Travis v. Merrill

Decision Date15 May 1950
Docket Number4 Div. 582
PartiesTRAVIS et al. v. MERRILL et al.
CourtAlabama Supreme Court

E. O. Baldwin, of Andalusia, for appellants.

Murphy & Murphy and Frank J. Tipler, Jr., of Andalusia, for appellees.

SIMPSON, Justice.

This appeal is from a final decree granting relief prayed for in the bill on a hearing of the witnesses ore tenus before the trial court.

The case was here before on appeal from an interlocutory decree on demurrer, where it was held that the facts as alleged warranted equitable relief. Since there was competent evidence to support the essential allegations of the bill, which it was within the province of the trial court to credit, we deem it proper to only deal with the present appeal briefly by making reference to the applicable principles of law pronounced in the first case. That case is reported as Merrill v. Travis, 248 Ala. 42, 26 So.2d 258.

The issue between the parties arose out of conflicting liens on a Pontiac automobile sold by appellees, E. R. Merrill, J. I. Merrill and J. M. Merrill, a partnership doing business under the name of Covington Motors, to one Armstrong under a conditional sale contract executed by Armstrong to them February 25, 1939. Appellant Travis' claim was under a mortgage on the automobile held by him, executed by Armstrong under date of October 10, 1939.

The facts established to sustain the essentials of the bill were: Appellant Travis (under his right as owner of the mortgage) sued Armstrong in detinue for the recovery of the automobile and two days later amended his complaint by making appellees Merrill parties defendant. Writ of seizure was issued and was duly returned by the sheriff showing that he had seized the automobile by taking it from the possession of appellees, to wit, December 30, 1939. On January 5, 1940, a replevin bond was approved with Armstrong as principal and appellees Merrill as sureties while they were still parties defendant. On March 4, 1940, plaintiff (appellant hdre) amended his complaint by striking appellees Merrill as parties defendant to the detinue suit and on November 22, 1943, obtained judgment against Armstrong, making proof that he, Armstrong, was in possession of the suit property when suit was begun, whereas the sheriff's return showed that the appellees were in possession of the property at the time of seizure and the proof in line with the allegations of the instant bill showed that the appellees were in fact in possession of the automobile when the detinue suit was instituted, having repossessed it from the said Armstrong under their conditional sale contract in August of 1939. When Travis took the detinue judgment against Armstrong, no proof was made as to the amount of his mortgage debt, nor was there any suggestion of any third party claimant or lien holder, as provided under § 929, Title 7, Code. The value of the property was adjudicated to be $550 and after the taking of the said detinue judgment, the replevin bond executed by Armstrong as principal and the Merrills as sureties was forfeited and appellees Merrill were forced to pay the amount of the judgment ($550) and costs of suit.

The purpose of the instant suit, inter alia, was for a reference to ascertain the amount actually due appellant Travis under the Armstrong mortgage and also the amount due appellees Merrill under the conditional sale contract and to require the said Travis to pay over to them the difference between the amount of his mortgage and the amount he received under the $550 judgment.

On a hearing the trial court granted relief under the bill and adjudged and decreed that the difference in the amount of the mortgage debt from Armstrong to Travis and the sum received by Travis from the detinue suit to be $371.45 and ordered a recovery of the appellant...

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1 cases
  • Travis v. Merrill, 4 Div. 615
    • United States
    • Alabama Supreme Court
    • May 24, 1951
    ...made to the decision of this court in Merrill v. Travis, 248 Ala. 42, 26 So.2d 258, and to the decision of this court in Travis v. Merrill, 254 Ala. 64, 46 So.2d 811. The suit is a suit in equity for an accounting and the first of the foregoing decisions was rendered on appeal from a decree......

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