Tuscumbia, Courtland & Decatur Rail Road v. Rhodes

8 Ala. 206
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJune 15, 1845
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 8 Ala. 206 (Tuscumbia, Courtland & Decatur Rail Road v. Rhodes) 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
Tuscumbia, Courtland & Decatur Rail Road v. Rhodes, 8 Ala. 206 (Ala. 1845).

Opinions

ORMOND, J.

The Tuscumbia, Courtland and Decatur Rail Road Company, having brought a suit at law for the use of Benjamin Sherrod, against H. W. Rhodes, the defendant in error, and recovered a judgment against him, he has filed this bill to obtain the benefit of a set ofij for money paid for the Company, after the suit was commenced.

Whatever may be the merits of the demand here attempted to be set off, it is very clear it cannot be set off at law, as it was not a subsisting demand when the action was brought, [Cox v. Cooper, 3 Ala. Rep. 256;] the question therefore is, whether this is a good set off in equity.

The true nature and extent of the doctrine of set off, in a Court of Equity, is one of some difficulty, complicated as it is, in the decisions made upon the subject, with the statutes of set off at law, where there are mutual debts, and of the statutes of bankruptcy, authorizing a set off where there are mutual credits. Mr. Justice Story has discussed this question in his Commentaries on Equity, 2d vol. 656, and more at large in the cases of Greene v. Darling, 5 Mason, 201, and How v. Shephard, 2 Sumner, 409. According to his opinion, equity follows the law in regard to set off, unless there is some intervening natural equity, going beyond the statutes of set off. That such a natural equity arises, where there are mutual credits between the parties, or where there is an existing debt, on one side, which constitutes the ground of a credit on the other, or, where there is an express or implied agrément, [212]*212that the mutual debts shall be a satisfaction pro tanto ’ between the parties.

To the same effect, is the opinion of Chancellor Kent, in Duncan v. Lyon, 3 Johns. C. 358, and of this Court in French v. Garner, 7 Porter, 549. In ex parte Stephens, 11 Vesey, 27, Lord Eldon says, Courts of Equity were in possession of the doctrine of set off, long before the law interfered ; though where the Court does not find a natural equity, going beyond the statute, the rule is the same in equity as at law. See also, Mead v. Merritt, 2 Paige, 402; Burkley v. Munday, 5 Madd. R. 297; Robbins v. Holly, 1 Munroe, 194; Green v. Farmer, 2 Burr. 1214, and Ex parte Harrison, 12 Vesey, 346, and to these might be added a multitude of authorities, English and American, establishing the same general principle.

What then is the natural equity, or to speak with more precision, what are the peculiar circumstances, attending this case, which would authorize this Court, to set off the one demand against the other.

The facts are, that Rhodes, the complainant, became a subscriber with others, to the Rail Road Company, for seventy-five shares of its stock, at one hundred dollars a share, which was to be paid for, in accepted and indorsed bills of exchange, payable in five, eleven, and seventeen months, interest included. The object of the subscription, was to enable the Company to raise funds for the payment of its debts. About the same time, Sher-rod made a loan to the Company of fifty thousand dollars, for five years, to secure the payment of which, Rhodes, and eleven others, executed a bond to Sherrod for that amount, payable also in five years; the Company, by an order on its minutes, pledging itself in its corporate capacity, for the payment of the debt. Subsequently, the Company became insolvent, and being indebted to Sherrod, in the sum of nearly two hundred thousand dollars, money paid by him for it, assigned to him some of its effects, and among other claims, the one against Rhodes for his sub scription, which he had not complied with, by executing bills of exchange; together with other claims against him. Upon this demand against Rhodes, Sherrod brought suit in the name of the Company, for his use, and subsequently Rhodes-paid to Sherrod, upon the bond for fifty thousand dollars, twenty-six thousand dollars. A judgment was obtained by the Compa[213]*213ny, for the use of Sherrod, against Rhodes, and he now seeks to set off in equity, the money thus paid against the judgment.

It is not pretended, that there was in this case any express agreement to set off, or extinguish the claim of the Company against Rhodes, for his subscription, by the obligation entered into by the latter, to guaranty to Sherrod, the payment of the loan of fifty thousand dollars. Nor is there the slightest foundation for supposing, that there was an implied agreement, having the same object in view. Before such an implication could be made, there must have been a debt due, or to fall due, which might be presumed to be looked to by the parties, as the fund out of which the debt attempted to be enforced, was intended to be satisfied. So far is that from being the case here,that the Company debt was not to fall due until several years after the bills would have been paid. Besides,such a supposition would havebeen destructive to the avowed object of the parties, which was to raise money for the pressing exigencies of the Company, whilst this theory of the intentions of the parties, supposes, that the bills were not to be drawn, until the fact was ascertained, whether Rhodes would become liable on his suretyship for the Company. As it is certain there was no express agreement to that effect, it is equally as clear that none can be implied from the circumstances.

It is however argued, that although these transactions are not strictly mutual debts, they are mutual credits, to create which, it is supposed, it is not necessary that the debts should fall due at the same time. Waiving for the present, the inquiry, whether there was any debt due from the Company to Rhodes, before the actual payment of the money by him, we proceed to inquire, whether the term mutual credit has this meaning.

The statute of 2d Geo. 2d, which first allowed sets off at law, as well as our statute on the same subject, only authorizes “ mutual debts” to be set off against each other. The term mutual credits, was first introduced in the bankrupt laws of England, as authorizing a set off in bankruptcy, which, in the English books, is said to be a term of larger import than mutual debts. Thus in Ex parte Prescott, 1 Atk. 230, it was held that a debt due the bankrupt, payable at a future day, might be set off against a debt then due to him, from the bankrupt; his Lordship holding, that although not a mutual debt, it was.a mutual credit, within the meaning of the bankrupt law. So where a bill of exchange, ac[214]*214cepted by A, got into the hands of B, it was held in accordance with the same principle, that there was a mutual credit between A and B, although the former did not know the bill was in the hands of the latter. [Hankey v. Smith, 3 Term, 507, in note.]

So also, an accommodation acceptor to a bill, which did not fall due until after the bankruptcy, and was then outstanding in the hands of third persons, and paid by him after the commission issued, was held entitled to a set off, under the words mutual credit. [Smith v. Hodson, 4 Term, 211.] To the same effect are Ex parte Wagstaff, 13 Ves. 65, and Arbouin v. Trottoire, 1 Holt N. P. C. 408.

Now, in all these cases, it is to be observed, there was a debt due before the bankruptcy, though not payable until afterwards, and the whole effect of the bankrupt law, in respect to the question we are now discussing, seems to be, to dispense with those circumstances, which would be necessary to give the Court of Chancery jurisdiction in other cases.

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Bluebook (online)
8 Ala. 206, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tuscumbia-courtland-decatur-rail-road-v-rhodes-ala-1845.