Cleveland Trust Co. v. Capitol Theater Co.

183 S.E. 457, 117 W. Va. 1, 103 A.L.R. 1435, 1936 W. Va. LEXIS 1
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 14, 1936
Docket8114
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 183 S.E. 457 (Cleveland Trust Co. v. Capitol Theater Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cleveland Trust Co. v. Capitol Theater Co., 183 S.E. 457, 117 W. Va. 1, 103 A.L.R. 1435, 1936 W. Va. LEXIS 1 (W. Va. 1936).

Opinion

Maxwell, Judge:

This is an appeal from two decrees of the circuit court of Ohio County, the first, November 26, 1934, directing immediate sale of the real estate involved, and the second, July 27, 1935, refusing to terminate the existing tenancy pending sale. The suit is based on a deed of trust. The trustees appeal.

In their bill of complaint, the trustees pray for a receivership, sale of the property and general relief, but they take the position that it would be for the best interest of the lien creditors (bondholders) that the property be not immediately sold, as required by the court. They also urge that, pending sale, the present tenant should be ousted and effort made to secure another one.

The initial question is jurisdictional. Inasmuch as the deed of trust clothed the trustees with full power of control and sale of the property after default, may they invoke the aid of a court of equity? Such course may not be taken by a trustee under a simple deed of trust. Hite v. Donnally, 85 W. Va. 640, 643, 102 S. E. 478; George v. Zinn, 57 W. Va. 15, 49 S. E. 904, 110 Am. St. Rep. 721. In such instances, it would be an imposition on the courts to call on them to do for parties that which they have full authority to do for themselves. Courts do not exist as mere conveniences. The underlying reason for their existence is that they may take charge of and settle controversial matters which the parties inter *3 ested cannot settle for themselves. But the instrument at bar is by no means a simple deed of trust. It is involved and complex.

The familiar procedural differences attendant upon the enforcement of mortgages and deeds of trust need not here be elaborated. It suffices to note that as to mortgages, equity jurisdiction is primary and essential; as to deeds of trust, it is incidental merely. If a deed of trust is simple and uncomplicated, incidental equitable jurisdiction does not arise, because there is no necessity for it. But if there are involvements in the trust, the situation is different. If it be practicable and advisable to call forth the power of the chancellor, such may be done, as the contractual or statutory method of foreclosure is not exclusive. I Quindry on Bonds and Bondholders, sec. 217; II Jones on Mortgages (7th Ed.), sec. 1217a; Granite Hall Farms Corp. v. Trust Co., 154 Va. 341, 153 S. E. 843; Clark v. lones, 93 Tenn. 639, 27 S. W. 1009, 42 Am. St. Rep. 931; Crecelius v. Home Heights Co., (Mo. Sup.) 217 S. W. 508; Jackson v. Prestwood, 211 Ala. 585, 101 So. 185; Old Colony Trust Co. v. Great White Spirit Co., 178 Mass. 92, 59 N. E. 673. We are of opinion that in this case the complications, more evident hereinafter, warranted the trustees in seeking the aid of equity.

The plaintiffs are the- Cleveland Trust Company and Rudolf A. Malm, substituted trustees under a deed of trust executed by Capitol Theater Company July 1, 1927, to secure bonds of $600,000.00. Thé¡ property involved is a large theater building (the Capitol Theater) in the city of Wheeling, West Virginia. January 1, 1934, bonds in the sum of $480,000.00 were outstanding. There was default in the interest due that date. On January 15, 1934, on request of fifteen per centum in amount of the bonds then outstanding, the trustees, acting under the acceleration clause of the trust, declared the entire debt due. This suit was immediately instituted. The original defendants are Capitol Theater Company, Wright Hugus and Albert W. Laas, trustees under a second deed of *4 trust, and Capitol Enterprises, Inc. The latter is the tenant of the property, having, with court approval, continued in possession under the special receivers who were appointed March 2, 1934. On the 13th of July, 1934, Lee C. Pauli, Kent B. Hall, William E. Stone and Morris W. Klein, on their formal petition, were made parties defendant to the cause. They alleged ownership severally of the aggregate of $78,200.00 in bonds. They moved for a decree of foreclosure and sale as prayed for in the original bill filed by the Cleveland Trust Company and Malm, trustees. This was resisted by the plaintiffs.

Of the $480,000.00 bonds outstanding, $320,000.00 are represented by a bondholders’ committee, about $78,000.00 by Pauli and his associates, and approximately $80,000.00 áre unrepresented. The learned circuit judge very pertinently refers to the situation as “a dispute between two groups of bondholders as to the method of procedure.”

Following the interposition of Pauli and associates, the plaintiffs filed two supplemental bills. There were demurrers and answers. The plaintiffs charge Pauli and associates with bad faith; that there is a conspiracy between them and Warner Brothers, Pictures, Inc., a motion picture producing concern, and Capitol Enterprises, Inc., tenant of the Capitol Theater, to depress the value of the Capitol Theater so that ownership thereof may be obtained at far less than the real worth. Pauli and the others (Warner Brothers Pictures, Inc., is not a party to the suit) deny any such efforts or intent, and, on the other hand, Pauli, Hall, Stone and Klein allege that the trustees are improperly seeking delay in the sale of the theater to the end that they may enhance the interests of the particular group of bondholders represented by the bondholders’ committee; that the Cleveland Trust Company is disqualified from acting as trustee because of its personal interest, in that it is the depositary for the said committee. These allegations are denied by the trustees. Incidental to the main controversy, in respect of the time and manner of sale, is the question of tenancy and occupancy of the property pending sale. The trial chancellor *5 acquitted the intervenors of the fraud charged against them. We concur. As to the Cleveland Trust Company, we are unable to perceive that it has any financial interest which may run counter to its duties as an impartial trustee. Nor is it evident that the trustees have thus far violated the letter or the spirit of the instrument from which they derive their authority.

We thus come to the question whether the trustees, having voluntarily come into equity, may invoke the provisions of the deed of trust and the discretionary powers thereby vested in the trustees, or whether, in such status, they must submit to the sound discretion of the chancellor, irrespective of provisions of the trust. The trial court seéms to have adopted the latter view, and therein, we think, there was error.

While it is true that in directing sale under a deed of trust or mortgage, the court does not acquire its authority from the instrument, and judicial discretion may be exercised (McLarty v. Urquhart, 153 N. C. 339, 69 S. E. 245), nevertheless, where the lien is first in priority, the contract may not be in large measure or entirely ignored.

In equity, when real estate is subjected to sale under the lien of a mortgage or deed of trust, the court should employ the terms of sale prescribed by the instrument. Stafford v. Jones, 65 W. Va. 567, 64 S. E. 723; Pairo v. Bethell, 75 Va. 825; Stimpson v.

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Bluebook (online)
183 S.E. 457, 117 W. Va. 1, 103 A.L.R. 1435, 1936 W. Va. LEXIS 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cleveland-trust-co-v-capitol-theater-co-wva-1936.