Churchill v. Proctor

16 N.W. 694, 31 Minn. 129, 1883 Minn. LEXIS 34
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedSeptember 25, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 16 N.W. 694 (Churchill v. Proctor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Churchill v. Proctor, 16 N.W. 694, 31 Minn. 129, 1883 Minn. LEXIS 34 (Mich. 1883).

Opinion

Mitchell, J.

The allegations of plaintiff are, in brief, that defendants Cahill and Townshend held a lease of certain real estate from McKusick for a term of years, subject to a yearly rental, payable quarter-yearly, with the right on the part of the lessor to re-enter and take possession on default of payment of rent; that Cahill and Townshend subsequently conveyed an undivided third of this leasehold estate to defendant Proctor, who afterwards mortgaged it to plaintiff to secure payment of the sum of $8,000 and interest, which is now overdue and unpaid; that Cahill subsequently conveyed his interest to Townshend, who is now in exclusive possession of the premises; that defendants Townshend and Cannon fraudulently con[132]*132spired to destroy plaintiff’s mortgage security, and, in pursuance and furtherance of such conspiracy, Cannon purchased the fee or reversion in the premises from McKusick, and with like purpose Townshend defaulted in the payment of the rent, and thereupon Cannon, for the same purpose, entered and took possession, and colorably ousted Townshend, and then made a new lease to Townshend and one Sabin, who had notice of all the facts; thus attempting to forfeit and destroy a leasehold estate worth $40,000 for a default in the payment of $375 rent. The relief sought is a foreclosure of plaintiff’s mortgage, and that this fraudulent forfeiture of the leasehold estate covered by the mortgage, and the new lease to Townshend and Sabin, be declared void and set aside, and thus establish or restore the mortgaged estate.

The first question presented is whether plaintiff can, in an action to foreclose, also have, as against defendants Cannon and Townshend, relief from this fraudulent termination and forfeiture of the estate covered by the mortgage. Defendants’ contention is that, in an action to foreclose, the mortgagee cannot bring in question a paramount title and have it adjudicated. This is undoubtedly true. Banning v. Bradford, 21 Minn. 308. But it is not here sought to litigate a paramount title, within the meaning of the rule. The object here-is to re-establish the mortgaged estate, which defendants, by their fraudulent acts, have attempted to wipe out. The equity to be relieved from these fraudulent acts is not defeated or affected by the fact that the forfeiture of the leasehold estate was attempted to be. accomplished by a title paramount to plaintiff’s, mortgage. In fact, that is the very injury complained of. It would be idle to foreclose and sell under the mortgage until it be determined whether there is now any estate covered by it. Cummings v. Freer, 26 Mich. 128; Wilkinson v. Green, 34 Mich. 221. It is no more onerous on defendants to try this question in this action than it would be in another suit brought by the purchaser at the foreclosure sale.

It is also suggested that plaintiff is not entitled to this equitable-relief, because she might have protected her mortgage interest by herself paying the rent. But if defendants were guilty of the fraud charged, it does not lie in their mouths to suggest that plaintiff might. [133]*133have thus defeated their fraudulent purpose. They have no right to insist on plaintiff’s paying the whole rent in order to protect herself against their fraudulent conspiracy. Neither was it necessary for plaintiff to tender Cannon payment of this rent before bringing this •action. If the overdue rent should be paid as a condition precedent to granting the relief sought, the court can amply provide for that in its decree. Nor, in our opinion, is there any force in the suggestion that Gannon could not have been guilty of fraud, because, as the successor in interest of MeKusick, the lessor, he had a legal right to re-enter for the non-payment of rent. Some of the worst kinds of fraud are practised under the guise of legal forms; but courts have no difficulty in such cases in stripping off the mask and exposing the fraud underneath. If the purchase of the reversion in these premises by Cannon, and the default of Townshend in payment of rent, •and Cannon’s entry and assuming to declare the lease terminated, and then assuming to relet to Townshend, were all parts and parcels of a fraudulent conspiracy between the two to cheat plaintiff out of her mortgage, it will not avail them that they resorted to the terms of the lease in order to accomplish their purpose.

2. It is assumed by defendants, and does not seem to be disputed by plaintiff, that it stands admitted by the pleadings that this lease from MeKusick was, at the date of the execution of plaintiff’s mortgage, the copartnership property of the firm of Cahill, Townshend & Co., composed of the defendants, Cahill, Townshend, and Proctor, the premises having been purchased and being occupied and used for partnership purposes, and that plaintiff had notice of that fact when she took the mortgage from Proctor. From these facts, defendants claim that plaintiff took her mortgage on Proctor’s interest, subject to the equities of the partnership, and hence is only entitled to Proctor’s interest in the surplus after all the equities of the partnership have been fully adjusted; that this interest can only be ascertained by taking an accounting of the whole firm business. But they further claim that a mortgagee of one partner’s interest cannot call for such an accounting, but must first proceed against his mortgagor alone, foreclose the mortgage, and sell his unascertained interest, and then, when he has transformed his lien into title, and not before, [134]*134lie may demand an accounting, and that for this reason this action was, as to them, properly dismissed.

It would be sufficient answer to this position to suggest that, independently of the matter of accounting, this action would lie against Cannon and Townshend for the purpose of setting aside the alleged fraudulent forfeiture of the leasehold estate covered by the mortgage. In fact, as against Gannon, this is the only ground upon which he is a proper party to this action. But, with reference to another trial, it may be proper to consider the right of plaintiff to have an accounting, in this action, of the copartnership business, in order to ascertain what her mortgage in fact covers. It is unquestionably true, as urged by defendants, that real estate purchased by a partnership with firm funds for partnership purposes, and used and occupied as such, will be deemed firm property for all the purposes of the piartnership, and is subject to all the rules applicable to such property, as between the partners themselves and all persons claiming through them, with notice of the facts, although the legal title stands in the names of the individual members of the firm as tenants in common. Also that a person with notice, who takes from one partner a mortgage upon his interest in such partnership property, takes subject to all the equities of the partnership, not only for the purpose of paying the debts of the firm to third parties, but also to members of the firm inter sese. The mortgage must yield to any use or disposition of the property which the firm may make of it for the purposes of the partnership, and, in this respect, there is no distinction between equities existing at the time and those arising subsequently to the execution of the mortgage. Kelly v. Hutton, L. R. 3 Ch. App. 703; Cavander v. Bulteel, L. R. 9 Ch. App. 79; Lindsay v. Gibbs, 3 De Gex & J. 690, 697; Bank v. Fowle, 4 Jones, Eq. (N. C.) 8; Lovejoy v. Bowers, 11 N. H. 404; Mechanics’ Bank v. Godwin, 5 N. J. Eq. 334.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
16 N.W. 694, 31 Minn. 129, 1883 Minn. LEXIS 34, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/churchill-v-proctor-minn-1883.