Rives, Battle & Co. v. Walthall's Ex'rs

38 Ala. 329
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJanuary 15, 1862
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 38 Ala. 329 (Rives, Battle & Co. v. Walthall's Ex'rs) 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
Rives, Battle & Co. v. Walthall's Ex'rs, 38 Ala. 329 (Ala. 1862).

Opinion

A. J. WALKER, C. J.

1. The first of the three positions can not be sustained ; because the allegations of fraud are denied by the answers, and not supported by the requisite measure of proof; and because the arguments in favor of the inference [332]*332of fraud, not defeated by the denials of the answer, are overruled by our former decision in this case, reported in 84 Ala. 91.

2. The averments of the bill are such that the second position cannot be sustained. The mortgages are in the bill declared fraudulent, and several grounds for the inference of fraud are set out. The bill contains a specific prayer, that the mortgages- may be declared null and void ; and another prayer, that, if they are not so declared, the mortgages may be foreclosed, and the mortgages and ther judgment of complainants be discharged from thepfoceeds of sale. We have here alternative prayers, for the annulment' of the mortgages, and for their foreclosure for the benefit-of the mortgagee and the complainants. It was in view of these alternative prayers, that we said when this cas© was before in this court, that there were two distinct claim#. to relief which the complainants' set 'up.- — 32 Ala. 91. This assertion by no means involved a decision, that, without an ■ amendment of the bill, alternative cases for the granting-of either of the claims to relief- was riiade. Whether the claims set up were respectively predicated upon sufficient allegations, was a point not touched by the decision-

It is certainly permissible fdn‘a complainant to ;aver! in > his bill, that either one or the other of two alternative • statements is true. Undoubtedly it is so when each of the statements entitles the party to the same relief. — Shields v. Barrow, 17 Howard, 130-144; Story’s Eq. Pl. § 254; Andrews v. McCoy, 8 Ala. 920; Thomason v. Smithsons, 7 Porter, 144; Simmons v. Williams, 27 Ala. 507 ; Strange v. Watson, 11 Ala. 324; Cornegay v. Caraway, 2 Dev. Eq. 405; Lloyd v. Brewster, 4 Paige, 537; Colton v. Ross, 2 Paige, 390. But the bill in this case does not contain such alternative statements. It asserts the invalidity of the mortgages on account of fraud, but does not contain a disjunctive averment of their validity. We do not decide that the rules of pleading would tolerate a bill with such conflicting alternative statements, entitling the party to reliefs diametrical in their character. We did not intend, [333]*333when this case was before in this court, (34 Ala. 95,) to approve such a mode of pleading. We intended merely to say, that the complainants claimed alternatively the two reliefs, and that the granting of such reliefs pertained to the jurisdiction of the chancery court. The second headnote of the reporter has carried us farther than we designed to commit ourselves at that time. It is not necessary for us now to commit ourselves, as to the extent to which variant, statements .of ¡facts in the alternative may be allowed. It is sufficient here, that the bill pronounces the mortgages fraudulent, and in no way recognizes .their validity. If, then, ¡the court were to grant relief, predicated upon .the validity of the mortgages, and making the satisfaction,of the .complainants’ judgment posterior to the satisfaction of the mortgages, .and dependent on,it, it would h.enQt only in the absence o.f appropriate .allegations, but in actual contravention of the case made by the bill.

A test of the propriety of any particular relief, under the allegations of a bill, is to inquire whether, if the bill were confessed, the court, looking at the bill and the confession, could grant the relief. — Charles v. Dubose, 29 Ala. 367-372. Under that test, there could be no foreclosure of a mortgage, under a bill which merely declared it fraudulent. In the case of McCosker v. Brady, (1 Barb. Ch. R. 329,) a question precisely like the one before us arose. The complainant in that case alleged, that a will, under which the defendants claimed title to a part .of .the premises in controversy, was void, and prayed \that it might be annulled, or, in case the will should be decreed .to be valid, that the premises might be partitioned. The prayer for a partition was held inconsistent with the case made by the bill, and it was therefore denied. — See, also, Lloyd v. Brewster, supra.

3. The third position taken for the complainants is, that, under their bill they may be regarded as creditors, having a return of nulla bona on their execution, and coming into chancery to .obtain satisfaction .of .their judgment out of their debtor’s assets. The bill alleges* that all the prop[334]*334erty mentioned is covered by mortgage. If the mortgages are valid, the property was not subject to the complainants’ judgment, and the complainants could ha^e no other remedy against it than by a foreclosure. We have already decided that the mortgages are not fraudulent. If, then, the complainants’ bill be a creditors’ bill, it shows that the .property against which it proceeds is covered by mortgage, which we must hold valid. Therefore, to subject the property under the bill to the payment, would be, according to the case made by the bill itself, to invade the rights of a mortgagee; in other words, to grant relief in violation of the allegations of the bill and proof. Let it be conceded, that it appears from the answer that the mortgágee did not claim the property under the mortgage, and the complainants’ condition is not thereby improved, for a decree must be predicated upon the allegations of the bill.

Nor will it aid the complainants to concede farther to them, that the answers show a discharge of the mortgage since the commencement of the suit; for, if the complainants’ bill be a creditors’ bill, they can only subject property upon the idea of a liability subsisting when the suit was commenced. A decree can only be had, when the facts subsisting at the commencement of the suit make out a case for equitable cognizance, and those facts must be alleged in the bill. — Land v. Cowan, 19 Ala. 297.

It is contended, that the complainants, if not entitled to relief as creditors proceeding against specific property, may at least claim a decree as creditors proceeding upon the general allegation authorized by the act of January, 1844, as expounded in Brown & Dimmock v. Bates, 10 Ala. 432. But the same insuperable obstacle is in the way of sustaining this view. Under the allegations of the bill, all the debtor’s property was, at the commencement of the suit, covered by mortgages, which we decide were valid.

4. It is strenuously insisted, that the complainants may, under their bill, have the hires and income from the slaves, now held by Borden and Jones, appropriated to their judg[335]*335merit. It is needless for us to say anything upon the question, whether such hires and income might not be so appropriated under a proper bill against Borden and Jones.

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Bluebook (online)
38 Ala. 329, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rives-battle-co-v-walthalls-exrs-ala-1862.