Duncan v. Williams

McCLELLAN, J.'

There are apparently two decrees of the Chancery Court, which stand in the way of the relief sought by the present bill. Each of these decrees was rendered in the year 1841; each of them purported to foreclose a mortgage on the lands in controversy; each ordered a sale; under each a sale was had and confirmed, and a deed executed; and whatever title passed under either of them, is now held by the defendants below, appellees here. The bill in this case, which was filed July 6th, 1888, more than forty-six years after the enrollment of said decrees and the\ sales finder them, can, of course, be maintained at this late day only upon the grounds of fraud in the procurement and rendition of the decrees, and that the facts constituting the fraud have been discovered within one year next before the institution of the suit. — Code, § 2630. It may be admitted, for all the purposes of this appeal, that the bill sufficiently charges fraud, and knowledge of it on the part of the respondents, to have entitled the complainant to the relief prayed, had the cause of action not passed under the ban of the statute of limitations; and proceeding upon the ease presented with that concession, the pivotal inquiry is, whether the cause of action is brought by appropriate allegation within the exception to the statute above referred to, which, notwithstanding the bar has been perfected, considered apart from the concealment of fraud, allows one year after the discovery of the fraud in which s.uit may be brought. Does the bill charge, with the precision and directness which the law requires, that the facts relied on as constituting the fraud were discovered only within one year prior to July 6, 1888?

The bill is a very voluminous paper. It' alleges transactions which are spread over nearly half a century. It charges the connection with these transactions, at various ■points along the line of their development, of a great number of people, many of whom are long since dead. It involves all of these people in the fraudulent purposes and practices, the first tangible result of which was the rendition *347of the decrees in question in 1841, and the last development of which was the effort in 1887 to continue the concealment of the fraud from the complainant. All along throughout these years, covinous intent, resulting in fraudulent acts, is laid against complainant’s mother, her step-father, her half brother and sister, disconnected third persons with apparently no interests to subserve in defrauding complainant, and against the persons who now claim the - property. Yet, when the effort is made by the pleader to bring her case within the saving exception to the statute — when it was upon her to aver with precision that the facts constituting the fraud had been discovered within the year — the requirement is attempted to be met by the averment of one single fact, and this a fact which, at most, only tended to show fraud, from amongst the manifold substantive charges made by the bill.

To state the case more concretely: The bill alleges that John J. Springsteel, the father of the complainant, owned the land in controversy as far bach as 1838 or 1839, and up to his death, which occurred in February, 1840; that at the time of his death one Earle held a mortgage on the land, to secure the payment of $1,000; that on April 25, 1840, complainant’s mother, the widow of Springsteel, paid off this mortgage with money belonging to the estate, and took a paper from Earle evidencing the fact of payment and satisfaction; that soon after Springsteel’s death, one Mudge and Mrs. Springsteel agreed to intermarry, and thereupon they entered into a conspiracy to defraud the complainant, then an infant of tender years, of her patrimony; and in execution of their fraudulent design, said Mudge, with knowledge of the fact that the Earle mortgage had been satisfied, procured from Earle, who was a brother of Mrs. Springsteel, a power of attorney to prosecute a bill to foreclose the satisfied mortgage; that this bill was filed in October, 1840, and prosecuted to decree against Mrs. Springsteel and complainant and her brother; that Mudge, while acting for Earle pnder the power of attorney in prosecuting the suit, was appointed by the court as guardian ad litem for the infant defendants; that at the foreclosure sale Mudge became the purchaser, and soon after married Mrs. Springsteel, and lived with her on the land up to his death, which occurred five or six years afterwards; that said foreclosure suit proceeded “ almost side by side with another bill filed by the Planters & Merchants’ Bank and Hunt” to foreclose a mort*348gage on the land, executed in 1835; that said Mudge had arranged with complainants in this latter suit to acquire any title they should get out of that proceeding; that a decree of foreclosure passed in that case, the land was sold under said decree and bought by Hunt, who subsequently conveyed by quit-claim to Mudge; that Mudge paid nothing, or a nominal sum, for this conveyance, and that whatever he did pay was of funds belonging to the Springsteel estate; that this sale and conveyance passed no title as against complainant, because neither she, nor any one else in possession of the land, was made a party to the proceeding; that Mudge devised the land to complainant’s mother for life, with remainder over to her children by Springsteel, of whom only complainant was living, and by himself, of whom there were two; that Mudge and his wife fraudulently concealed from complainant the evidence of the satisfaction of the Earle mortgage, and of a re-conveyance of the land to Springsteel by one Pash, to whom it had been conveyed in 1839, by deed absolute in form, to secure the payment of $1,000, and which original conveyance still stood upon the records; that after Mudge’s death, this fraudulent concealment was continued by his widow, complainant’s mother, and after her death, in 1881, it was in like manner continued by the son and daughter of Mudge — half brother and sister to complainant — until in June, 1888, when complainant broke open a heavy and heavily locked express trunk belonging to her half brother, and then for the first time discovered, and came to a knowledge of these long concealed papers, and to a knowledge of ■ the facts constituting the frauds by which the two foreclosure suits had been prosecuted to successful issues, and her land had been sold and acquired by said Mudge; that prior to this, however, Price Williams, Sr., through whom the defendants claim, had, with full knowledge of the frauds which had been practiced upon her, by undue means induced her to sell a one-third undivided interest in the land to him, he inducing her to believe that she had no title, except to that extent, and that under the Mudge will, and he also bought the interest of the Mudge children.

