Pollard v. American Freehold Land Mortgage Co. of London

139 Ala. 183
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedNovember 15, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 139 Ala. 183 (Pollard v. American Freehold Land Mortgage Co. of London) 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
Pollard v. American Freehold Land Mortgage Co. of London, 139 Ala. 183 (Ala. 1903).

Opinion

McCLELLAN, O. J.

These appeals involve a review of the action of the judge of the city court sitting as chancellor upon, exceptions to the report of the register and master made on reference to state the account between a mortgagor and a mortgagee, in possession for the purposes of redemption, or, failing that, foreclosure. [199]*199As to the amount of the original mortgage debt and as to interest charges thereon there was no dispute before the master, and the correctness of his finding and report in that regard was not questioned before the chancellor, and, of course, is not questioned here. The correctness of his finding and report as to the amount the mortgagee should be charged for rents of the lands while it, the mortgagee company, ivas in possession of them or chargeable as a mortgagee in possession, and as to the amount such mortgagee should be charged as for waste committed on the one hand, and, on the other, as to the amount the mortgagor should be charged for attorneys’ fees provided for in the mortgage, and for taxes paid on the land during such possession, was challenged by exceptions thereto, and the chancellor in passing upon those exceptions overruled such of them as went to the findings as to waste, as to attorneys’ fees and as to taxes, and sustained those which went to the master’s findings as to the rents chargeable against the mortgagee, and reduced those charges from three thousand to two thous- and dollars per annum for certain five of the years of the mortgagee’s possession, and from an average of about three thousand five hundred dollars to three thous- and dollars for each of the remaining years of such possession. As to the rents, the liability of the mortgagee is not now nor was it before the master or chancellor, denied, but the issue in that respect is one of amount only. As to waste, the contention of the mortgagee is that no formal claim therefor was made in the case, and also that waste was not proved. As to attorneys’ fees, the mortgagor’s position is that the amount thereof was not proved, and hence that nothing should be allowed to the mortgagee on that account, and the contention of the mortgagee is that it should have been allowed three thousand dollars on that account instead of the two-thousand dollars allowance found by the master and confirmed by the chancellor. And in respect of taxes, the mortgagee insists that it should have been allowed all taxes assessed against and paid on the property from the time it went into possession to the time of hearing, whereas the report made and confirmed disallowed its [200]*200claim in this connection í'ot taxes paid by a purchaser from it during the years lie held the land as such purchaser. There are also brought under consideration some questions as to the computation of interest on taxes paid and on attorneys’ fees allowed, and upon the failure of the register to alhnv the mortgagee credit for repairs it claimed to have made, and for expenses incurred in the collection of rents.

We will first consider questions which arise upon those parts of the decree whereby the findings and report of the master as to certain items are confirmed; and in approaching these matters it is well to state and have in mind the familiar rule which obtains here in respect of revising the decree in so far as it sustains the findings of the master on evidence adduced before him, and confirms his report thereon. “The rule is,” said Chief Justice Walker in Mahone v. Williams, 39 Ala. 202, 221, “to indulge all reasonable presumptions in favor of the register’s décisions upon questions of fact, such as those now under consideration, and not to reverse it unless clearly satisfied that it is wrong. Judge Story goes so far as to say, ‘that the court must be clearly satisfied that there has been unquestionable error.’ ” And he illustrates the application of the rule thus: “The testimony as to the annual value of the slaves is conflicting and voluminous: We have made an examination of it. No two minds would ever draw the same conclusion from it. As the result of our examination, we feel no full conviction that the register’s conclusion is wrong. His conclusions are not unreasonable. It does not appear to us that they are plainly wrong; and, therefore, wo Avill not reverse the chancellor’s decree confirming the report.” On this subject, it was said in Jones v. White, 112 Ala. 449, 451: * * * “To say the least, we cannot affirm that the chancellor erred in overruling the exceptions and confirming the report. The evidence before the register, consisting for the most part of the oral testimony of witnesses, and being presented to the chancellor and here in written form, the rule laid down in Woodrow v. Hawving, 105 Ala. 240, and also the gen[201]*201eral rule to be observed in reviewing findings of fact by the register on reference. Mahone v. Williams, supra, requires the chancellor and requires ns to indulge all reasonable presumptions in favor of the register’s decision upon questions of fact, * * * and not to reverse it unless clearly satisfied that it is wrong.” The general doctrine that the register’s conclusion upon evidence should not be disturbed unless it is “clearly wrong,” “palpably erroneous,” “plainly and palpably incorrect,” etc., etc., and so appears after the indulgence of all reasonable presumptions in its favor, has been declared also in the following cases: Kinsey v. Kinsey, 37 Ala. 393; Lehman v. Levy, 69 Ala. 43; Winter v. Banks, 72 Ala. 409; Glover v. Hembree, 82 Ala. 324; Trust Co. v. Wood, 108 Ala. 85; Warren v. Lawson, 117 Ala. 339; Speakman v. Burleson, 123 Ala. 678. The effect of this rule in cases of findings upon the testimony of Avitnesses, oral evidence, considered in connection with the doctrine of Woodrow v. Hawving, supra, is to put the register’s decision upon the same footing as the verdict of a jury, and to authorize the reversal of a decree confirming it only upon such a state of case as Avould require a trial court to grant a motion to set aside the verdict of the jury and grant a neAV trial. — Cobb v. Malone, 92 Ala. 630; Bank v. Chaffin, 118 Ala. 246.

This rule for the examination and consideration — the revieAV — of decrees confirming the register’s finding of fact, has application here to the charge of eight hundred dollars for Avaste made against the mortgagee. Having this rule in mind and the testimony of the Avitnesses Huggins and Barnes going to show that the denudation of the place of timber by Armistead reduced the value of it to the extent of from eight hundred to fifteen hundred dollars, we cannot affirm, even though there Avas strong evidence to the contrary, even to the effect that the removal of the timber increased the value of the lan'd, that the chancellor erred in confirming the report of the register as to that item.

What we here say is not intended to foreclose certain objections to the allowance of this item based upon other considerations than the testimony as to this cutting of [202]*202timber being waste, etc.; but we proceed to consider tliose other objections. The first of them is that the mortgage company is not liable for this waste for that it was not committed by the comjiany directly or indirectly, but by Armistead for whose acts in that regard the mortgagee is not responsible. This court on the former appeal in effect held, or at least proceeded upon the assumption, that the mortgage company was liable for waste committed by Armistead, and we think that ruling or assumption was correct.

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Bluebook (online)
139 Ala. 183, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pollard-v-american-freehold-land-mortgage-co-of-london-ala-1903.