Rapier v. Gulf City Paper Co.

64 Ala. 330
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedDecember 15, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 64 Ala. 330 (Rapier v. Gulf City Paper 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
Rapier v. Gulf City Paper Co., 64 Ala. 330 (Ala. 1879).

Opinion

BRICEELL, C. J.

The rule of pleading in equity, as at law, can not be doubted, that the plaintiff must show an actual existing interest in the subject-matter of the suit, giving him the right to sue concerning it. The rule is stated with precision by Chilton, J., in McKinley v. Irvine, 13 Ala. 693 : “ The complainant must show, by his allegations in the bill, that he is entitled to the relief which he seeks; and if he fails to set forth every essential fact necessary to make out his title to maintain the bill, the defect will be fatal.” A bill which does not show that the complainant has an interest in the subject-matter of the suit, and a proper title to institute the particular suit concerning it, is subject to demurrer. — 1 Dan. Ch. Pr. 314.

A material purpose of the present bill is the redemption, from a mortgage to Mrs. Roper, of the real estate described, and averred to be the individual property of John L. Rapier, which has been and is used and occupied as the place of business, and on which the materials, presses and fixtures, of the printing establishment, known as the “ Mobile Register,” are situate. “No person can come into a court of equity, for a redemption of a mortgage, but he who is entitled to the legal estate of the mortgagor, or claims a subsisting interest under him.” — 2 Jones on Mort. § 1055; Grant v. Duane, 9 Johns. 591. It is as assignee that the complainant, now the appellee, claims to be let in to redeem ; and the instrument under which the right is deduced, is exhibited; and its terms, the circumstances surrounding the parties when it was executed, and all existing facts which may be looked to in construing them, it must be assumed, are fully stated, so far as reliance upon them is intended. Pleadings are construed most strongly against the pleader, and the only intendment made is, that he has stated the facts as favorably for himself as they will allow.

The instrument does not, in express terms, transfer any [341]*341right or interest in or to the real estate, nor is it expressly referred to. All its words are of the transfer of personal property only — “ the property known and described as the Mobile Daily and Weekly Éegister newspaper, and all the property and materials in and belonging to the printing establishment thereof, and of the job-printing and book-binding establishment, and of the offices connected therewith, with the rights, contracts and privileges attaching thereto, and including and embracing the property mortgaged,” &c. The mortgages referred to were executed by Forsyth, and Rapier is not a party to them, nor is this real estate embraced in them. The theory of the bill is, not that the real estate was transferred, but that it had been appropriated to the use of the business of the “ Mobile Daily and Weekly Register,” and the use was one of the rights, privileges and contracts transferred. It is not averred that, by contract, Rapier had transferred the use to the firm of which he was a member; nor is it averred that there was any lease, for any definite term, to the firm. The building had been adapted to the use of this establishment, and when the establishment was transferred, the use passed as an incident to the transfer, is the idea which seems to underlie the proposition asserted by the appellee. If such be the result, it can scarcely be supposed to have been within the contemplation of Rapier,- when he devoted his individual property to the uses of a business conducted by a partnership of which he was a member. Promoting the interests of the partnership, was a promotion of his own interest; and so long as he could derive profit, he may have intended to appropriate his individual property to its uses. The limit of the term of the appropriation is, of necessity, no other being expressed, the existence of the partnership, and the application to its uses of the thing appropriated. "When the partnership ceases, the right to the use ceases with it; and there is no right, during the continuance of the partnership, to apply the thing to any other than to partnership uses. A lease to a partnership, during its existence, is terminated by its dissolution, and the lessor may reenter. “ The house,” said Lord Ellenborough, “ was to be used and occupied by the partners, during the partnership only, and when that was determined, there was an end of the tenancy.”,— Waitheman v. Miles, 1 Stark. 181. And where one partner let to the partnership a house for the carrying on of the business of the firm, on the dissolution of the partnership the lease terminated.— Colnaghi v. Black, 8 Carr. & Payne, 464. The lease could not be extended beyond the term necessary for the uses which entered into the consideration, and was the moving cause for making them,

[342]*342The intention of the parties, when they keep within the pale of the law', guides and determines the construction of their contracts, express or implied, and fixes the character of their conduct. The devotion by a partner of his individual property to the uses of the partnership, may be intended to pass from him the entire title, or it may be intended as an appropriation of the mere usufruct— the right to the profit, utility and advantage, it may yield tlie partnership during its continuance, — the title remaining in him. The usufruct may be appropriated for a particular term, or it may be intended to continue only during the existence of the partnership. If it is not expressly transferred for a particular term — if it is in the nature of a contribution to the partnership — it stands upon the same ground of a contribution of the partner’s skill and industry, continuing only during the continuance of the partnership. Admitting the bill avers an appropriation of this property to the uses of the partnership, construing the averment according to its natural import, the use was for the advantage of the partnership, — continued and terminated with it, and is not a right, contract, or privilege, incident or attaching to the personal property transferred to the appellee. The terms of the instrument of assignment do not admit of, but are inconsistent with, a construction that it was intended to pass an interest in the real estate, or any other than the personal property, the materials, presses, and fixtures which made up the printing and publishing establishment, which were subject to execution, and which being sold under execution, the sale woqld be absolute, indefeasible, leaving to the defendants in execution no legal right of redemption. Such are its express terms; and they exclude any supposition, or construction, that it was intended to pass any interest in real estate, which, if vendible under execution, would be subject for two years to a legal right of redemption, by the defendant in execution, or any of his judgment creditors.

A judgment creditor of a mortgagor may be let in to redeem; but it is enough to say, if the appellee stands in that relation, the present bill is not so framed, and has not the necessary allegations to entitle it to that relief, in reference to the real estate. The whole right, as asserted by the bill, is deduced from the assignment.

The fifth ground of demurrer was properly overruled. It is founded in a misconception of the statute (Code of 1876, § 2126). A general assignment by a debtor is not prohibited— it is not declared void. The only effect of the statute is in its operation, depriving it of the character of a particular security for a particular creditor, and converting it into a general security for the equal benefit of all creditors who [343]

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Bluebook (online)
64 Ala. 330, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rapier-v-gulf-city-paper-co-ala-1879.