Daniels v. Lowery

COLEMAN, J.

The two bills were filed for the same purpose, namely, to have deeds which are absolute iix terms, declared to be mortgages. The evidence in the two cases is very similar; many of the same witnesses are examined in both cases; the parties are represented by the same counsel, and they respectively ask that the briefs filed in one case be considex’ed as the bi'iels for the other, and that the cases be coxxsidered together.

Ixx the case of Robert Loweiy, both he and his wife testify positively, that it was understood and agreed that the deed should stand as a mortgage to secure the loan of two hundred dollars. W. J. Daniels, the grantee, states, there was no such agreement; that he refused to. loan Robert Lowery any money, and refused to accept a mortgage, although offered to him; but states he bought the land absolutely for two hundred dollars in cash. He states, however, as follows: “There was a vex’bal contract between us, that he would be allowed to redeem the land. Bob was to rent- the land for five years, and pay me fifty dollars a year rent, and at the end of five years he was to pay me the purchase-money, two hundred dollars. Then I was to transfer the land hack to him; hut,'if he failed to pay me the two hundred dollars at the end of the five years, the land was mine? This statement of the grantee has an important bearing, not that it is competent to show by parol, that an absolute deed was intended as a conditional sale, but *521as an admission that there was a parol cotemporaneous agreement, different from that expressed in the written instrument..

The terms of the verbal contract, as stated by Daniels himself, fairly construed, would make the transaction a conditional sale, rather than an unconditional sale with the right in the grantor to repurchase. — Logwood v. Hussey, 60 Ala. 417. In the case of Douglass v. Moody, 80 Ala. 66, it was held, “The requisite degree of proof varies as the controversy may be, whether an unconditional sale or a mortgage, and whether a conditional sale or a mortgage, was intended. In the former case, the evidence must be clear and convincing; in the latter, courts of equity are inclined to consider the transaction as a mortgage.”

In determining whether a particular transaction was a mortgage or a conditional sale, there are some facts which may be regarded as of controlling importance. ' Did the relation of debtor and creditor exist before and at the time of the transaction? Or did the transaction begin in a negotiation for the loan of money? Was there great disparity between the value of the property, and the consideration passing for it ? Is there a debt continuing for which the vendor is liable ? If any one exist, in a doubtful case, it will go far to show a mortgage was. intended. — Turner v. Wilkinson, 72 Ala. 366.

The evidence shows, and Lowery admitted, that he executed his promissory note to the defendant Daniels for fifty dollars, annually for several years, specifying as the.consideration that it was the rent of the land; but he says Mr. Daniels told him to give these notes in that way, so that if his (Lowery’s) creditors for supplies or advances should undertake to enforce their claims, Daniels would have precedence, and in this way the payments could be secured'to the payment of the debt, for the two hundred dollars, secured by the mortgage; .and we are satisfied that the conclusion of the chancellor was correct in holding that Lowery paid considerably more in cotton to defendant each year than the fifty dollars, evidenced by the notes, alleged to have been given for rent.

Many witnesses were examined to prove admissions by Lowery that he had sold the land to Daniels, and of Daniels, that he said “all he wanted was his money,” and to others, “his money and the interest on it.” The testimony can not be reconciled.

We have construed the transaction from the testimony of the parties themselves, who, it seems, were alone when the terms were agreed upon, and considered in connection with other facts, fairly deducible from the testimony of all the witnesses, have reached the same conclusion as the chancellor.

*522Much testimony was introduced to show that the lands conveyed by Robert Lowery were his homestead, and that his wife did not acknowledge the conveyance before any person authorized to take acknowledgments. If the question was properly before us, and conceding that she did make the acknowledgment, we would be constrained to hold, that the certificate of the officer before whom the acknowledgment was made,

was fatally defective, and that as an alienation of the homestead, wlieiher intended as a mortgage or deed of conveyance, it was a nullity. The word “persuasion” in the certificate of acknowledgment is not a substantial substitute for the word ■“threats,” required by statute. — Code of 1886, § 2508, and authorities. The form of the acknowledgment to the conveyance has been held insufficient, ever since the date of the act approved Eeb. 9, 1877. The question has been directly adjudicated. Motes v. Carter, 73 Ala. 553.

Both cases are affirmed.