Williams v. Reggan

111 Ala. 621
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedNovember 15, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 111 Ala. 621 (Williams v. Reggan) 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
Williams v. Reggan, 111 Ala. 621 (Ala. 1895).

Opinion

HEAD, J.

The complainant, by his bill as last amended, seeks to have a conveyance, absolute in it3 terms whichhe and his wife executed to the defendant, on the 21st day of April, 1892, declared to be a mortgage and tobe let in to redeem. The case, in its legal aspects, is not different from many that have been decided by this court. In Reeves v. Abercrombie, 108 Ala. 535, we collected our previous decisions in the cases where similar relief was sought, and re-stated the rule as to the [623]*623measure of proof in the two classes, into which the decisions may be grouped. There, it was necessary to apply the rule, requiring strong and stringent evidence of the clear and certain intention and understanding of both parties that the instrument should operate as a mortgage. Here, the contestation is differently presensenfced. It was an undisputed fact, that after the execution of the conveyance, the complainant remained in possession of the property, it being his homestead, without payment of rent — a circumstance calling for explanation. In reply to the question propounded by his counsel, whether there was any agreement or understanding that the complainant should remain on the land, the defendant testified, “there was an agreement that Williams should remain on the land until the 1st day of November, 1892,in order that he might gather the crop on the place, and if he bought the place, he was not to pay any rent.’’ If the conveyance was designed to operate according to its terms, the title and complete ownership passed absolutely to the grantee by the delivery of the deed entitling him to the crop then growing and to subsequent rents, as an incident to such ownership. The defendant’s statement of the contemporaneous agreement is meagre as to details, but fairly construed, it is reasonably susceptible of the construction, that, according to his version, the repurchase of the place was discussed and provided for, in which event he was to be free from liability for rent during the intervening period and that, in any event, the complainant was to have the crop then growing on the place. We have, therefore, an admission by the defendant that the conveyance was subject to a verbal agreement, varying its effect, separately considered, that a contingency of repurchase was contemplated; and the verms thereof, to the relief of the complainant from rent, arranged. With this admission, the case is made very closely to resemble that of Daniels v. Lowery, 92 Ala. 519, and it is thereby brought within the influence of the broader rule, as to the measure of proof announced in that and similar cases, where the controversy was, not whether an unconditional sale or a mortgage was intended, as was the issue in Reeves v. Abercrombie, supra, but whether the transaction was a mortgage or a conditional sale, including in that designation, a sale with a right of re-pur[624]*624chase. When the issue is thus presented, the court in-' dines to hold the conveyance to be a mortgage, and if there be doubt, resolves the doubt in favor of the mortgage theory. This it does for the manifest reason, that if it errs in so holding, no loss will be inflicted upon the grantee, made whole by a reimbursement of his outlay and interest, whereas, a mistake, committed against the grantor, might entail upon him hurtful consequences, without any compensating benefits. — Cosby v. Buchanan, 81 Ala. 574; Turner v. Wilkinson, 72 Ala. 361; McNeil v. Norsworthy, 39 Ala. 156; Turnipseed v. Cunningham, 16 Ala. 501.

. Proceeding to a consideration of the evidence, it may be premised that the record presents the same irreconcilable conflict, that we have so often encountered in similar cases. When the understanding between the parties, which induced the execution of the deed of April 31st, 1892, was reached, it is conceded they were alone. Both testify, and while they coincide in some particulars, they differ widely as to the terms of the agreement, upon which their minds then met. At the execution of the instrument, the complainant, his wife, the justice who took the acknowledgment and Secrest, the attesting witness, were present, but their accounts of what transpired at the time do not harmonize. Several persons testify, with more or less meagreness of detail, to statements said to have been made by the complainant, to the effect that he had sold his property to the defendant, Reggan, and had received the purchase price, while the witness Ingram, examined by the complainant, deposes, with great definiteness and particularity, to an interview with the defendant;, after the witness had agreed, as he narrates it, to pay what the complainant said was a continuing indebtedness, wherein Reggan stated that he wanted the money that Williams owed him on the three acres of land, and “that his money was all he wanted.” Neither of the parties to the litigation was examined in rebuttal nor interrogated originally in reference to these alleged statements, and hence, we have neither denial, admission, qualification nor explanation of either of the conversations attributed to him. Not a witness in the case appears to have been cross-examined by the opposite party, whether the deposition was taken by interrogatories or on oral examination. Yerbal [625]*625admissions have never'been regarded as the most trustworthy evidence ; and as there is much reason to believe or to doubt those attributed to the one party as to the. other, and as they cannot be reconciled, we think it will be safe to decide the case upon the testimony of the witnesses who depose to facts constituting the res gestae of the transaction, and upon the circumstauces shedding light upon it, which the evidence satisfactorily establishes — a course we pursued, under similar circumstances, in Daniels v. Lowery, 92 Ala. 519.

The material facts may be thus presented : The complainant is a negro carpenter, more than fifty years of age. He is illiterate, being unable to either read or write, and knows nothing of accounts. He had purchased the three acres of land from’ one McCormack at the price of one hundred and twenty-five dollars, of which he or his wife paid in cash thirty-five dollars. The remaining ninety dollars he earned by building for the defendant, Reggan, certain houses the latter had contracted to erect for a coal mining company, and the amount was paid by Reggan directly to McCormack, who executed to the complainant a warranty deed on the 17th day of January, 1891. After his purchase he built a small house upon the land for a home and also erected another building upon it for use as a store, with a room or hall in the upper story for church, society and social gatherings. The latter building he rented, in January, 1892, to the defendant, who was merchandizing there in April of the same year when the deed, the subject of investigation, was made. The complainant prior to his negotiation with Reggan',had mortgaged the property to a bank at Pratt City to secure a sum of money, not exceeding $66.90. He also owed another party about $35. It does not appear the first debt was pressing for payment, and for it the property was. ample security, worth, as the disinterested witness, McNoel, states, with the improvements, from $275 to $300. The second debt is not shown to have been a charge upon the place, or that the property, his exempt homestead, could have been subjected to its payment. It is conceded the complainant approached Reggan at the latter’s residence, with a request that he advance the money to pay off the two debts. When this request was made is matter of dispute, the complainant fixing the time at a [626]

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Bluebook (online)
111 Ala. 621, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-reggan-ala-1895.