Tyson v. Decatur Land Co.

MoOLELLAN,’ C. J.

— This is a bill to foreclose a mortgage'. It is filed by the Decatur Land Company, as assignee of the mortgagee, against the mortgagors and their grantees- of the equity of redemption. Certain pleas were interposed by the respondents, Tyson and Ar-rington, which went to the whole bill and in bar of any relief upon it. These pleas Avere nqt set doAvn for hearing as to their sufficiency, nor Avas their legal sufficiency in any other manner tested or attempted to be tested. These pleas were proved. The cause Avas submitted for final decree on them, as Avell as upon the answers, and on the evidence .in support of them. They and the proof of- them Avere disregarded at the hearing on the ground that they Avere Avithout merit, that is, presented no material defense and Avere therefore insufficient in law. There can be no doubt, we think, that this Avas an erroneous vieAv. In- chancery as Avell as at law, if issue be taken upon an immaterial and insufficient plea and it be established by the testimony, the respondent is en*417titled to the benefit of it as fully as if the .matter set up in it had been to the last degree material and a perfect defense against the bill. This doctrine is thus declared and illustrated by Mr. Daniel: “If the plaintiff reply to the plea, he thereby makes as full admission of its validity as if it had been allowed upon argument; so that if the defendant, at the hearing, proves his plea to be true, the bill must be dismissed. Therefore, when a defendant, in a plea of purchase for valuable consideration, omitted to deny notice, and the plaintiff replied to it, and the defendant, at the hearing, proved the purchase for valuable consideration, it was held that the bill ought to be dismissed; for it was the plaintiff’s own fault that he had not set the plea down for argument, when it would have been overruled. And it seems that in such case it will make no difference if the plaintiff should prove notice; for all that is required of a defendant, in such case, is to prove his plea, which he does by proving the purchase, and the payment of the consideration.” — 1 Daniel Ch. PI. & Pr., p. 695, citing among others the cases of Daniels v. Taggart, 1 Gill & J. 311; Meeker v. Marsh, 1 Saxton (N. J.), 198; Dows v. McMichael, 6 Paige 139; Harris v. Ingledew, 3 P. Wms. 94. Judge Story lays down the same proposition: “If the plaintiff conceives a plea to be defective in point of form, or of substance, he may take the judgment of the court upon its sufficiency. * * * * “If a plea is allowed upon argument, or if the plaintiff without argument thinks it, although good in form and substance, not true in point of fact; he niay take issue upon it and proceed to disprove the facts upon which it is endeavored to be supported. For, if the plea is, upon argument, held to be good; or the plaintiff admits it to be so by replying to it; the truth of the plea is the only subject of question remaining so far as the plea extends; and nothing but the matters contained in the plea, as to so much of the bill as the plea covers, is in issue between the parties. * * * * * If the defendant proves, the truth of the matter pleaded, the suit, so far as the plea extends is barred; even though the plea is not good, either in point of form or of substance.” — Story’s Éq. PI. § 697, citing among other authorities Hughes v. Blake, 6 Wheat. 453; Bo*418gardus v. Trinity Church, 4 Paige 178. Tbe same principle is announced by Mr. Beach. — 1 Beach Mod. Eq. Pr. § 329. In Mitford & Tyler’s Pleadings and Practice in Equity the doctrine is declared substantially in the language employed by Judge Story, pp. 390-1; and in addition thereto it is said: “By replying to a plea the plaintiff admits that it is sufficient in law, and cannot after-wards raise any questions as to its sufficiency.” p. 435. And so it is said in the American & English Encyclo-paedia of law: “Where a replication is had to a plea, and issue is joined thereon as to the facts, then, if it be proven true, it is admitted that they are sufficient in law to bar the plaintiff’s right to- recover. The English practice in chancery, in this respect, prevails here; and the bill will also be dismissed on proof of the facts pleaded in bar, without reference to other equities in the bill.” Yol. 6, p. 804.

These principles of English chancery pleading and practice relating as they do to a matter as to which no other provision lias been made or principle declared by our statutes or by the rules and decisions of this court, obtain in Alabama, not as positive rules, but as furnishing proper analogies to regulate practice. — Rule 7 Ch. Practice, Code, p. 1203. Their application here is not hindered by the provision of our statute that all defenses may be incorporated in the answer. — Code, § 699. This is permissive merely, for the benefit of a defendant, and he may avail himself of it not as he sees proper. If he does not avail himself of it but pleads independently, his plea stands upon the same footing as if the statutory provision did not exist. And on the other hand, if he does avail himself of it, and incorporates in the answer a plea in form and substance, that is a plea to all intents and purposes as if it had been separately filed, just as a demurrer is none the less a demurrer for being incorporated in the answer, and is, whether so incorporated or not, to be dealt with and disposed of according to the general principles of pleading and practice pertaining to demurrers. And there is the more reason for this court to adopt the rule in chancery that a cause may be as effectually tried and decided upon a false issue, in that *419no court bas gone further in applying this doctrine in all of its strictness to actions at law.

By analogy alike to the statutory rule dispensing with replications to answers (Code, §701), and to the rule obtaining at law that in the absence of a special replication to a plea the other party is held to have taken issue upon it, it must be held, and indeed has been held by this court, that in such case — the case of a plea to a bill in equity and a submission for final decree upon the plea either alone or along with other defenses — the complainant silently takes issue on the plea; and that is the case now before us.—Forrest & Wife v. Robinson Extr., 2 Ala. 215; American Freehold Land Mortgage Co. v. Dykes, 111 Ala. 178, 192.

Our conclusion, therefore is that complainant having taken issue on the pleas of the defendants Tyson and Arrington, which went to the whole bill, and the facts laid in those pleas having been proved, the bill should have been dismissed as to Tyson and Arrington, whether the pleas were in the abstract good or bad. The decree of the chancery court granting relief will be reversed, and a decree will be here entered denying relief and dismissing the bill as to the defendants Tyson and Arring-ton. As to the other defendants the decree is affirmed. •

Affirmed and reversed and rendered.

Tyson, J., not sitting.