Tyson v. Weber

81 Ala. 470
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedDecember 15, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 81 Ala. 470 (Tyson v. Weber) 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
Tyson v. Weber, 81 Ala. 470 (Ala. 1886).

Opinion

CLOPTON, J.

— The bill, which is filed by appellant, so far as necessary to be stated for the purposes of this appeal, substantially alleges, that the defendant, by false representations as to the amount of his indebtedness, the value of his stock, and profitable nature of his business, induced complainant to become liable as endorser and acceptor for his accommodation, which endorsements and acceptances complainant paid. On October 5, 1885, the defendant, to secure this and other indebtedness, for which he gave his notes, and also an indebtedness to J. R. Jordan, executed to them a mortgage, conveying the entire stock of drugs, and every other kind of property in the store in the city of Montgomery then occupied bv defendant, and all the stock of drugs and goods that may be on hand at the maturity of any and all the notes described in the mortgage, with power of sale in case of default. The mortgage contains a stipulation that the mortgagor would carry at least seven thousand dollars worth of stock at cost price, exclusive of [473]*473the soda fount, which it is averred he failed to do. Jordan transferred all his interest in the notes, mortgage, and property to complainant. After the law-day of the mortgage, negotiations for a settlement having been unvailing, the complainant brought an action of detinue to recover possession of the mortgaged property, and caused it to be seized by the sheriff. The complainant replevied the property, under the statute, the defendant having failed to do so within the time allowed. The bill further alleges, that complainant has only an equitable title to the after acquired property, and that it is impossible to distinguish these goods from those in the store at the time the mortgage was made ; that defendant has in his possession the only evidence by which they can be distinguished; and that he refused to surrender the property on demand, and now undertakes to defeat the action of detinue on the ground that the mortgage does not convey the_ legal title. An injunction was granted restraining the defendant from setting up the defense in the detinue suit, which was dissolved by the chancellor, and from this decree the appeal is taken.

It is unnecessary to consider the general equity of the bill. The chancellor overruled the motion to dismiss for want of equity, thereby determining that the bill contained equity. Of this the appellant can not complain, and the defendant does not appeal. All the questions argued by counsel may be eliminated, except the single question, whether, on the averments of the bill, the defendant should be enjoined from setting- up in the detinue suit, that complainant, not having had actual possession, shall establish a legal right to the property ?

A mortgagee has three remedies, either of which he is at liberty to pursue; or may pursue any two or all concurrently; he may bring an action at law to recover the debt; an appropriate action to recover possession of the property; and may foreclose the mortgage, and sell the property. But if he pursues one or more, each suit must be tried and determined on the principles applicable and prevailing in the forum in which the particular remedy is sought. The complainant is pursuing two of these remedies — an action at law to recover the property, and a bill in equity to foreclose the mortgage. Finding himself in a real or supposed difficulty of making sufficient proof to sustain his detinue suit, which was first brought, he seeks relief, on a bill to foreclose the mortgage, by invoking the aid of the court of equity to prohibit the defendant from defeating the action at law on legal principles and by a legal defense. The argument is, that if the detinue suit is defeated or dismissed, the defendant, [474]*474who is insolvent, will be entitled under tbe statute to a judgment against tbe complainant for tbe property or its alternate value ; and that having commingled the goods, so that they can not be distinguished; having refused to surrender them on demand ; and having under his control the only evidence that would enable complainant to segregate those to which the legal title passed by the mortgage, it would be inequitable to allow him to take advantage of the wrong to defeat the action at law. The wrong does not consist in the confusion ; for by the terms of the mortgage it was intended that the mortgagor should replenish the stock from time to t-ime by the purchase of new goods, so as to keep it at the value of seven thousand dollars, which subsequently purchased goods, it must have been contemplated, would naturally be mixed with the goods in the store. The confusion was by the implied consent of the complainant. The wrong, as alleged, consists in the failure of defendant to furnish plaintiff the evidence by which to establish a legal title to a part of the goods ; and the bill seeks, as a penalty, that the defendant be restrained from asserting that the plaintiff has not the legal title to any of the property, so that he may recover all in the detinue suit.

The only embarrassment in the remedy of the complainant at law is a difficulty of proof, which is not of itself sufficient to give equity jurisdiction. On a bill for discovery and relief, which seeks to withdraw from the jurisdiction of courts of law matters purely of legal cognizance, the jurisdiction of equity rests on the inadequacy of the legal remedy, and the bill must aver that discovery is indispensable to complete justice, and the inability of a court of law to compel it. — Com. Life Ins. Co. v. Webb, 54 Ala. 688. There are also cases in which equity will restrain a defendant from setting up a certain defense in an action at law, on the ground that it would be inequitable — for instance, where the defendant has obtained by fraud a receipt or discharge, of which he is seeking to avail himself in the suit at law. In such case, equity will deprive him of its fraudulent use. — Stewart v. Gr. West. Ry. Co., 2 DeG. J. & S. 319. But if the receipt, though purporting to be in full accord and satisfaction, was not intended to be so, and was not fraudulently procured, and no fraudulent use is attempted, equity will not interfere, but will leave the facts to be determined by a jury. — Lee v. Lan. & York. Ry. Co., L. R. 6 Ch. App. 527. The bill is not framed for a discovery material to support the suit at law ; neither does it seek to withdraw from the jurisdiction of the court of law the legal proceedings, because of. the inadequacy of the legal remedy. [475]*475It is not averred that the confusion of the goods was fraudulent or without the consent of the complainant; nor that the evidence in the possession of the defendant by which they can be distinguished was fraudulently obtained. The complainant, with knowledge of the confusion, of his want of legal title to a part of the goods, and of the difficulty of proof," elected to sue at law to recover possession of the entire property. Neither does the complainant seek to suspend the proceedings at law until the defendant discovers the evidence by which the goods may be distinguished, and thus enable him to recover that part of the property to which he has the legal title. The purpose is, that the action shall proceed, but notwithstanding its continuance, to avoid a judgment against complainant for the portion of the property to which his title is only equitable, or for its alternate value, by restraining the defendant from asserting that complainant has not the legal title to all the property.

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Bluebook (online)
81 Ala. 470, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tyson-v-weber-ala-1886.