California Joint Stock Land Bank v. Gore

55 P.2d 1118, 153 Or. 267, 1936 Ore. LEXIS 110
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 11, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 55 P.2d 1118 (California Joint Stock Land Bank v. Gore) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
California Joint Stock Land Bank v. Gore, 55 P.2d 1118, 153 Or. 267, 1936 Ore. LEXIS 110 (Or. 1936).

Opinion

RAND, J.

The defendants, W. H. Gore and Sophenia J. Ish Gore, are husband and wife and together they owned and operated a farm in Jackson county, each individually holding title to a different portion thereof in severalty. On May 2, 1927, they borrowed from plaintiff the sum of $66,000, and jointly executed two promissory notes, each for the sum of $33,000. To secure the payment thereof, they jointly executed two mortgages, giving, as security for the payment of one of said notes, that part of the land held by W. H. Gore and, as security for the other, that part held by Mrs. Gore. They failed to pay certain of the installments as stipulated in the mortgage and also failed to pay the taxes levied and assessed against the land as provided in the mortgages. While so in default and on May 23,1934, plaintiff brought a separate suit to foreclose each mortgage and on July 24, 1934, obtained a decree of foreclosure and order of sale in each suit. *269 Executions were issued on each of said decrees hut, before a sale thereunder could be had, the defendants filed their petition in bankruptcy and obtained an order of the bankruptcy court enjoining both sales. Later, and on November 10, 1934, said defendants filed an amended petition in bankruptcy under the original Frazier-Lemke Act and were adjudicated bankrupt on the same day. After the Frazier-Lemke Act had been declared unconstitutional in Louisville Joint Stock Land Bank v. Radford, 295 U. S. 555, the orders enjoining the sale of the mortgaged premises were vacated and set aside and shortly thereafter plaintiff caused another execution to be issued upon each of said decrees and, pursuant thereto and on July 15, 1935, the properties covered by said mortgages were separately sold to the plaintiff, it being the highest and best bidder therefor. For that part of the mortgaged land belonging to W. H. Gore, plaintiff bid the sum of $38,000 and, for that part belonging to Mrs. Gore, it bid the sum of $37,100, neither of said bids being for the entire amount due under either of said mortgages.

At the time of the sale, the unpaid taxes upon the combined properties amounted to some $15,000 and constituted a first lien upon the lands, said bids being made subject to said tax lien. After the sheriff’s return of said sales had been made and filed in the court below, the defendants, W. H. Gore and wife, and P. M. Janney, the trustee in bankruptcy of the Gores, jointly filed objections to the confirmation of said sales and thereafter and on October 1, 1935, after a hearing in which P. M. Janney withdrew all objections to the confirmation of the sale upon his part as trustee in bankruptcy of the Gores, the court sustained said objections and refused to confirm either sale and ordered a resale *270 of the mortgaged property. In its order or decree vacating the sales, the court fixed as a minimum or upset price at which the mortgaged properties could be resold the “amount which may be owing upon such said judgment and decree of the plaintiff, including accrued interest thereon, at the time of any sale which may hereafter be had, together with the amount of taxes paid by the plaintiff subsequent to said decree, together with accrued interest thereon, together with the costs and expenses of such said sale”, and also decreed “that unless an amount equal to or in excess of said upset price be bid at any sale had upon execution issued upon such said judgment and decree, such bid should be rejected and the sheriff should not make any sale of the property, that any sale at any less figure should not be confirmed, and the same should be set aside, rendered nugatory and held void in all things”, and also decreed that the plaintiff “shall have no right of possession of said premises under and by virtue of such foreclosure sale heretofore held herein and by this said order and decree vacated, annulled and set aside”.

From each of these two orders and decrees, the plaintiff has separately appealed but, by stipulation of the parties, these appeals were consolidated and heard together and, since the questions on each appeal are identical, those questions will all now be passed upon and decided.

The plaintiff contends, first, that the trial court, on the showing made, had no authority, under the statute, to deny confirmation and order a resale; second, that it had no authority to fix any minimum or upset price at which the property should be resold; and, third, it had no authority to deprive plaintiff, as pur *271 chaser, of the right to the possession of the mortgaged property pending a resale, after it had been shown that none of the mortgaged property was in the possession of a tenant holding under an unexpired lease.

In passing upon the objections to the confirmation, the trial court first computed the combined amount due plaintiff from the defendants on October 1, 1935, the date when the orders appealed from were entered, and found that, after making all proper deductions, the amount then due was approximately the sum of $84,461.36, and that, if the sales were confirmed, the plaintiff would be entitled to a deficiency judgment for something over $9,000. This computation did not include the taxes then unpaid on the mortgaged property, amounting to approximately $8,776.09, not including any interest or penalties thereon, all of which were prior to the lien of plaintiff’s mortgages.

In passing upon said objections, the court, in its orders and decrees, found as follows:

“It appearing to the court and it does hereby find that the reasonable value of the real property of said defendants, Gore, which was sold at said foreclosure sale, at the time of said sale held on execution was and now is substantially greater than the amount of plaintiff’s judgment in this said cause, together with accrued interest thereon, and unpaid taxes levied and assessed against said premises at the date of said judgment and decree, together with accrued interest thereon, and that the plaintiff at said foreclosure sale paid less than the amount due and owing upon its said judgment, plus any taxes that might have been paid by it, together with accrued interest thereon, thereby securing a deficiency judgment against the defendants Gore.
“And it further appearing to the court and the court does so find that at such said foreclosure sale the plaintiff was the only bidder for said property and *272 that by reason of the general economic depression now existing the market for real estate in this community to a more or less degree has been destroyed, and that the great value of this said property, together with the present economic conditions prevailing in the country as a whole and in this community as well, preclude the establishment of a fair price by competitive bidding alone, and it appearing to the court and it does further find that where there .is no competitive bidding a reasonable price cannot be obtained and that the amount bid at the sale by the plaintiff is not in any particular a fair indication of the value of said property.

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Bluebook (online)
55 P.2d 1118, 153 Or. 267, 1936 Ore. LEXIS 110, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/california-joint-stock-land-bank-v-gore-or-1936.