Parrish v. Parrish

61 So. 2d 130, 258 Ala. 13, 1952 Ala. LEXIS 48
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedOctober 23, 1952
Docket5 Div. 527
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 61 So. 2d 130 (Parrish v. Parrish) 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
Parrish v. Parrish, 61 So. 2d 130, 258 Ala. 13, 1952 Ala. LEXIS 48 (Ala. 1952).

Opinion

LAWSON, Justice.

This is a bill in equity filed by Jim Parrish and his wife, Mrs. Pearl Parrish, against Dr. W. L. Parrish and seeks to have a deed1 which they executed to him declared to be a mortgage and that they be allowed to redeem the land in an exercise of the equity of redemption.

The trial court found that there was no mutual agreement expressed or implied that •the deed should operate as a mortgage and, therefore, denied relief and dismissed the bill. This appeal is from that decree.

The suit property was purchased by Jim Parrish in September, 1929, for $3,650. It consists of ninety-five acres situated about three miles northeast of Clanton on the Lay Dani road. Approximately fifty-five acres of the tract is suited for. cultivation. Jim Parrish, his wife, and two sons moved on the property in' March of 1930.

On June 12, 1934, Jim Parrish and wife, Mrs. Pearl Parrish, executed two mortgages on the suit property. One was to the Federal Land Bank of New Orleans in the sum of $1,300. The other was to the Land Bank Commissioner, acting on behalf of the Federal Farm Mortgage Corporation, in the amount of $1,000. Jim Parrish got behind in his payments on the loans secured by the mortgages. Foreclosure notices were-published in 1937. In the fall of that year he endeavored to sell some of the property in order to pay off the mortgage indebtedness. He tried to secure further loans. He was unsuccessful in both respects. Among those he approached relative to the purchase of a part of the tract was the respondent in this case, Dr W. L.. Parrish, a veterinarian and a first cousin of Jim Parrish. After considering the proposal, Dr. Parrish declined to buy a part of the land.

In the spring of 1938 foreclosure was. still imminent and again Jim Parrish approached his cousin, Dr. Parrish. As a result of negotiations between them, a warranty deed was executed on March 28, 1938, by Jim Parrish and wife, Pearl, conveying-the entire tract of ninety-five acres to Dr. Parrish for a recited consideration of $300..

It is this deed which complainants seek to have declared to be a mortgage. Perhaps-it is well to note at this time that the bill in this case was filed November 1, 1939. After demurrer was overruled, the respondent answered on April 17, 1941. The taking of testimony was not begun until around February 6, 1950, and the decree was rendered on August 24, 1951..

[15]*15No money was actually delivered to the grantors. It seems that the sum expressed in the deed as the consideration therefor was the approximate amount needed to pay principal and interest then due on the mortgage indebtedness. On, to wit, April 6, 1938, Dr. Parrish gave his check in the sum of $310, made payable to' Mr. and Mrs. Jim Parrish and the Federal Land Bank. It seems to be admitted that the proceeds of this check were paid on the debts secured by the mortgages.

There is a dispute in the evidence as to the' agreement between Jim Parrish and Dr. Parrish and their conversation leading to the execution of the deed. But at the close of the taking of testimony an agreement was entered into, which in pertinent part reads as follows:

“It is stipulated and agreed by and between the parties and this stipulation to be used and considered as testimony in this cause along with all other testimony that at the time the conveyance in this case was executed Dr. W. L. Parrish had agreed to assume and pay and did assume the indebtedness of the Land Bank Commissioner loan' and the Federal Land Bank mortgage already introduced in this cause, .and has paid the Land Bank, Commissioner mortgage, which mortgage was delivered to Dr. W. L. Parrish, upon payment of the same, by the Land Bank Commissioner and which mortgage has been introduced as evidence in this cause and said mortgage was never delivered to Jim Parrish. And that neither of said mortgages had been paid in full to the. Federal Land Bank or to the Land Bank Commissioner before the suit in this cause was filed, and that Dr. Parrish did not receive possession of either of the two mortgages until after the suit was filed.”

Jim Parrish was a man of fair education and business experience and his testimony, the language used and his grasp of the questions involved indicate that he was a man of considerable intelligence. As before shown, Dr. W. L. Parrish is a veterinarian and perhaps the better educated and more successful of the two men. They had been friends since childhood and are approximately the same age.

Jim Parrish testified that after Dr. Parrish refused to buy a part of the land he asked him for a loan of $300 to make the payments then due on his indebtedness secured by the two mortgages; that sometime later Dr. Parrish told him he had delivered a check in the sum of $300 to the agent of the Federal Land Bank in payment of the amount due and for him to go to an attorney and “make the papers”; that on the same day he and his wife went to. the office of the attorney suggested by Dr. Parrish and there they both executed an instrument which he thought was a mortgage,' although no note was executed; that he did not tell the attorney to prepare a mortgage, but did tell him to “prepare papers for Dr. Parrish to secure the $300.”

Mrs. Pearl Parrish did not participate in the negotiations which led up to the execution of the deed. As to what transpired at the time the deed was executed, her testimony is to the effect that on entering the attorney’s office her husband said, “We came to sign papers for Dr. Parrish”; that she thought it was a note; that after her husband had signed the instrument and left the room she read the instrument, at the. request of the attorney, and stated to him that she was signing it voluntarily; that she thought the attorney liad included a clause in the instrument giving the grantors a two-year period in which to redeem the property.

The respondent, Dr. W. L. Parrish, testified that Jim Parrish had sought to sell him a part of the property, but he had declined to purchase it; that thereafter Jim Parrish approached him and asked if he would be interested in purchasing the entire place by assuming the mortgage indebtedness and permitting Jim Parrish to remain on the property until the fall of 1938, when he could gather his crop; that he then told Jim Parrish to,go to the attorney and have the deed prepared and that he would assume the mortgage indebtedness and permit Jim Parrish to remain on the property until the fall of 1938; that at the [16]*16time the deed was executed, at Jim Parrish’s request, he agreed to reconvey the property to Jim Parrish if in the fall of 1938 the latter had repaid all that Dr. Parrish had expended by that time. This witness denied emphatically that in any of the negotiations leading up to the execution of' the instrument he had agreed to make a loan in the sum of $300 or in any other amount.

The attorney who drew the deed testified on behalf of the respondent. A number of years had intervened since the deed was executed and the time his testimony was taken. But it was his recollection of the transaction that Jim Parrish and his wife came to his office and asked him to draw a deed conveying the suit property to Dr. Parrish; that no mention was made of a mortgage or that the grantors would have a right to redeem; that Jim Parrish stated in effect that since he was unable to make the payments due on his indebtedness and the mortgages securing that indebtedness were about to be foreclosed, he wanted Dr. Parrish to have the property by assuming' the mortgage indebtedness, inasmuch as he did not think Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
61 So. 2d 130, 258 Ala. 13, 1952 Ala. LEXIS 48, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parrish-v-parrish-ala-1952.