McGehee v. Weeks
McGehee v. Weeks
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
This appeal is prosecuted from an interlocutory decree granting an application on the part of the defendant and cross-complainant, A. W. Weeks, for a writ of sequestration to seize certain agricultural products grown upon the premises in litigation. Appellants were the complainants in the court below, and by their bill seek to cancel a deed absolute in form executed by them in fa,vor of the defendant. The theory of the bill seems to be that this deed was intended as a mortgage, or at least that appellants by separate instrument of writing were accorded the right to repurchase the lands upon payment of one thousand nine hundred and sixty-five dollars and eighty-four' cents on or before November 1, 1914; and in event they did not redeem the land by that date, they, by the same instrument, promise to pay the defendant or 'order the sum of one hundred twenty five dollars as and for the rent of the premises for the year 1914, The writing by which they promise to pay rent and by which they are given the right to redeem the land appears to have been executed on the same day the deed of conveyance was signed and delivered.
This separate instrument is crudely drawn, but, whether it operates as a deed of defeasance or not, it appears from the pleadings that appellants, as the gran
We cannot say that the chancellor erred in the rendition of the decree complained of. No testimony has been taken, and the cause has not yet been tried upon its merits. It was certainly within the power and the sound discretion of the chancellor to issue the writ of sequestration complained of. The cross-complainant tendered and the chancellor required a good and suf
Let the decree of the lower court therefore be affirmed, and the cause remanded.
Affirmed and remanded.
Reference
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- 1. Mortgage. Deed as mortgage. Parol evidence. Cancellation of instruments. Suit to cancel deed. Relief. Sequestration. ■ The grantors of a deed, on the trial of their suit to cancel the deed on the theory that it was intended to he a mortgage or that they were by a separate instrument accorded the right to repurchase, had the right to show by parol evidence that the deed was intended to operate as a mortgage where they remained in possession after the giving of the deed. 2. Cancellation oe Instruments. Suit to cancel deed. Suggestion. In á suit to cancel a deed absolute in form, on the theory that it was intended as a mortgage, where defendant filed a cross-bill averring that he was the landlord of complainants and that they were indebted to him for rent for a year, and that he believed that they would remove the agricultural products from the leased premises, unless sufficient goods were distrained, it was within the discretion of the chancellor to issue a writ of sequestration to seize sufficient crops to cover the amount of the rent; upon cross-complainants procuring a sufficient bond to indemnify complainant.