Coburn v. Coke
Decision Date | 18 June 1915 |
Docket Number | 785 |
Citation | 69 So. 574,193 Ala. 364 |
Parties | COBURN et al. v. COKE et al. |
Court | Alabama Supreme Court |
Rehearing Denied July 2, 1915
Appeal from Chancery Court, Lauderdale County; W.H. Simpson Chancellor.
Suit by Ella Coburn and others against Rosser J. Coke, as trustee and others, to quiet title. From a decree for defendants plaintiffs appeal. Affirmed.
Ashcraft & Bradshaw, of Florence, for appellants.
Mitchell & Hughston, of Florence, for appellees.
This appeal presents the question whether a mortgagor, a citizen of this state, can obtain a loan of money from a foreign corporation that has not complied with the law authorizing such corporation to do business in the state, and then maintain a bill to cancel the mortgage, on the ground that the same is void, without offering to do equity by a return of the money received. Will a bill to quiet title under sections 5443-5449 of the Code of 1907, in such a case relieve the mortgagor of the requirement to do equity by restoring the money secured by the mortgage?
The bill alleges that appellants are in the peaceable possession of the real estate described, claiming to own the same in their own right, and that appellees are reputed to hold a lien or incumbrance thereon, that no suit is pending to enforce or test the validity of such incumbrance, and that this suit is brought to settle the title to the lands and to clear all doubts and disputes concerning the same; and it calls upon the defendants (appellees here) to "set forth and specify their reputed lien and incumbrance upon said lands, and how and by what instrument the same is derived and created." Appellee trustee, as respondent in the court below, files his plea as follows:
Said appellee files, in addition to said plea, a demurrer to the bill, for that the bill is without equity and fails to offer to do equity, and then by answer sets up the mortgage executed by appellants on March 4, 1905, for $1,008.66 and interest thereon, payable as therein indicated to the Standard Guarantee & Trust Company, a corporation of Washington, D.C., and S.L. Harris, trustee, secured by the lands described in the bill, providing for foreclosure in event of default, etc., and duly recorded in the probate office of the county where the land is situated; that the grantee in said mortgage became a bankrupt, and appellee was duly appointed by the federal court of the Northern district of Texas as trustee of the bankrupt estate of the said mortgagee; and that the mortgage was in his possession and unpaid at the time of his plea and answer in said cause.
The testimony shows clearly that at the time the loan was negotiated and the money received the transaction was an Alabama contract. The loaning of the money and securing its payment by mortgage on real estate is engaging in business in the state, within the meaning of this statute, although there be but a single transaction. State v. Bristol Bank, 108 Ala. 3, 18 So. 533, 54 Am.St.Rep. 141; Dundee Mortgage Co. v. Nixon, 95 Ala. 318, 10 So. 311. At said time the mortgage was executed and the loan was made the mortgagee had not filed in the office of the secretary of state an instrument in writing, under seal of the corporation and signed officially by its president and its secretary, designating at least one known place of business in this state, and an authorized agent or agents thereat, as required by sections 1316 and 1317, article 16, Code of 1896, the statutes of force where the loan was made and the mortgage was executed.
The equitable doctrine having application in this case is expressed in the maxim, "He who seeks equity must do equity." The meaning of this expression is that whatever be the nature of the controversy between the parties, and whatever be the nature of the remedy demanded, the court will not confer its equitable relief upon the party seeking its interposition and aid, unless he acknowledges or concedes, or will admit and provide for, all the equitable rights, claims and demands justly belonging to the adversary party, growing out of, or necessarily involved in, the subject-matter of the controversy. The court will give the plaintiff the relief to which he is entitled only on condition that he has given or consents to give the...
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