There are very many other allegations in the bill, as to irregularites and errors apparent on the records of the two foreclosure suits, &c., but the averments we have stated are sufficient for a determination as to whether “the facts constituting the fraud” are shown to have been discovered within the year of the bill filed. It appears from the foregoing *349outline, that this discovery made by complainant embraced two papers, and nothing more. One of these was the Fash deed. This was wholly unimportant in any aspect, for two reasons: first, neither the complainant, nor any other party to the cause, claims through or under Fash; and second, he, it is alleged, was a party to the Earle foreclosure suit, made no defense, being without interest, and the decree in that case, whether fraudulent or not, was notice to the complainant that she. had no title to the land superior to that of her father, which was thereby subjected to sale and passed into Mudge, and hence the fact shown by this deed was a fact which must, in legal contemplation, have been known to complainant long before. The other paper found was the receipt of Earle as of April, 1840, evidencing the payment at that time of the mortgage, which was afterwards foreclosed. This receipt is only prima facie evidence of the payment. The payment itself, if conclusively shown, would be only a fact tending to show fraud. The receipt is open to explanation and falsification. But, even if shown to speak the real fact, that fact may be so explained as to deprive it of all probative force in the establishment of the alleged fraud. It is open to proof, notwithstanding the receipt, that the mort- ' gage was not paid, or that the receipt was really intended to evidence the satisfaction of the mortgage by the foreclosure sale of the land, and was incorrectly dated. And, taking the paper as genuine and correct, and conceding the fact to be that the mortgage was then satisfied, it by no means follows that the subsequent foreclosure of the satisfied mortgage by Mudge as attorney for Earle, and Mudge’s purchase of the land, was fraudulent. It may well be, that Mudge knew nothing of the alleged satisfaction. Indeed, the presumption of law which obtains under the circumstances shown here is against the imputation of fraudulent knowledge, intent and conduct on his part.—Prevast v. Gratz, 6 Wheat. 481. In any view of the paper discovered, therefore, it is merely evidence which prima facie is sufficient to establish a fact, which fact, when established, tends to show fraud on the part of Mrs. Stringsteel and Mudge in the foreclosure proceeding. To hold that the recent discovery of mere evidence like this, authorizes the destruction of repose and security, with which the statute of limitations envelops long past transactions, would be the opening up of the most solemn and ancient judgments and decrees upon the discovery of any badge of fraud, or suspicious circumstance, *350connected with them; and this, though the very element of suspicion and fraud may be the result of long lapse of time, and derive all its power of impeachment from the death of the parties who knew the facts. We can not accede to such a doctrine.

The bill should have gone further, and alleged with accuracy and precision when and how the complainant came to a knowledge of the various facts averred as constituting the fraud of which she complains. To a recovery it was essential to show, not only that the mortgage had been paid, but that Mudge, knowing this fact, had fraudulently conspired and colluded with Mrs. Sprinsteel to cut off complainant’s inheritance. It was also necessary to the relief sought, that knowledge of the fraud, and participation in it on the part of the respondents, should be shown. In one aspect of the case, it was also necessary to aver facts constituting the fraud which is charged against the Hunt decree; and admitting, for the sake of argument, that all these facts are alleged, it is nowhere stated in the bill when or how a knowledge of them came to the complainant; and it does not appear but that all these facts, excepting only the prima facie evidence of the payment of Earle’s mortgage, were known to the complainant more than one year before bill filed. On this state of averment, the chancellor properly held, that the case presented was without equity as upon a bill praying relief on the ground of fraud, the facts constituting which had been discovered within the period of the exception quoted. Gordon v. Ross, 63 Ala. 363; James v. James, 55 Ala. 525.

The bill can not be maintained at this late day for the irregularities and errors, however flagrant and fatal if seasonably attacked, apparent on the records of the foreclosure proceedings. In support of the regularity and validity of the decrees, and of the title acquired thereby, almost any fact essential to that end, and certainly any fact necessary to supply the defects pointed out here, whether consistent with or contradictory of the record, will, after the lapse of twenty years, be presumed, to sustain the validity of the proceeding. Barnett v. Tarrence, 23 Ala. 463; Grant v. Phillips, Ib. 275; McArthur v. Carrie, 32 Ala. 75; Matthews v. McDade, 72 Ala. 377.

So far as the relief prayed, or any collateral advantage, — as, for instance, the imputation of notice to respondents, — is claimed on the theory that the complainant had adverse possession of the land up to the time of the alleged ouster after *351the death of her mother, the position of appellant is untenable. "While it is roundly alleged that complainant has been in adverse possession since the death of her father, the facts stated in the bill very clearly negative such possession.. It is shown that Mudge entered in 1842, claiming as a purchaser under two foreclosure decrees, one of which, at least, was rendered in a proceeding directly adverse to the complainant; that he remained in possession till his death; that, by his will, a life-estate in the land passed into his widow, who held until her death, when complainant and two others took as tenants in common in remainder, as provided in the will. Under these facts, the occupancy or possession of the complainant with the holder of the legal title could not be adverse and hostile to that title. " The possession, on the contrary, is referred to the title, and any right or advantage springing from the possession enured to the benefit of Mudge and those who claim under him.—Scruggs v. Decatur Land Co., 86 Ala. 173. .

The bill was without equity in any aspect of its averments, and the decree of the chancellor is affirmed.