Seasongood, Menderson & Co. v. Ware

104 Ala. 212
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedNovember 15, 1893
StatusPublished

This text of 104 Ala. 212 (Seasongood, Menderson & Co. v. Ware) 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
Seasongood, Menderson & Co. v. Ware, 104 Ala. 212 (Ala. 1893).

Opinion

HEAD, J.

The only question for decision, in these cases, is the one of fact whether the expenditure of his own funds by Robert Y. Ware, in the erection of the storehouse on his wife’s land, was made, under an agreement with the wife, that the amount so expended should be deemed a payment pro tanto of the indebtedness then owing to her by him, for moneys of her separate estate which he, at sundry times, had received and appropriated. The register, upon a reference, found there was no such agreement. The chancellor, on exceptions, reversed that finding, in each case, and decreed that the agreement was established by the evidence. From those rulings these appeals are prosecuted. It can not be well questioned that, in the absence of proof of an agreement that the moneys so expended were to be repaid by her, or allowed as a credit on the indebtedness owing her by the husband, the presumption of law is that the investment was intended as a voluntary settlement upon the wife, and that, upon attack of the husband’s existing [217]*217creditors, the burden is upon her to overcome that presumption by proof. See authorities on brief of appellant’s counsel. The evidence upon the subject is reduced to narrow limits. It proceeds, we may say, entirely from Mr. and Mrs. Ware, themselves, as witnesses. In October, 1887, Mrs. Ware purchased a lot of five acres of land, in the town of Tallassee, Ala., with a dwelling house thereon, and she, with her husband, thereafter occupied the property' as their residence. In the spring or summer of 1889, Ware, the husband, for the purpose of using it in carrying on a mercantile business therein, began the erection of a storehouse on this lot, locating it on the corner of the front yard of the premises. He exercised entire control and management of the erection, making all contracts for labor and materials, in his own name and behalf, and expended, in the building, after complainant’s claims against him were contracted, the sum of $2,009.39 of his own funds. At this time, he owed his wife $4,474. These sums were ascertained by the register, upon the execution of’ a reference, after hearing very much testimony. The indebtedness to the wife consisted of $1,080 paid him by Mr. Storey, the step-father of Mrs. Ware, for her use, in the fall of 1880, and sundry sums of money leceived, at different times, the most of which being' the proceeds of the property which he had previously given her. He began ordering goods for his mercantile business in the summer and opened up business about September 1st, 1889, when he had purchased some $8,400 worth on credit. The business proved so disastrous that he failed on the 2d day of October, 1889 — an experience of one month. Of the goods on hand he applied enough to pay a debt of $2,000 to one Harrington, and to the payment of some other preferred creditors, amounts not given, and selected and retained $1,000 worth as exempt. This left nothing for his other creditors. On the 25th of January, 1889, he executed to his wife a promissory note for $1,200, payable 12 months after date, with interest, expressing that it was for rents of her property for 1888 and 1889 ; and on the same day, two other notes, one for $1,500 and the other for $1,640, both payable twelve months after date, with interest, and expressing that they were for money borrowed of her. The execution of these notes was the [218]*218result of a conference he had a few days before, with his attorney, to whom he related the facts, in detail, of his indebtedness to his wife, and whose advice he sought as to the best thing for him to do, in case of his death, or any other misfortune befalling him, to secure his wife. This building of the storehouse in question began about May, 1889, and was ready for occupancy, and was occupied by Ware, about September 1st, following. From 1882 to 1888, Ware had given to his wife, at sundry times, real and personal property, amounting to several thousand dollars in value. We have stated the foregoing undisputed history, as introductory to the evidence directly touching the subject of the alleged agreement between Mr. and Mrs. Ware, that the moneys expended by him, in building the storehouse, should go in payment pro tanto of his indebtedness to her. The testimony is not very lengthy, and we will state it all. Robert Y. Ware testified: “I built that house on the start on my wife’s property, and she and I spoke of the house being built, and we walked around together and decided where to put and where to locate it. I wanted to put the house where it now stands, and she preferred me to put it at the rear of the building, but we finally decided for nie to put it where it was put.” Further on, speaking of his indebtedness to his wife, he said : “I have never accounted to my wife or paid her anything on those amounts prior to the commencement of the erection of this storehouse. I paid her in that building. I have not paid her anything in money since. ” Further on, he says : “There was no special understanding when I paid her back by this building that I should build it out of the money I owed her and had used. The only thing was just what I have told you; we went around together and decided where to put the house, and she told me where she wanted it put and agreed for me to put it where I did. This was ail there was said about it. * * * There was nothing said about my paying rent for the new store when it was finished.” After testifying at length as to the different sums paid by him for labor and materials for the building, he stated : “I have a memorandum of the most of the parties to whom I paid money on account of this budding. This is an itemized account of it. (Witness produces small [219]*219pocket memorandum which he now consults.) * * * Ques. When was this book to which you are referring made up? Ans. I couldn’t tell you what day, but it was recently. It was made up from bills and receipts where I bought the material and things from. I did bringsome of those bills and receipts with me. They are here. I showed yoti some of them. I refresh my memory with that book. I knew that I had to testify, and I got it up for that purpose, knowing I would have to tell you what the goods cost. I have told you now everything that I remember that that house cost.” Further on, he says: “I footed up the cost of the building, what it cost me up to the first of October when I quit business, and it footed up $2,639.39. That was all it cost up to that time ; since then a few things have been got here from Snow & Kennedy. That is to the best of my recollection. I testify that that is the cost of the building as near as I can get it up. * * * Various men have asked me what it cost, and some have made some suggestions and some another, and I may have told them various things ; but I never knew myself until I began to foot it up. * * * When I footed it up it did not cost as much as I thought. The law suit made me foot up the cost of the house. I had not done so before. I hadn’t footed it up until this suit was brought and I had to answer the bill and I had to foot it up then.” Without giving, in detail, the efforts of this witness to show the several sums paid out in the construction of the building, we remark that they show a demonstration that no regular account was kept with a view of ascertaining what sum Ware would be entitled to credit for, on his indebtedness to his wife, or for any other purposes, and that his only means of ascertaining the cost were such bills and receipts as he could get up, such data as he could get others to furnish and his own personal recollection, and that no effort was even made to get this information until, and except for the purposes of this litigation.

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Related

Ware v. Hamilton Brown Shoe Co.
92 Ala. 145 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1890)

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Bluebook (online)
104 Ala. 212, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/seasongood-menderson-co-v-ware-ala-1893.