Court Opinion

ID: 6516188
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-19 18:26:53.175596+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:55:01.857885
License: Public Domain

HARALSON, J.
1. As appears from the bill, I. L. Swan, the party named as trustee in the deed in this case, was dead at the time the bill was filed. It was unnecessary to make his personal representative or heirs parties defendant to the bill. Upon his death, the trust estate did not descend to his heirs, or pass to his legal representative. — Code, § 1848; McDouyald v. Carey, 38 Ala. 320 ; Sprague v. Tyson, 44 Ala. 341.
2. It is the well settled rule, that a promise, verbal or written, to pay the debt of another, if not founded on a precedent liability, or a new consideration, will not support an action; that when the promise is simply to pay the debt of another, such promise is not binding without being in writing, based on a consideration expressed in the writing, and that in cases where the original debt is extinguished, or the day of its payment postponed, either expressly or by implication, the contract is a new substitutionary one, and is binding. — Townsend v. Rutledge. 38 Ala. 716 : Underwood v. Lovelace, 61 Ala. 157; Dunbar v. Smith, 66 Ala. 490; Thornton v. Guice, 73 Ala. 322. In Davidson v. Rothschild, 49 Ala. 109, it was held, that a promissory note imports a consideration, and when “given by an executor, administrator or guardian, it is prima facie evidence of assets, because assets are presumed to be the consideration upon which a promise is founded. Between the original parties, it is prima facie evidence only; and the defendant may show that, in fact, there were no assets, and thus defeat a recovery for want of a sufficient; couside ratio. — Edwards on Bills, p. 78. On proof by the defendant that the note was given for the debts of the ward’s estate, and also, that there were no assets of the ward’s estate to pay it (the plaintiff being the administrator of the payee), no recovery could be had, on the ground of a want of consideration, but not because the note was void *369by the Statute of frauds. — 2 Wms. Exrs. (Am. Ed. with notes), p. 1818. Edwards on Bills and Notes, supra; Lehman v. Levy, 69 Ala. 51.
Now, it is shown by the appellant, defendant below, that his father, E. T. Read, died leaving a will, and it was probated, and appellant was appointed executor of it by the probate court of Calhoun county; that the estate was in process of administration at the time of the execution of the notes and mortgage sued on, and that the lands embraced in the mortgage belonged to the said E. T. Read, at the time of his death, and were the only lands he owned. In his answer, the defendant states, that he and his brother, I)r. E. T. Réad, were the joint owners of the lands, — inherited, of course, from their father, — that he has purchased from his said brother, his half interest in said lands, and was indebted to him therefor, in the sum of $2,000, and he made application to Rowan, Dean & Co., for the loan of $2,000 with which to meet that indebtedness, which they agreed to let him have, and, also, the further sum of $1,000 to cover an open account against him, held by said firm, a part of which was past due, and a part of that would be due on 1st of January, 1891, “ and for any other loa,ns or advances which might be made to respondent., during the years 1890, .1891 and 1892, up to the time, said notes would fall duo.” The loan was accordingly made, the notes and mortgage given as wo find them in the transcript. The, contention on the part of appellee is, that the $1,000 note was given to cover an indebtedness of $415.29, owing on an open account by appellant to the firm of Rowan, Dean & Co., and an open account of appellant’s father, E. T. Read, deceased, for $584.71, each of which accounts matured on the first of January, 1891; that the understanding and agreement between appellant and Rowan, Dean &Co., as to this loan was, that appellant was to assume and pay the indebtedness of his deceased father, and this indebtedness was accordingly included in the $1,000 note, and (hat the loan of the $2,000 with which to pay for said land, was made on the condition chat the appellant and his wife would join-in a deed of trust on said lands, to. secure $3,000 ; embracing said $2,000, and also a $1,060 note, for his own and his father’s indebtedness to said firm.
