Mohr v. Griffin

137 Ala. 456
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedNovember 15, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 137 Ala. 456 (Mohr v. Griffin) 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
Mohr v. Griffin, 137 Ala. 456 (Ala. 1902).

Opinion

ITAKALSON, J.

The facts of the case are substantially, that prior to' the 1st day of April, 1899, the 'Complainant, Ada J. Griffin, a married woman, the wife of J. E. Griffin, owned and possessed 610 acres of land described in the bill, lying in Bullock county, on which she and her husband resided; that the complainant purchased the lands from her father, J. E. Hightower, in October, 1897, and he made her a deed thereto, but there remained due and owing to’ said Hightower on the pur[459]*459chase money for said land, the sum of $803.07, to secure AAdiich she had promised to give him a mortgage on the lands. Mrs. Griffin had borroAved $1,600, — a part of the money with Avhich. to pay her father for the lands,— from the American Freehold Mortgage Company of London, and also the sum of $128 from the Land Company of Alabama, to secure AA’hich, she- and her husband liad executed mortgages on said lands to said companies respectively, AA’hich sums, together AAdth the $803.07, aggregated $2,537.07 she OAved on the lands besides wha,t interest there may liaA’e' accumulated. J. E. Griffin, the husband of complainant, had been cultivating these lands under lease from his Avife, for several years prior to 1898, and OAvned the stock and personal property Avith Avhich he did the farming. He procured advances to make the crops in, these years from the defendant, M. Mohr, of Montgomery, and to secure him therefor, mortgaged 'to him from year to year the crops to he groAA’n on the lands, and all his, personal property, including the mule-s and horses, etc., Avith AAdiich he ran the farm. On the 1st of April, 1898, the debts AAdiich said J. E. Griffin owed the defendant on these several mortgages, amounted to about $1,445. Defendant had refused to make further advances. Griffin Avas anxious and concerned to- he put in position by AAdiich he could secure.' advances, and HightoAver was concerned to collect his $803.07, due him on the land, or to have it secured. They came to Montgomery to see defendant, and as a result of a conference between, them, according to defendant’s viMon of it, AAdiich thei evidence, tends to support, defendant stated that he was willing to pay the debt Mrs. Griffin owed’ HightoAver on the land, and sell and transfer to her the debts h:e held against her husband, J. E. Griffin, secured by the mortgages referred to, amounting to about $1,445, AAdiich, with "the $803.07 she OAved to Hightower, aggregated $2,248.07, if Mrs. Griffin Avould execute to him a mortgage on her said lands to secure the payment of said sum. Whether defendant or said HightoAver and Griffin proposed this arrangeuienit does not certainly appear, hut it can make no difference Aldrich, as it Avas no more than- preliminary negotiations for an arrangement to he carried out in the future, if [460]*460consented to. Some month or six weeks after this conference, and on the 1 April, 1898, J. E. Griffin and his wife, the complainant, came to Montgomery to siee the defendant, Avith the view of carrying said proposed arrangement into effect. After their arrival, they conferred Avith defendant, and as a result, they repaired with him to the office of the attorneys of defendant, to which place also the attorney of Griffin, with whom Griffin had already' conferred, was invited. The most of the business day was spent at this office in talking over the proposed arrangement, and in the preparation of the several papers that Avero executed on the occasion, carrying into effect the agreement that was reached. The first paper was a mortgage, by Mrs. Griffin, joined in by her husband, on said lands to secure a note by her and her husband, of the samé date, for $2,248.07, payable on the 1 April, 3 903, with five interest notes for the interest for each year payable, respectively, on the 1 April each year thereafter, the last note, for $60, being payable on 1 April, 3 903. The mortgage recited that the indebtedness Avas from complainant, Mrs. Griffin, to defendant, loaned to her by him. It provided that on default in payment of the interest as it became due on said notes, at the option of the defendant, the mortgagee, the Avholr sum of money secured should become due and payable and the mortgage liable to foreclosure: It also recited, that it Avas given subject to 'the prior mortgage of said two loan companies. Tbe second Avas a paper, by which it Avas arranged, that if the mortgage Avas not paid at maturity, it might on conditions mentioned ¡therein be extended for another five years, making it ten years in Avliich Mrs. Griffin might, if needed, and conditions Avere complied Avith, he indulged by defendant, in the payment of her said mortgage debt and interest. This contract was signed by the complainant and the defendant, by' and Avith the consent of J. E. Griffin, the husband of complainant.

There was, at the same time, executed by the complainant and the defendant, with the Avritten consent of complainant’s husband indorsed thereon, another agreement, reciting the execution and delivery by complai'n[461]*461ant to defendant, of said mortgage, the object of which;' as it appears on its face, was to put- in written form, and not to leave it open for dispute, what was the real ..on-, si deration on which said mortgage, and the’contract between the parties in reference to ithei same had been executed. It appears, as plainly as it had been written out on the face of the1 paper itself, what the real purpose and agreement between the parties were, so as to preclude any dispute in reference thereto, such as we have before us now. The paper recited: “It is understood and agreed between the said Ada J. Griffin and Michael Mohr, that the said consideration [of the mortgage] is 'composed as follows: Eight hundred and eight dollars and 3-100 ($808.03) which was advanced in cash this day by the said Michael Mohr to the said Ada J. Griffin, for the purpose of paying the same to J. E. Hightower, in payment of the balance due him by the said Ada J. Griffin, as purchase money for the lands so mortgaged by the said Ada J. Griffin to the said Michael Mohr; fourteen hundred and forty and -1-100 dollars ($1,440.04) for the purchase by the said Ada J. Griffin from the said Michael Mohr of certain indebtedness, amounting to said sum, due to the said Michael Mohr by the said J. E. Griffin, which said indebtedness is secured by certain mortr gages on the property of J. E. Griffin. The claim held by the said Mohr against the said J. E. Griffin, has! this day been transferred to the said Ada.-J. Griffin, and the said sum of fourteen hundred and forty and 4-100 dollars ($1,440.04) is the amount agreed to be paid by her in payment, of said transfer.”

As if this were not enough to foreclose all dispute as to the transaction, a. receipt was, at the same time, executed by complainant to defendant acknowledging the delivery to her by defendant of seven different mortgages by J. E. Griffin: to defendant, in different amounts, the first for the year 1894 for $600, and the last, dated January 5, 1897, and payable on the 1st of September, 1897, for $1,445, together with the notes mentioned in each mortgage, which receipt stated: “All of said papers have this day been sold and transferred to me by the said M. Mohr, and which were held by him'to secure an' indebtedness due by the said J. E. Griffin to Mm, [462]*462amounting to the sum ot‘ $1,440.04, which said indebtedness has been sold and transferred ¡to me this day by the said M. Mohr, together with the above described papers.”

Mr. Weil, the, attorney who.

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Bluebook (online)
137 Ala. 456, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mohr-v-griffin-ala-1902.