Brown v. Easton

112 F. 592, 1902 U.S. App. LEXIS 4745
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Northern Iowa
DecidedJanuary 6, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 112 F. 592 (Brown v. Easton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Northern Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brown v. Easton, 112 F. 592, 1902 U.S. App. LEXIS 4745 (circtnia 1902).

Opinion

SHIRAS, District Judge.

From the record in this case it appears that on the ioth day of November, 1896, the First National Bank of Decorah, Iowa, being found to be in an insolvent condition, was closed for business- by order of the. comptroller of the currency, and on the 24th day.of the same month William H. Dent was ap-ppipted receiver of the insolvent corporation, and duly qualified as such officer. At -the date of the failure of the bank, and for many years previous thereto, James H-. Easton was and had been the president thereof, and had largely controlled the management of the affairs o.f the institution, being also the owner of 455 shares of the capital stock, of the par value of $100.per share. On the nth day of February, 1897, the comptroller of the currency levied an assessment of 100 per cent, upon the capital stock of the bank, and to enforce the payment thereof the receiver brought suit in this court against- the said James H. Easton, and on the 30th day of April, 1897, a judgment in favor of the receiver and against the said Easton was rendered in the sum of $46,097.07 and costs. On the 25th day of April, 1897, judgment was entered in tbis court in favor of the receiver and against the said Easton for the sum of $5,775.50 and costs, in an action based upon certain promissory notes executed or indorsed by him. These judgments remaining unpaid, executions thereon were issued and returned unsatisfied, and there[593]*593upon the receiver brought this suit in equity, charging in the bill that James H. Easton had an interest in, or was the owner of, certain lands situated in the counties of Allamakee, Chickasaw, Howard, Hancock, Sioux, Winneshiek, and Winnebago, in the state oflowa, the title thereto having been transferred to Frederick S. Easton without consideration, and for the purpose of placing the realty beyond the reach of the creditors of James H. Easton; and the prayer of the bill is that it be decreed that Frederick S. Easton holds the title to the realty, not in his own right, but as trustee for James H. Easton, and that the same be declared subject to the judgments held by complainant as receiver. Some time after the institution of the proceedings in equity William H. Dent resigned the receivership, and was succeeded therein by Edwin E. Brown, and by order of court he has been substituted as the complainant in this suit.

The defendants answered the bill, denying the charges of fraud, and averring, in substance, that all the transfers of realty made by James H. Easton to Frederick S. Easton were made for full value, in good faith, and that James H. Easton had no interest whatever in the realty in question.

The evidence introduced in the case shows that Frederick S. Eas-ton is a younger brother of James H. Easton, residing at Lowville, in the state of New York, and is and has been for years cashier of the Black River National Bank of Lowville; -that James H. Easton, residing at Decorah, Iowa, for the past 40 years had acted as agent, for William L. Easton, his father, for his brother-in-law D. C, West,, and his sister Ella Rullison, with respect to lands owned by these' parties in the states of Iowa and Minnesota. Upon the death of the father, W. L. Easton, in 1865, Frederick S. Easton became executor of his estate; and on the death of D. C. West, in 1880, he, in conjunction with his sister Emma H. West, became executor and trustee under the will of D. C. West, and he also^ became a trustee for his sister Ella Rullison; and in these several capacities he became charged with the duty of looking after the investments of these several estates in lands in Iowa and Minnesota, the said James H. Easton continuing to look after the payment of taxes, collection of rents, and contracting for and selling portions of the lands, and in so doing, and also for money borrowed, he had incurred up to August 11, 1893, ah indebtedness to the West estate amounting to $27,839.91, and to the Rullison trust the sum of $3,531.14, which amounts were evidenced by promissory notes executed during the years 1882 to 1891, both inclusive. During the year 1893 Frederick S. Easton had been pressing these notes for payment, and finally, in September of that year, an agreement was reached between James H. Easton and Frederick S. Easton for the payment of the sums due by transferring certain lands from James U. to Frederick S. Easton. The agreement thus reached was carried into effect by the execution of the necessary deeds on the part of James H. Easton, and the surrender to him of the notes held by Frederick S. Easton.

This transaction is questioned by the complainant, and largely for the reason that the deeds from James H. Easton, bearing date in 1893, were not recorded until in 1896, and just about the time when [594]*594the First National Bank of Decorah ceased to do business and was placed in the hands of the receiver, and in the meantime James H. Easton exercised an apparent ownership over the property, in that he continued to look after the renting, the payment of the taxes, and the selling of the land. The evidence, however, clearly sustains the facts, already recited, showing the existence of an actual indebtedness existing in 1893 from James H. Easton, which was canceled by the conveyance of the realty to Frederick S. Easton, and, this fact being established, then the failure to record the deeds would not invalidate the-transfers, except in favor of subsequent innocent purchasers.

The reason assigned by Frederick S. Easton for not recording the deeds at the time of their delivery to him is that at that time, in 1893, a panic prevailed in the business world, and that if it had appeared that James H. Easton, who was president of the bank, was transferring large amounts of his property, it might have had the effect of causing a run upon the bank, and therefore he withheld the deeds from record, although there was no agreement or understanding between the brothers that this should be done. There can be no question that such action on his part throws suspicion on the transaction, and justified the receiver in making it the subject of judicial investigation; yet, in the light thrown thereon by the evidence introduced, it cannot be held that the failure to record the conveyances invalidates them, or that the evidence justifies the finding that the transfers to Frederick S. Easton were without consideration, or that he holds the title in trust for his brother James H. The question presented is not that which arises when one becomes a purchaser in some form of the premises from or under the grantor, during the time the deed is withheld from the record, nor the question which arises when persons sell property on credit to the grantor in the reasonable belief that he is the owner of the property the title to which appears of record to be in him. The only ground upon which the complainant can secure the relief sought in the bill filed in this case is by proving that James H. Easton has in fact an interest in or ownership of the realty, or some portion of it; the title thereto being in truth held by his brother in trust for him.

As already said, the evidence fails to sustain these averments of fraud or want of consideration, and therefore it must be held that the conveyances executed in September, 1893, and covering lands in Allamakee, Howard, Winneshiek, Winnebago, and Chickasaw counties, were and are valid, and the lands conveyed thereby cannot be subjected to the judgments held by complainant against James H. Easton. In the, settlement made in 1893 there was included a lot in Duluth, Minn., which was subject to a mortgage which Frederick S.

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Bluebook (online)
112 F. 592, 1902 U.S. App. LEXIS 4745, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-easton-circtnia-1902.