Pearson v. Dancer

SIMPSON, J.

This is an appeal from a decree of the chancery court sustaining a demurrer to the bill of complainant (appellant here), and the first causes of demurrer are to the sufficiency of the allegations of the bill as to the mistake, against which relief is sought.

The complaint alleges that a note was- given for an amount supposed to be due for interest, on a mortgage debt, but that “the sum was a mistake, as he was not due that amount of interest.” The bill does not show particularly wherein the mistake consisted, whether he had knowledge of it at the time, nor any facts tending to show -whether it was such a mistake, or made under such circumstances, as would justify equitable relief.

Mr. Pomeroy says that “Mistake, within the meaning of equity, and as the occasion of jurisdiction is an erroneous mental condition, conception or conviction, induced by ignorance, misapprehension, or misunderstanding of the truth, but without negligence, and resulting in some act or omission done or suffered erroneously by one or both of the parties to a transaction, but without its erroneous character being intended or known at the time.” — 2 Pomeroy’s Eq. Jur. § 839, pp. 299, 300, also § 854.

It follows then that, in order that a court of chancery may know whether the mistake complained of is such as calis for equitable interposition, it is necessary that the bill should “state with precision the facts constituting” the mistake, and going to show whether it occurred without negligence on the part of the party complaining.- — 3 Mayfield’s Dig. p. 231.

The further statement that various sums were paid, at different times, does not make the matter any clearer, nor show why the complainant did not know what sums he had paid.

*430While i't may he true that complainant could not state exactly just what amounts had been collected of rents, income and profits, which had not been accounted for, yet he certainly could state what amounts had been accounted for and could give some facts tending to show what amounts should have been received, so that the court could have some information upon which to base a conclusion as to whether equitable relief is justified. Nor does it aver that any demand was ever made for a statement of account. These averments are entirely too general, and the first and second causes of demurrer were properly sustained.

We come next, to consider the effect of the agreement which is alleged to have been made, in May, 1897, when the complainant conveyed the land in question to the respondents.

The allegations of the bill show that said land had been, on July 7, 1890, mortgaged to respondents, for a debt of $22,000.00; that ill May, 1897, there had been no accounting between the parties, but respondents, by their agent, claimed that the complainant was indebted to them in the sum of $6,080.00 for past due interest, in addition to the original principal of $22,000.00 and complainant executed a deed conveying to them for the expressed consideration of said principal $22,000.00 and, at the same time, executed his two notes, each for $2,240 and one for $1,616.29, making the sum of $6,096.29, payable 3 years from date. And that it was agreed, at said time, and was a part of the consideration of the conveyance, and of the notes, that all of complainant’s noles should be cancelled and delivered to him together with three $1,000.00 bonds which were left with them as additional security if at any time before the maturity of said notes, to-wit, within three years, said property should so increase in value as to make the defendants this amount of money with interest, crediting the complainant with all payments of rents.

It is insisted, on the part of the defendants by demurrer that this in an effort to vary,, by parol testimony the written obligation of the complainant, while the complainant replies that this is but the exercise of the rec*431Ognized equity jurisdiction, of declaring that a deed, unconditional in form, was intended to operate as a mortgage.

We do not discover any of the elements of a mortgage in the transaction, as set out in the bill.

It is not alleged that the property conveyed was, in any event, to stand as a security for the notes given for interest. On the contrary it was conveyed absolutely, in payment of the principal of the debts, and the agreement was not that the property should, in any event, be sold and the proceeds applied to the payment' of the said debt, but on the contrary the amount of principal due was paid and extinguished, and the property became the property of the defendants, without any conditions attached to the title. The only agreement was that, if the property should enhance in value, to the extent named, within the three years the said notes were to be cancelled.

So that, it is simply the case of a man, executing his note for a certain amount payable, at a certain time, seeking to prove by parol that at the; time of the execution of the notes there was a parol agreement to the effect that, the notes were not payable absolutely as stated therein, but if a certain event transpired before their maturity, they were not to be due at all. The fact that the agreement was contemporaneous with the sale of the land, and even a part of the same transaction, does not change the fact that the agreement was not about how ¡the land should be held, but simply about the cancellation of the notes. This is clearly within the prohibition in regard to contradicting written contracts by parol. 2 Pomeroy’s Eq. Jur. § 858, p. 324; Couch v. Woodruff, 63 Ala. 466; Green v. Casey, 70 Ala. 417.

It is alleged that complainant was sued on said notes and paid them, without making any defense, or seeking to enjoin their collection. We cannot see upon what principle of equity the court of chancery can now fix a. mortgage upon the lands to reimburse the complainant. The complainant prays for the specific performance of the contract, (which contract he does not state.) If it refers to the mortgage, there is no allegation showing a mortgage, if to the agreement regarding the notes, *432that was simply to deliver them up, cancelled, and they liave been paid and cancelled.

As a bill for specific performance tbe bill does not sbow tliat there is any contract in existence which can be specifically enforced. There are no allegations in the bill showing that the defendants were made 'trustees as to the rents and profits, or that the property was, in any event, to be made subject to the claim of the complainant, so that the demurrers to that aspect of the bill were also properly sustained.

In the view we take of the case it is unnecessary further to consider the causes of demurrer.

The decree of the court is affirmed.

Haralson, Dowdell and Denson, JJ.,concurring. .