We will not review the evidence tending to support *370the contentions of the respective parties. The notes and mortgage imported a consideration, entitling the com-complainant to a decree, unless such prima facie proof was overcome by defendant, showing a want of consideration. The proof on the part of complainant, consisted of his own deposition and that of Walter Dean, a member of the firm of Rowan, Dean & Co., who negotiated the transaction with defendant, and fully supports the caso as made by the complainant. The proof on the part of defendant consisted of his own and his wife’s deposition, both swearing that there was no agreément on their part, that the indebtedness of E. T. Read, deceased should be included in the $1,000 note. On this evidence, the chancellor found for the complainant, and we find no reasons to disturb his finding.
There was no proof to show, that the estate of said E. T.Reed was insolvent, but it is plainly inferable that it was solvent. The lands could not. have been appropriated in the manner they were by defendant and his brother, on any other basis than the solvency of the estate. The defendant was the executor of the will of his father, from whom he inherited half of his lands. These lands were bound for the debt of the deceased to Rowan, Dean & Co. in the absence of personal assets of the estate sufficient to pay it. The defendant had purchased his brother’s half interest in them, and had a personal interest to pay the debt of the estate to said firm. In one sense, the debt was his. He could not get a title to the lands free from their liability to be sold to discharge said debt, until he paid it; and having paid the debt, the correctness of which is not disputed, the amount paid would have been a credit to him as executor on settlement. Until the defendant showed, therefore, there were no assets of his father’s estate with which to pay the amount of said debt included in said note, he could not defeat a recovery on the ground.of a want of consideration, or that the obligation sued on, was within the statute of frauds.
3. The case breaks down also on the other defense set up, — that the execution of said mortgage, was not done in the manner required by statute, to convey the homestead. It is not denied that the mortgage on its face is executed in due, legal form, but the defense is, that the wife, in truth and in fact, did not appear before the *371judge of probate who certified her acknowledgment and separate examination. There is not a single fact deposed to, tending to show fraud or duress practiced on the mortgagor or his wife in obtaining'their signatures to or acknowledgement of the conveyance. They do not dispute their signatures. The papers were prepared and read over to them bv their own attorney. He and they went together to the court house, for the purpose of having the mortgage executed. Their purpose could not have been less than to have it properly and legally executed. They both say the mortgage was signed, by them in a. room in the court house1, occupied by the clerk of the probate judge. The husband testified that Col. Caldwell, their attorney, folded the mortgage up, after it was signed, and walked out of this room, into the adjoining one occupied by Probate Judge Crook, and the defendant and his wife followed him and found the judge seated at a table, using a type-writer, when Col. Caldwell walked up to the table and said, “Judge, here are those papers,” laying them down on the table, and Col. Caldwell soon walked out, leaving the defendant and wife and the judge alone in the room. They both proposed to swear, against the objection of the complainant, that the judge did not examine the wife apart from her husband or otherwise, and that neither of them acknowledged the deed before him.
This evidence shows, that the wife appeared before the judge for the purpose of acknowledging her signature to the mortgage, and that the judge had the mortgage in his possession to be acknowledged before him by her. The attorney had evidently prepared the judge for the business, for he said, “Judge, here are those papers,” manifestly reminding him of a previous conversation between them about the papers. This case then, comes up to the rule, that when the acknowledging officer has jurisdiction, which is acquired by having the party acknowledging and the instrument to be acknowledged before him, and he proceeds to exercise his jurisdiction, the certificate, in the absence of fraud or duress, cannot be impeached by parol. — Am. F. L. Mort. Co. v. James, 105 Ala. 347; Grider v. Mortgage Co., 99 Ala. 281; Giddens v. Bolling, 99 Ala. 319.
The frequency with which such acknowledgments are being disputed, for the purpose of invalidating mort*372gages- on which loans of money have been confessedly obtained, shows the value and importance of the stringency of the rule as we have laid it down. The best way, where the husband and wife would not convey their homestead, but would preserve it intact to the family, is not to sign auy conveyance in which it is included.
Affirmed.