Winn v. Ham

1 Charlton 70
CourtChatham Superior Court, Ga.
DecidedApril 15, 1821
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Charlton 70 (Winn v. Ham) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Chatham Superior Court, Ga. primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Winn v. Ham, 1 Charlton 70 (Ga. Super. Ct. 1821).

Opinion

My CMABLTOlf, Judge.

THIS bill in its application for relief, prays for an injunction, upon the following allegations.

That sometime, and perhaps, at the commencement of the the year 1818, the complainant’s affairs were so embarrassed, that without a sacrifice of property he could make no payments : that under the pressure of such necessitous circumstances, the complainant “ thinks,” on the suggestion of Mara, was induced to enter into an agreement with him for a loan of money—or as is charged in the bill, “ for the advance of such sum of money as would enable your orator to relieve himself from his embarrassed situation.” That according to the terms of such agreement, and in “ consequence of it” the complainant on or about the 2nd of March, 1818, gave, or executed a bond to Mara in the penal sum of $3750, conditioned for the payment of $1875, payable in the ensuing February, with legal interest from its date : That a mortgage of personal property was contemporaneously executed, the better to secure the payment of the money in the bond. That afterwards, but the precise time not recollected, Mara obtained from complainant the assignment or transfer of an instrument in writing, purporting to be a contract between the complainant, [71]*71and one Virgil H. Vivian, for the hire of certain slaves of the complainant to Vivian, by which the latter was bound to pay to complainant $1200, for the services of said slaves at the expiration of one year : That the sum advanced on the security of the bond and mortgage, and that secured by Viviónos contract and assigned to Mara, by no means amounted together with lawful interest thereon to the sum of three thousand and seventy-five dollars, the aggregate amount of the sums due by the said bond and contract: that on the contrary, the securities united, not only covered the demand, for which the complainant was liable, but gave to “ Mara exorbitant usurious interest,” upon the amount actually advanced to complainant: that on the 16th of November, 1819, the bond and mortgage thus obtained from the complainant was assigned, or pretended to be assigned by Mara to Jesse Ham : that at the epoch of this assignment, the complainant believes Ham had a knowledge or notice of the usury, connected with the circumstances of the transaction of the loan or advance of money for which the bond was given, and wras equally cognizant of the fact, that the Vivian contract was transferred for the express purpose of securing usurious interest on the money actually advanced by Mara: that the complainant neither knows nor admits, that Ham gave any consideration or equivalent for the property he acquired in the bond and mortgage by the assignment: that in the transfer of the agreement between the complainant and Vivion to Mara, Ham acted as the friend and agent of complainant, and that complainant believes received from Mara a written acknowledgment to pay over to complainant any surplus of said contract, after discharging the usurious interest: that complainant believes Ham is now in possession of such receipt or stipulation ; and complainant thinks if such receipt were produced, it would appear that the complainant had engaged to pay 25, or 33 per centum on the money borrowed from Mara: that on the 25th of January, 1820, the complainant paid on the bond $1350: that [72]*72on the 23d of March, of the same year, Ham proceeded to foreclose the mortgage—the negroes levied upon, are advertised for sale by the Sheriff: and that the complainant is ready and willing to pay Mara or Ham, the sum borrowed with legal interest. The hill prays specific and general relief, and for the writ of injunction to stay proceedings on the execution issued by virtue of the foreclosure of the mortgage, until the further order of this Court. A rule was granted by my predecessor to shew cause why an injunction should not be granted. Much learning and great ability have been displayed in support and against the rule, and upon the foregoing synopsis of the allegations of the bill, it is now my duty to discharge the rule or make it absolute. When on a former occasion this hill was submitted to my examination, I entertained scarcely a doubt of the course I should take, or that which would be prescribed to the mind of any Chancellor. The discussion before me by the counsel of the defendants, and the suggestion of extrinsic matter, if I may so express, produced an embarrassment which required this short delay for reflection, and to afford to the argument the deliberate attention to which it became entitled.

Mr. Wayne contended, that every relief the complainant now seeks to obtain by a chancery investigation, he could have obtained at common law, under that equitable remedy and form of proceeding, designated in our Judicial Act, in relation to the foreclosure of this species of mortgage—and that if he neglected to avail himself of that proceeding, he could not now convert his laches into an excuse for an application to this Forum. This is a difficulty which exhibits itself in limine, and stands with a formidable aspect, in the very threshhold of the case. But my mind has conquered it, and in sustaining the jurisdiction, I am about to exercise, I can perceive no hostility between the statutory remedy and those general powers which a Court of Chancery assumes, in suppressing frauds beyond the control of a common law proceeding. It is true you must pursue the remedy pointed out [73]*73by statute in foreclosing a mortgage, and you can pursue no other. But does that form of remedy under our statute offer to the mortgagor every equitable relief to which he may be erititied ? It certainly does not, nor could the Legislature have intended the forms of the statutory foreclosure, as adequate to the fulfillment of all the justice a mortgagor might righteously claim. The statutory remedy can only afford relief on a dispute as to the sum due, by the exhibition of such proofs and evidence, as are admissible before a common law tribunal on a trial by Jury. The affidavit and bond of the mortgagor are mere bases for the order of postponement of sale, without giving to such affidavit the attributes of an answer in chancery. It only discloses facts, the mortgagor must subsequently establish, through those media recognized by a common law investigation. But if payments have been made, resting upon the exclusive knowledge of the mortgagee—if by withholding accounts, he has fraudulently violated any confidence reposed in his integrity by the mortgagor—if there has been any breach of trust confided to the honor and conscience of the mortgagee— if by associating with the sums actually lent, to the mortgagor, an iniquitous and ruinous interest, manifestly the base triumph of avarice over the miseries and necessities of the borrower—a transaction assuming any of these aspects, leaves the party remediless at common law, and therefore our Judicial Act, independent of the general powers incidental to, and inseparably amalgamated with the functions of a Chancellor, expressly delegates to the Superior Court opened in its Equity side, the “powers of a Court of Equity in all cases where a common law remedy is not adequate.”

It must be obvious from the allegations of the bill, now under discussion, that the common law remedy of our Judicial Act, cannot reach and probe the distresses and exigencies of the complainant’s case.

[74]

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Bluebook (online)
1 Charlton 70, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/winn-v-ham-gasuperctchatha-1821.