Brach v. Moen

35 F.2d 475, 1929 U.S. App. LEXIS 2992
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedOctober 7, 1929
DocketNo. 8238
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 35 F.2d 475 (Brach v. Moen) 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
Brach v. Moen, 35 F.2d 475, 1929 U.S. App. LEXIS 2992 (8th Cir. 1929).

Opinion

KENYON, Circuit Judge.

This ease arises out of the trading of an apartment build[476]*476ing in Chicago owned by Mrs. Aurora C. Upton, one of the appellants, for two farms in Iowa aggregating 487 acres owned by E. C. Moen, appellee, who seeks to set aside the transfer of his farms on the ground that the conveyance thereof was secured by fraud. This is its second appearance in this court. In the former opinion [4 F.(2d) 786] we set forth a statement of the facts. They are somewhat extended, and as the evidence is substantially the same'on this trial, and will unfold itself as we proceed, there is no need of incumbering the record with a further statement of facts. There is some new evidence in this ease, and some of the evidence in the former one is not here.

While the pleadings, as suggested by the trial court in the former ease are bewildering, we think the entire matter dwindles to the one question of fraud. There are suggestions in the brief that a court of equity is without jurisdiction to entertain appellee’s amended hill because this is an action to quiet title and remove a cloud, and complainant is not in possession of the property. The matter, however, is not pressed, and we think cannot seriously be urged, in view of the decision of the Supreme Court of the United States in Twist v. Prairie Oil Co., 274 U. S, 684, 47 S. Ct. 755, 71 L. Ed. 1297. This is in fact an action for rescission or cancellation of certáin instruments on the ground of their being procured by fraud, and the equitable relief in the nature of quieting title, as prayed, is merely incidental to the general equitable relief asked. The question also suggested that Moen’s eograntors in the deed from the Uptons were indispensable parties was settled in the former ease adversely to such contention, and that becomes the law of this case. Therefore we pass to the main and controlling question, viz., fraud.

The trial court adopted the statement of facts outlined in the previous decision of this court, and made further findings, namely, that Edwin J. Braeh was the agent of Aurora C. Upton and Emily Upton Braeh, and that he was a party to and had notice of the fraudulent acts of one Stewart, and that Aurora C. Upton and Emily Upton Braeh had the benefit of the transaction, not only with full knowledge on the part of Edwin J. Braeh, “hut with the fact that he participated in and was a party to the fraud,” and held that Braeh with knowledge of Stewart’s misrepresentations to Moen, took title to the farm lands of Moen as the representative, and for the benefit, of the two women.

It is the short contention of appellants that they had nothing to do with Moen; that they had entered into contracts, which are in evidence, to transfer three apartment buildings, two of them owned by Mrs. Braeh, and one by Mrs. Upton, to Stewart, or to those whom he designated under the agreements; that there was figured an equity of $20,000 in each one of the three apartment buildings, and that Stewart paid under the contracts $1,000 down on each building, and was later to pay the $19,000 due on each one of the three contracts; that later Stewart arranged to give them Moen’s farms as security for these amounts, and that, if Moen in transferring his two farms to Braeh (designated to act for the two women) was. defrauded, he was defrauded by Stewart without their knowledge; that neither they nor their agents had anything to do with, it; that they were dealing -with Stewart solely as a purchaser o]: the three apartment buildings; and that the situation is the same as if they had deeded the buildings to Stewart and he had deeded the Upton building to Moen. In other words, they claim to be innocent parties in the transaction.

On the other hand, Moen’s claim is that he supposed Braeh was the owner of the Rokeby apartment building (Upton building) and that he was selling the farms to Braeh; that the women, if they had any interest in the property, had full knowledge of everything that was done by virtue of their agents, Braeh and Upton, having such knowledge; and that therefore they have received property acquired from Moen by misrepresentations and fraud of' Stewart, with full knowledge on their part of such fraud.

That Moen was defrauded out of his farms by Stewart cannot well be questioned. That Stewart in the trade, for that is what it amounted to, of the Upton building for Moen’s farms, made all kinds of false representations as to ownership and value of the property, rental income, condition of the building, and other matters, is abundantly established in this record, and the brief of appellants admits that he did make false representations to Moen. Moen seems to have relied implicitly on Stewart’s representations and to have believed everything he told him, signing any papers that he asked him to, utterly unconscious of the part Stewart was playing. As the result of his excursion under Stewart’s direction into the realms of high finance Moen found himself bereft of the, ownership of 487 acres of unincumbered farm land in the state of Iowa, with nothing left except the remembrance of having acquired an apartment building in the city of Chicago, with mortgages thereon of $207,500, [477]*477which he had in the deed, contrary to his intention and agreement, assumed, and which passed back to Mrs. Upton by virtue of the foreclosure of the mortgage given by her to secure notes made to herself. As the curtain went down on the unfortunate affair, Moen was left as the shorn lamb, with no relief through tempered winds, but comforted with “Merry Christmas” greetings from Upton conveyed in his letter of December 24* 1921.

The facts disclose a strange tale. A drama based thereon might fittingly be called “All in the Family.” Mrs. Upton, owner of the Rokeby street apartment building, which eventually was traded for Moen’s farm, had secured the same in a trade for lands the year previous. It was heavily incumbered with mortgages, and was evidently trading property. J. G. Upton, her son, and Abraham L. Upton, her husband, were her agents. Mrs. Brach was her daughter and owned the other two apartment buildings known respectively as the Pine street and the Barry avenue apartments, also heavily mortgaged. J. G. Upton, her brother, acted for her, as well as for his mother, and Mr. Brach also acted as her agent. Mrs. Braeh’s testimony is that J. G. Upton was her broker, and her husband was her agent. J. G. Upton apparently had the most to do with managing their affairs, assisted by Mr. Brach; also by the husband of Mrs. Upton. George W. Stewart, a Chicago real estate agent, who operated under the title of George W. Stewart Company, a master mind apparently in the arts of chicanery, was the acknowledged villain in the transaction. He had to assist him a Dr. Moore and a Mr. Dixon, who seemed to operate as “bird dogs” in locating prospective victims for him. He also had around him in Chicago straw men and stool pigeons, such as his employees, Powers, Blair, and Williams, so essential to the equipment of an office conducted as his apparently was, and in whose names he took the contracts from the women to buy these apartment buildings. While for some reason he signed the contracts of purchase also, the straw men were designated as the purchasers. These straw men performed some shifts of the contracts among themselves before the deeds were eventually made to them. So much for the dramatis persona).

To ascertain whether inferences of fraud can properly be drawn from the facts, as • has been done by two trial courts, we review the circumstances at some length, commenting thereon as we proceed. On April 9,1921, Mrs. Brach entered into a contract with one Fred J.

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Bluebook (online)
35 F.2d 475, 1929 U.S. App. LEXIS 2992, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brach-v-moen-ca8-1929.