Allison v. Corson

88 F. 581, 32 C.C.A. 12, 1898 U.S. App. LEXIS 2100
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedJuly 2, 1898
DocketNo. 1,044
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 88 F. 581 (Allison v. Corson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Allison v. Corson, 88 F. 581, 32 C.C.A. 12, 1898 U.S. App. LEXIS 2100 (8th Cir. 1898).

Opinion

SANBORN, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal by the owner of a first mortgage upon real estate from an order refusing to grant a preliminary injunction against the taking of a tax deed upon the mortgaged property by the assignee of a tax certificate which is based on taxes levied after the first mortgage was made, and which was held by the second mortgagee, from the time a suit to foreclose the first mortgage, to which he was a party defendant, was commenced, until after that suit was heard on the bill and his answer, and submitted for decision, and was then assigned to the appellee Henry T. Corson. The appellant filed his bill for the injunction on October 11, 1897. No demurrer or answer to it was interposed, but the appellees presented certain affidavits on the hearing upon the application for the injunction, and the bill and these affidavits disclose these facts: On June 17, 1890, Fred D. Gillespie and his wife mortgaged to Fred T. Evans four lots, which Gillespie owned, in the town of Hot Springs, in the state of South Dakota, to secure the payment of his notes to Evans for $15,000; and Evans pledged these notes to the Western Home Insurance Company, a corporation, to secure his debt of $10,000 to it, which has never been paid. This corporation has since become insolvent, and the appellant, John P. Allison, is the receiver of its property and effects. On May 9, 1892, Gillespie and his wife mortgaged the same property to the Vermont Investment Company, a corporation, to secure the payment of notes or bonds to the amount of $15,000; and on December 7, 1893, the Vermont Investment Company assigned this mortgage to- the appellee J. W. Russell, trustee, who held the mortgage to secure the notes or bonds which had been sold to third parties. The assessor placed a valuation of $8,325 on this property for purposes of taxation, and the board of equalization of the county, without jurisdiction, unlawfully raised that valuation to $15,000 in 1892; and the levy of taxes for that year was made on that increased valuation, so that the tax levied on this property for that year was $420, when the lawful tax could not have exceeded $233.10. The assessor valued this property at $10,600 in 1893, and the county board of equalization, without jurisdiction, unlawfully raised this valuation to $15,600 in 1893; and the levy of taxes for that year was made on this increased valuation, so that the tax upon tins property was $600.60, when the lawful tax could not have ex[583]*583ceeded $408.10. Nevertheless, on November 7, 1894, the premises were sold ior these illegal taxes of 1892 and 1893 to the county of Fall River for the gum of $1,184.85, and a certificate of that sale was Issued to the county. On January 31, 1898, J. W. Bussell, trustee, who had raised the requisite money from those who owned the notes or bonds that were secured by the mortgage he held, bought with this money the certificate of this tax sale on the property; but he paid for it $248.20 less than its face value, on account of the illegality of the tax of 1893. On .June 19, 1898, the appellant brought a suit in a court of the state of South Dakota of competent jurisdiction to foreclose the mortgage of June 17, 1890, to Evans, and filed in the proper office notice of the pendency of that suit. In that suit he made the county of Fall Elver and the appellee Bussell parties defendant. Russell answered that the mortgage to Evans was paid, and that the mortgage of May 9, 1892, of which he was assignee, was the first mortgage upon the property. That case was tried and submitted to the court on April 19, 1897. On May 1, 1897, Russell assigned the certificate of tax sale which he held to the appellee Henry T. Corson for $600 in cash, and Corson’s promise to pay $400 more on demand. On July 22, 1897, the court rendered a decree in the foreclosure suit that the mortgage to Evans held by the appellant was “a valid and subsisting lien from June 17, 1890, upon the premises therein described, prior to the lien of the mortgage to the Vermont Investment Company, and prior and superior to any and all claims of the defendants, and each of them, and that said defendants, and each of them, and all parties claiming under them, or either of them, since the commencement of the action, and the filing of notice of pendency thereof, June 19, 1896 (though such persons, if any, so claiming since said date might not be parties to the action), be forever barred and foreclosed of all right, title, interest, and equity of redemption in and to said mortgaged premises,” unless they redeemed from the sale under that decree. The amount found due on the debt secured by this decree was $16,618.26, and the mortgaged property is worth only $5,000. The appellant was proceeding to advertise the property for sale under this decree, and expected to be the purchaser at the sale, when the appellee Corson took proceedings to obtain a tax deed thereof on the sale of November 7, 1894; and the appellant brought this suit to enjoin him from so doing, on the grounds that the appellee Corson stood in the shoes of the second mortgagee, Bussell, who was a defendant in the foreclosure suit; that Russell, and all claiming under him, were barred by the decree in that suit from asserting any lien or title superior to that of the appellant’s mortgage; that a second mortgagee cannot acquire a tax title to the mortgaged property, as against the first mortgagee; and that the taxes on which the sale rests were illegal, and the sale was void. When the application for the preliminary injunction had been heard on this state of facts, the court ordered that a temporary restraining order which had been issued be set aside and annulled “unless the complainant, John P. Allison, as receiver of the property of the Western Home Insurance Company, pay to the said defendant, Henry T. Corson, or C. S. Palmer, his attorney, the amount which the certificate of sale represents, which is [584]*584now held and owned- by the said defendant Henry T. Corson, as the same appears from the complainant’s bill of complaint, and defendant Corson’s answer and return to the order to show cause,” and refused to grant the injunction. The appeal challenges this order.

When the appeal was taken the court below properly continued the restraining order in force until the questions it presents could be decided by this court. The same considerations which led to this wise exercise of its discretion might well have induced that court to hold matters in statu quo, by the issue of the injunction, until a final hearing and decision of the case could be reached. No substantial loss or inconvenience would have been entailed upon the appellees by the allowance of the writ. Why, then, should not the injunction have been issued? Why should not the rights of these parties have been held where they were, without loss to any one, until the final hearing? The controlling reason for the existence of the right to issue a temporary injunction is that the court may thereby prevent such a change of the conditions and relations of persons and property during a litigation as may result in irremediable injury to some of the parties before their claims can be investigated and adjudicated. Undoubtedly an injunction ought not to be issued unless substantial questions of law or fact, whose decision in favor of the moving party would entitle him to ultimate relief, are presented. If it is reasonably clear that he cannot ultimately succeed, — if his pleading discloses no cause of action or defense, — no injunction should be granted.

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Bluebook (online)
88 F. 581, 32 C.C.A. 12, 1898 U.S. App. LEXIS 2100, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allison-v-corson-ca8-1898.