Bankers Mortgage Building & Loan Ass'n v. Simpson

93 F.2d 196, 114 A.L.R. 1368, 1937 U.S. App. LEXIS 2761
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedDecember 20, 1937
DocketNo. 8462
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 93 F.2d 196 (Bankers Mortgage Building & Loan Ass'n v. Simpson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bankers Mortgage Building & Loan Ass'n v. Simpson, 93 F.2d 196, 114 A.L.R. 1368, 1937 U.S. App. LEXIS 2761 (5th Cir. 1937).

Opinion

SIBLEY, Circuit Judge.

On an involuntary petition filed June 11, 1930, Norman H. Waters was adjudged a bankrupt on June 18, and a trustee was later appointed. On September 12, 1932, the appellant, Bankers Mortgage Building [198]*198& Loan Association, applied to the referee for leave to foreclose a mortgage for a balance of $8,473, which it held on certain lands in the possession of the trustee, by exercising the power of sale contained in the exhibited mortgage. The matter stood until January 28, 1936, when the trustee filed an answer denying that anything was due on the mortgage, together with what he called a cross-bill. The latter set up that on February 17, 1930, a fire had destroyed part of the improvements on the mortgaged land; that Alma Lois Waters, the bankrupt’s wife, in whom the legal title to the land then was, had in her name insurance to the amount of $27,500; that the Building & Loan Association had settled the loss for $18,600 and credited the money on the mortgage, all without the consent of the bankrupt or his wife or the bankrupt’s creditors, knowing that a bankruptcy proceeding was about to be filed and that the creditors of Waters claimed that the property had been transferred by Waters to his wife with intent to defraud them; that on March 25, 1932, a judgment had been rendered against Mrs. Waters divesting the title out of her and into the trustee; that the insurance claim was worth $27,500 and more than enough to have paid the mortgage, and the Building & Loan Association by releasing it for less was estopped to assert any further claim; and the prayer was for á cancellation of the mortgage and a quieting of the title in the trustee. The Building & Loan Association moved to dismiss the cross-bill for want of jurisdiction in the referee, and, being overruled, answered that Mrs. Waters had disagreed with the insurance company as to the amount of the loss, and pursuant to the policy provision had submitted the question to appraisers, who awarded - $18,966.74, which the Building & Loan Association under the mortgage clause in the policies had claimed and collected on proofs made by it therefor and had applied the sum as a credit on the mortgage, leaving a balance of over $6,000 principal, besides interest. On a trial the referee found the award void, and that the mortgage was paid, and decreed it to be canceled. On a review of the referee’s ruling the District Court approved it and made another decree to the same effect. The Building & Loan Association, appeals.

Appellant still insists that the cross-bill praying a cancellation was a matter for a plenary suit and is not within the summary jurisdiction of the referee. Appellee, contending that the summary jurisdiction extends to ascertaining what liens are on property in the trustee’s possession, moves to strike the narrative statement of the evidence and the assignments of error raising questions of fact because the concurrent findings of referee and judge cut off inquiry into such questions. We think that the referree went too far in attempting to decree a cancellation of the mortgage summarily; but, since the evidence was all reported stenographically and went up to the judge along with the documentary proof and was fully considered by the judge, who made his own decree, the case has had just the treatment it would, have had if a plenary bill had been filed, been reported on by a master, and then considered by the court. The referee made full findings of fact and conclusions of law, as a master would do, and the appellant elaborately excepted to them as if to a master’s report. We will treat the case as a controversy arising in bankruptcy by intervention and decided by the judge, review of which on appeal as in equity opens up questions of law and fact.

The narrative of the evidence duly approved by the judge will be considered. The assignments of error are prolix and overnumerous, but we understand what questions they seek to raise. Some of the findings of fact are asserted to be without evidence to support them, or contrary to all the evidence, and we must examine them notwithstanding the presumption of correctness that attends concurrent fact findings by master and judge.

There is no dispute that the bankrupt owned the land, more than a hundred acres, and in the early part of 1928 conveyed it to his wife. An old house upon it was afterwards repaired and enlarged at a cost of over $30,000 to make a handsome home in which they lived. Part of the money to make the improvements was obtained in February, 1929, on the mortgage in controversy for $25,000 made to the Building & Loan Association by Mrs. Waters as “borrowing stockholder” but joined in by Waters as husband. As a part of the loan transaction, the insurance in controversy was required to be taken out, each policy having attached to it a-mortgage clause in favor of the Building & Loan Association and making the loss payable to it as its interest might appear.

The policies were in the name of Mrs. Waters, and presumably paid for by [199]*199her. She signed the proofs of loss, 'though her husband assisted her in the adjustment, and she signed the agreement for the appraisal, naming one .McCauley as .her appraiser. She was in possession of the property and the holder of the legal title at the time of the mortgage, at the time of the fire and until the decree rendered in March, 1932, which did not purport to cancel her deeds but divested her of title and vested it in the trustee. That decree makes no fact findings, and has the appearance of being a compromise, as Mrs. Waters was awarded $6,000, and it followed immediately a dismissal from the case of the Building & Loan Association and the insurance companies who had been impleaded to try the very matter now being litigated. The bill had averred that Waters conveyed to his wife “for the purpose of hindering, delaying and defrauding his creditors and/or as a voluntary conveyance.” There was no allegation that Mrs. Waters had conspired with him. There is no evidence in the present case to show that the conveyance to her was other than a gift from husband to wife, void as to creditors because it left him insolvent. As against him the conveyance was good, although his creditors might seek to set it aside. She became owner subject to their attack. She had an insurable interest. Insurance taken by her payable to herself was hers. The creditors had no interest in the insurance. Because the property burned, the creditors do not acquire any right to her insurance. An early case so holding is Lerow v. Wilmarth, 9 Allen, Mass., 382. Shadgett v. Phillips & Crew Co., 131 Ala. 478, 31 So. 20, 56 L.R.A 461, 90 Am.St.Rep. 95, asserts a like principle. Forrester v. Gill, 11 Colo.App. 410, 53 P. 230, involved circumstances essentially like the case at bar. The lower court refused even to hear the evidence that the conveyance by husband to wife was to defraud creditors, and that the husband had taken out the insurance in her name and himself paid the premium. The judgment was affirmed. In McLean v. Hess, 106 Ind. 555, 7 N.E. 567, 568, the court pithily said: “The insurance was taken in appellant’s name. However fraudulent the purpose may have been in having the property conveyed to her, that policy belonged to her. However fraudulent the conveyance may have been, she had an insurable interest in the property. The insurance was taken in her name. The policy was hers, and the proceeds thereof cannot be taken from her by the husband’s creditors.”

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Bluebook (online)
93 F.2d 196, 114 A.L.R. 1368, 1937 U.S. App. LEXIS 2761, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bankers-mortgage-building-loan-assn-v-simpson-ca5-1937.