Wood v. Estes

139 So. 331, 224 Ala. 140, 1932 Ala. LEXIS 516
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJanuary 21, 1932
Docket6 Div. 47.
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 139 So. 331 (Wood v. Estes) 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
Wood v. Estes, 139 So. 331, 224 Ala. 140, 1932 Ala. LEXIS 516 (Ala. 1932).

Opinion

KNIGHT, J.

Complainant, appellee, avers in her bill that on June 19, 1928, Ida May Wood, one of the respondents, executed to Tom G. Estes a deed of conveyance, whereby she conveyed to said Estes the south half of lot 15, in block 2, according to the plan and survey of Wood- ■ crest, a subdivision of the city of Birmingham, Ala., and this deed contained an agreement on the part of the grantor to pave the alley that was contiguous to, and immediately in the rear of, the property conveyed, and also to construct a sidewalk in front of this property.

It is further made to appear that Tom G. Estes is the husband of complainant, Elizabeth S. Estes, and that he, on the 28th day *142 of February, 1030, by deed, containing full covenants of warranty, conveyed tins property to complainant, together with the agreement of Ida May Wood to construct the pavement and sidewalk, which she had obligated herself to do in her deed to Tom G. Estes.

The deed of Wood to Tom G. Estes was filed for record in the office of the judge of probate of Jefferson comity on June 19, 1928, and the deed to complainant was filed on March 5, 1930.

The recited consideration of the deed from respondent Wood to Tom G. Estes was the “execution of a purchase money mortgage of even date with” the deed from grantor to grantee, securing $2,500, to be paid in five equal annual installments. The bill further avers that after the execution and delivery of the purchase-money mortgage and notes, Ida May Wood pledged this mortgage and the three unpaid notes to the respondent General Bond & Mortgage Company, Inc., to secure an indebtedness owed by her to the company, the amount of said indebtedness on information and belief, the complainant avers was $420, and matured on August 26, 1931. The bill also avers that note No. 3 secured by said mortgage matured June 19, 1931. The bill charge the said General Bond & Mortgage Company, Inc., with constructive notice of the agreement of Ida May Wood to construct the pavement and sidewalk, as the same is set forth in her deed to Tom G. Estes.

The complainant avers that said Ida May Wood has breached her agreement to pave the alley and to construct the sidewalk, and, by reason of this failure, she had been damaged in the sum of, to wit, $2,000, and which sum, she avers, is now due and unpaid, and should, in equity and good conscience, be applied upon the indebtedness secured by said mortgage. The bill was filed June 20, 1931.

The complainant seeks (1) that the court will ascertain and decree that complainant has been damaged to the extent of $2,000 by reason of the failure of the respondent, Ida May Wood, to construct the pavement and sidewalk, and for cancellation of said mortgage held by her upon the property, and for judgment for the excess against said Ida May Wood; (2)' if mistaken in that prayer, prays for specific performance of the contract ; and (3) if mistaken in the two previous prayers, prays for cancellation of so much of the mortgage indebtedness as exceeds the “$420.00 interest” of the General Bond & Mortgage Company, Inc., as pledgee of the debt, and for judgment against Ida May Wood for the excess. Usual general prayer follows.

To this bill, the two respondents, Ida May Wood and General Bond & Mortgage Company, Inc., filed separate demurrers, but each demurrer is similarly addressed, and is upon identically the same grounds. Thereafter, and before the submission, the respondent Ida May Wood filed additional grounds of demurrer. The demurrer filed by respondent Wood was directed to the bill in the following language: “And now comes yespond-ent, Tda May Wood, and demurs to the bill of complaint in above cause, and to each paragraph thereof, separately and severally, and as grounds of demurrer, states as follows:”

In the case of Oden v. King, 216 Ala. 504, 113 So. 609, 610, 54 A. L. R. 1413, Mr. Justice Thomas, speaking for the court, says: “When a bill contains several aspects, the proper method of testing the pleading as a whole, and the several aspects thereof, is to address the demurrers to the bill as a whole, or to the aspect of the bill as the demurrer is appropriate and is desired to be challenged in such manner.” Thompson v. Brown, 200 Ala. 382-384, 76 So. 298; Worthington v. Miller. 134 Ala. 420, 32 So. 748; Hudson v. Hudson, 204 Ala. 75, 85 So. 282; Bank v. Dunnavant, 204 Ala. 636, 639, 87 So. 105; City of Birmingham v. L. & N. R. R. Co., 216 Ala. 178, 112 So. 742.

It was also held in Oden v. King, supra, that a demurrer addressed to the bill as a whole, and separately and severally to each paragraph thereof, has the effect of a demurrer to the bill as a whole. So, in this ease, we can only consider and treat appellant’s demurrer as one directed against the bill as a whole, and cannot consider those assignments directed to the different paragraphs of the bill.

The appellee insists that, if each of the several aspects of th,e bill is defective, and subject to a properly directed demurrer, by reason of the manner in which the demurrers are addressed, the appellant can take nothing by her appeal, and cites in support of her contention Thompson v. Brown, 200 Ala. 382, 76 So. 298, 300. This would be true, if the bill in some one of its aspects contained equity. But a bill without equity in any of its aspects cannot stand. It must present some matter of equitable cognizance, or it must fall. In the Thompson Case, supra, the demurrers were filed to the bill as a whole, while the objections urged therein were appropriate only to the several aspects of the bill, and there was no ground of demurrer which tested the equity of the bill as a whole. In the case under consideration, there is a general demurrer in statutory form, which challenges the equity of the bill, and there is also the further ground that the bill shows on its face that the complainant has an adequate remedy at law, which is but the general demurrer in different language. Alabama Lime & Stone Co. v. Adams, 222 Ala. 538, 133 So. 580.

*143 In the ease of Oden v. King, supra, as well as in the later ease of American-Traders’ Nat. Bank et al. v. Henderson, 222 Ala. 426, 133 So. 36, this court held that if the demurrer is directed to the bill as a whole, and not to its respective aspects, it is error to sustain the same, where any one of the aspects presented by the bill is not siibject thereto. Of course, this means, and can only mean, that if the bill does not, in some one of its aspects, contain equity, the demurrer thereto must be sustained. Indeed, this finds support in the case of Jasper Band Co. v. Manchester Sawmills, 209 Ala. 446, 449, 96 So. 417.

Appellee seems to recognize the above rule, for we find in her brief, under ‘-“Point One,” the following: “A demurrer addressed to the bill as a whole, and separately and severally to each paragraph, has the effect of a demurrer to the bill as a whole, and cannot be sustained if there is any equity in the bill.”

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Bluebook (online)
139 So. 331, 224 Ala. 140, 1932 Ala. LEXIS 516, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wood-v-estes-ala-1932.