Winn v. Fitzwater

44 So. 97, 151 Ala. 171, 1907 Ala. LEXIS 506
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedMay 29, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 44 So. 97 (Winn v. Fitzwater) 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
Winn v. Fitzwater, 44 So. 97, 151 Ala. 171, 1907 Ala. LEXIS 506 (Ala. 1907).

Opinion

HARALSON, J.

James H. Lowry was the executor of the will of A. J. Lowry. The will of said A. J. Lowry in its sixth item provides: “I do hereby constitute and appoint him (James H. Lowry), executor of this my last will and testament, with full power to sell at public or private sale, and wthout any order of court, any lands or property that may be necessary to be sold for the payment of any debt I may owe at my death, and in view of this confidence and trust of my beloved son, I expressly will and desire that upon granting letters of executorship, that my said.son, shall not be required to execute any bond, the same being hereby waived.”

The wife of James H. Lowry, by item 5 of the will, was made alternate executrix, in the event of the death of said James H. Lowry.

Item 7 provides: “That the control and management of said property by my son and his wife, hfary Lowry, shall continue during their lives, first, under the control' of James H. Lowry, and if he should die and his wife, Mary, survive him, then his wife, Mary Lowry, and I expressly Avill and desire, that Avhile the title of the property, real and personal, and the rents, vests in the children of said James H. Lowry, yet the said James H. Lowry, during his life shall have a right to use the rents and profits, Avithout any liability to account for the same, and in the event of his death, his wife. Mary Lowry, shall have libe authority, this provision being made in the confidence that my son and his wife will properly clothe and support said children.”

On the death of said A. J. Lowry, F. A. Vaughan, as is shown, claimed to he a creditor of his estate, to the amount of $968.29, and he pressed said James IL, as executor, to pay the same; and said James IL, as executor, [174]*174on the 25th.of August, 1898, executed to said Vaughan what purported to be an absolute deed to the real estate belonging to the said A. J. Lowry, at his death. The bill avers (section 12) that while said instrument appears to be an absolute deed, it was • understood and, agreed between the said F. A. Vaughan and ¡James .H. Lowry, at the time, said deed was executed, that the same was to secure the past due indebtedness;-that the said Lowry was to be, and did remain, in possession of said lands therein ■ conveyed, up to the present time; and that it was further understood. and agreed, at the time of- the execution of said paper, that the said - James H. Lowry should make payments on the-same, from time to time, as he was able, and that he should remain in possession of said property undisturbed until he could pay the amount therein claimed to be due, and it was distinctly understood, that the said deed was to operate only and solely as a security for the amount claimed to be due from the said Lowry as executor of said A. J. Lowry, deceased, and when all of said indebtedness was paid, that the said Vaughan would surrender said deed and convey all his right, title and interest in and to said •lands, back to the said James H. Lowry as -such executor. It is further charged, that at the time said deed was executed, on a fair settlement there was nothing due from said J. H. Lowry to said F. A. Vaughan; that said land conveyed in said deed was worth the sum of $2,000, at the time of said conveyance, and complainants aver, that they are ready and willing to pay any amount that may be due from the estate of A. J. Lowry, deceased, to the said F. A. Vaughan, at the time of the filing of this bill, or at the time of the rendition . of decree thereon, and that since the making of said deed, the said J. H. Lowry has made various and sundry payments thereon, amounting to more than $300.

[175]*175It was further shown, that said F. A. Vaughan died intestate in July, 1892, in Tallapoosa county, and that W. H. Wynn, the defendant, was duly appointed and is now the administrator of the estate of said deceased,, and on the 25th of February, 1905, as such administrator, he commenced his suit in electment in the circuit court of said county, against James H. Lowry, for the possession of the lands described in the bill, purporting to have been conveyed to said deceased by said deed,. which suit is now pending in said court. Complainants offer to pay to said Wynn, as such admnistrator, whatever sum may be really, fairly and honestly due from the estate of said A. J. Lowry, deceased, to the estate of said F. A* Vaughan, deceased, and submit themselves to the jurisdiction of the court for all purposes connected with and incident to the foreclosure of said instrument above mentioned.

•The payer is for an injunction against said Wynn, as administrator, pending this suit, from prosecuting his said suit in ejectment against said James H. Lowry for the possession of said lands; and, on a final hearing, for a decreee declaring said deed to be a mortgage to secure the indebtedness due by the estate of said A. J. Lowry, deceased, to said F. A. Vaughan and to his administrator, W. H. Wynn, and for a reference to the register to ascertain the amount due on said mortgage, after excluding all matters not properly chargeable against the estate of said A. J. Lowry, and after deducting all payments that have been made thereon, and any indebtedness due from said Vaughan to said A. J. Lowry, as set up in the bill, and that upon the payment of such balance as may be found due, the estate of said Vaughan, or to his administrator, Wynn, that said mortgage be declared void and of no effect, and for a divestiture, of title out of the estate of said Vaughan, his heirs and administrators, and the investiture of same in complain[176]*176ants, as fully as if said instrument purporting to be a deed had never been made, and for a perpetual injunction against said Wynn and his successors from the-prosecution of said ejectment suit. There was, also, a prayer for general relief.

The defendant demurred to the bill on many grounds,, and moved the court to dismiss it for want of equity. One of the grounds of demurrer was, that a certain note-made by Steiner and Vaughan and Wright, was, as shown by the bill, barred by the statute of limitations and by thp statute of. nonclaim as against the estate of said Vaughan.

The chancellor was of opinion that, if true as alleged in the bill, that said deed was to operate as a mortgage; that it was understood and agreed between the said Vaughan and J. H. Lowry, at the time said deed was. executed, that the same was to secure past due indebtedness; that Lowry was to remain in possession of said lands and make payments on said indebtedness, from time to time, until he .could pay such indebtedness, and it 'was distinctly understood that said deed was to operate only and solely as a security for the amount claimed by said Vaughan to be due from said Lowry as executor, and that said Lowry made payments thereon, and the parties treated said deed as a mortgage, then the court was of opinion that it would be inequitable and unjust to complainants to suffer said deed to stand as an absolute conveyance, especially since complainants offer to-do equity by paying the debts said deed was intended to secure. The demurrers to the bill and the motion to dismiss were separately overruled.

In this case, the evidence is conclusive, that a debt existed from Lowry to Vaughan, prior to and at the time of the execution of the deed. The recitals of the deed itself, show this fact, aside from the other evidence-in the case.

[177]*177It also appears, that the debt was held, after the execution of the deed, as a continuing obligation.

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Bluebook (online)
44 So. 97, 151 Ala. 171, 1907 Ala. LEXIS 506, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/winn-v-fitzwater-ala-1907.