known to them. It was, therefore, binding upon them, and determined all right they theretofore had to treat the transaction as a conditional sale and reclaim the property upon condition broken.—6 Amer. & Eng. Encyc. of Law, pp. 250, 254; Bigelow on Estoppel, pp. 29, 673, 674. A subsequent attempt to pursue the inconsistent right may be defeated by the fact of the former election; but such attempt could not, of course, have the effect of emasculating the right made absolute by the first, and only efficacious, election. The bill shows, we therefore conclude, the existence of a debt due from Belser A Parker to complainants, which could be enforced against them and against property fraudulently conveyed by them.

This brings us to the second objection taken by the demurrers to the biü, that it fails to show that the mortgage to Lehman, Durr & Oo. was fraudulent as to the complainants, and as against the debt they now seek to enforce against the property covered by it. The averments of the bill as to the facts relied on to taint the mortgage with fraud are, that on December 4, 1885, Belser & Parker “found themselves' largely indebted without cash to pay. Among their general indebtedness there was a large sum, the exact amount of which is unknown to orators, due Lehman, Durr & Co. for money previously advanced without security;” and in order to meet demands then pressing upon them, and to provide means of inaugurating their different business undertakings the coming year, they “needed a large amount of ready money, which they sought to borrow from Lehman, Durr & Co. Lehman, Durr A Co., knowing of their insolvent pecuniary condition, and desiring to get the large bal anee already due them, offered to advance the desired sum upon a mortgage being made by Belser A Parker. Belser A Parker declined to execute such a mortgage, for the specific reason that it icould affect their credit and standing as merchants, of which they' informed said Lehman, Durr A Co.

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Bluebook (online)
92 Ala. 443, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lehman-durr-co-v-van-winkle-co-ala-1890.