Wright v. Wright

60 So. 931, 180 Ala. 343, 1913 Ala. LEXIS 356
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJanuary 23, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 60 So. 931 (Wright v. Wright) 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
Wright v. Wright, 60 So. 931, 180 Ala. 343, 1913 Ala. LEXIS 356 (Ala. 1913).

Opinion

de GRAFFENRIED, J.

Tte appellee made a contract to do certain railroad construction work, and the appellant was one of Ms sub-contractors. In tis contract with tte railroad company, it was agreed ttat tte [346]*346appellee was to receive $10 per 100 cubic feet for corduroy work. The contract between appellee and appellant is substantially in the same form as the contract between appellee and the railroad company. In the contract between appellant and appellee, however, it is agreed that appellant is to receive $5 per cubic feet for corduroy work.

In order that appellant might carry out his contract and perform the work which he had contracted to perform, the appellee let the appellant have some money and took a mortgage from appellant upon a certain railroad construction outfit, and upon certain live stock, to secure the payment of the debt. This property' so mortgaged by appellant to appellee is all of the property of the appellant, and if the claims of the appellee are correct the property is not of sufficient value to pay the debt of appellee. If the claims of the appellant are correct, then the appellant owes the appellee nothing.

The appellee claims that when the contract was made between him and the appellant it Avas agreed that appellant Avas to receive $5 per 100 cubic feet for corduroy Avork, Avhich was one-half of the amount Avhich the railroad company was to allow the appellee for such work; and that, in preparing the written memorial of the contract, the figures “100” Avere, by a clerical misprision, left out of the contract, and the writing was signed by both parties without a discovery of the error.

The appellant, on the other hand, claims that there Avas no such agreement as that set up by appellee, but that, on the contrary, the appellee agreed to pay him $5 per cubic foot for corduroy work; and that the writing as signed by the parties, correctly states the agreement Avhich they made. If the contention of appellant is correct, then the appellee was to pay him $5 for work for which the railroad company was to pay the appellee only 10 cents.

[347]*347The bill in this case was filed for the purpose of having the above contract reformed and the above-alleged mistake corrected, for an accounting before the register for the purpose of ascertaining the amount actually due appellee by appellant, for a foreclosure of the mortgage, and for the appointment of a receiver to preserve the property pending the litigation. The register, without notice, appointed a receiver, and an appeal from his order was taken to the chancellor. When the appeal was heard by the chancellor, both sides were represented by solicitors, and affidavits presenting the claims of each of the parties to the suit, and covering the matters in controversy between them, were submitted to him for his consideration.

The chancellor, after allowing an amendment to the bill, overruled the appellant’s demurrer to the bill as amended, and rendered a decree confirming the order of the register appointing a receiver.

(1) The bill alleges that the indebtedness secured by the mortgage was $3,325, owing at the time of the execution of the mortgage, and all future money or advances, of any kind, made by appellee to appellant; and that, when the bill was filed, there was $5,000.14 due appellee by appellant. The bill further alleges that this money was obtained by appellant from appellee for the purpose of carrying out his contract to construct a part of the railroad for appellee.

The question as to whether there is anything due appellee on said mortgage indebtedness depends upon the state of the account between appellee and appellant, growing out of the contract on the part of appellant to do said work. If the corduroy work was to be paid for at the rate of $5 per cubic foot, instead of $5 per 100 cubic feet, then there is nothing due appellee by appellant. As the contract, on its face, says that [348]*348the work was to be done at “$5 per cubic feet,” we think it plain that, in an action of detinue, the appellant would be able to defeat the appellee’s suit. In other words, the law does not furnish to appellee a plain and adequate remedy; for, if appellee’s claims are correct, it is necessary for him to obtain a correction of the contract in a court of equity, in order that the written evidence of the contract may be made to speak the truth. In a court of law the appellee would be held to the letter of the contract, whether that letter be a truthful letter or not. In a court of equity he can have the contract corrected, so as to make it speak the true agreement.

The bill alleges the insolvency of appellant, sufficiently indicates the necessity for the correction of the contract, shows that the amount due appellee on the mortgage indebtedness depends entirely upon the state of the indebtedness existing between appellee and appellant, growing out of their dealings with each other under the contract which is sought to be corrected; and we can see no reason why, as a part of the controversy between the parties can be settled'Only in a court of equity, the entire controversy between them should not be settled in that court. The bill, as amended, contains equity.

(2) As the appellant appealed to the chancellor from the order of the register appointing a receiver, and the chancellor heard the entire matter de novo, all parties being represented, we will consider the propriety of the appointment of the receiver as if the appointment had been made, in the first instance, by the chancellor after due notice to the appellant. When the chancellor sustained the appointment of the receiver, his action was the equivalent of an appointment of a receiver in the first instance.—Meyer v. Thomas, 131 Ala. 111, 30 South. 89.

[349]*349(3) The bill of complaint and the bill, as amended, are not sworn to on information and belief, but they are both sworn to as correct statements of facts within the personal knoAvledge of appellee. The bill, as amended, we think, shows that there is a reasonable probability that the complainant will ultimately succeed in obtaining the relief sought by the bill; and that there was imminent danger to the property, the subject of the suit. The bill alleges the insolvency of the appellant, and also alleges that, to avoid repaying money justly due the appellee, he is taking advantage of a clerical error in a Avritten' instrument, and claiming remuneration at $5 per cubic foot for work which he had contracted to do at 5 cents per cubic foot. We regard this feature of this litigation, coupled Avith the insolvency of the appellant, as of particular importance in detérmining Avhether the chancellor, in refusing to disturb the order of the register appointing a receiver, had evidence that there was imminent danger to the property, if left in the hands of appellant pending the litigation.

Under the allegations of this bill, verified by affidavit as we have above stated, we have an insolvent man in possession of perishable personal property — a large part of'it live stock, with the consequent necessity of being fed, watered, and cared for — and which property is mortgaged to the full extent of its value to the appellee. We have that insolvent man ready and willing to defeat the appellee’s claim by undertaking through a clerical misprision, to collect from appellee $5 per cubic foot for work Avkich he had contracted to do at 5 cents per cubic foot.

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Bluebook (online)
60 So. 931, 180 Ala. 343, 1913 Ala. LEXIS 356, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wright-v-wright-ala-1913.