Colonial Hill Co. v. Mortgage Bond & Trust Co.

162 S.E. 272, 174 Ga. 78, 1931 Ga. LEXIS 17
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedDecember 19, 1931
DocketNo. 8540
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 162 S.E. 272 (Colonial Hill Co. v. Mortgage Bond & Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Colonial Hill Co. v. Mortgage Bond & Trust Co., 162 S.E. 272, 174 Ga. 78, 1931 Ga. LEXIS 17 (Ga. 1931).

Opinion

Gilbert, J.

This litigation concerns two parcels of real estate, which are fully described in the pleadings, designated by the parties as numbers 307 and 311 Newnan Avenue in the City of East Point. This suit was brought by Mortgage Bond & Trust Company against Colonial Hill Company, John S. Owens, Cobb Operating Company, Mortgage Holding Company, Marbut-Williams Lumber Co., J. T. Williams, G. A. Childers, W. W. Hanson, and Mrs. Loma Dell Gibson. Demurrers to some allegations of the petition were sustained; and as there is no exception to those rulings, those portions of the petition are eliminated. Other portions of the petition alleged as follows:

On November 3 and September 7, 1927, respectively, Colonial Hill Company, which held the title to the two lots mentioned, conveyed them by warranty deeds to the defendant Mrs. Gibson. The deeds were filed for record on February 7, 1928. Prior to record of these deeds, Mrs. Gibson conveyed the two lots to Colonial Hill Company by two deeds, each one as security for payment of $825. On or about January 1, 1928, “without knowledge of the loan deeds from” Mrs. Gibson to Colonial Hill Co., Mortgage Bond & Trust Co. made to Mrs. Gibson “a first loan” of $2750 on one of the lots and $2500 on the other lot, secured by deeds which were filed for [79]*79record on January 9, 1928. These deeds and the notes evidencing the debts were made to Atlanta Trust Company as trustee. “It was the understanding, agreement, and intention” of the Mortgage Bond & Trust Company and Mrs. Gibson that her two deeds conveying the property to secure debts “should be first and prior encumbrances against the property conveyed, . . and . . petitioner would not have made said loans had1 it not thought that said conveyances constituted first and prior encumbrances against said property.” The two loans by petitioner to Mrs. Gibson were “made for the express purpose of paying off certain materialmen and laborers who had furnished labor and material used in the improvement of the property.” The loans were closed at the same time, and the proceeds, at the instance of Mrs. Gibson, were “disbursed together.” From the proceeds of these loans -sums of money aggregating $3969.44 were paid to five persons named, who had furnished labor or material, including $849.60 paid to defendant Owens “in satisfaction of a building loan wh-ieh he made Mrs. Gibson upon said property.” On March 5, 1929, there were filed for record deeds made by Colonial Hill Company “as attorney in fact” for Mrs. Gibson, “purporting, . . in the exercise of the power of sale” contained in the loan deeds of Mrs. Gibson, to convey the property to the Colonial Hill Company. On May 8, 1929, and April 17, 1929, Colonial Hill Company made deeds in each of which the tracts were conveyed to Cobb Operating Company. The first deed did not recite any consideration, but as re-recorded the deed recited a consideration of ten dollars and other valuable consideration. On July 30, 1929, both tracts were conveyed by Cobb Operating Company to Mortgage Holding Company. Because of default in payment of the indebtedness of Gibson,’ secured by the loan deeds to Atlanta Trust Co., trustee, suits were begun by the trustee, and on July 2, 1929, judgments against Mrs. Gibson, for the principal, interest, attorney’s fees, and costs, were recovered, with a special lien against the real estate. At the sale in August, 1929, under executions issued in these suits, the property was conveyed by the sheriff to Atlanta Trust Company, trustee, which afterwards conveyed it to Mortgage Bond & Trust Co. Mortgage Holding Company notified the sheriff of its claim of title paramount to that of Mrs. Q-ibson, and the sheriff declined to place Atlanta Trust Company, trustee, or the petitioner in possession. The property is occupied by persons [80]*80wlio are paying the rentals to the Colonial Hill Company or Owens or Mortgage Holding Company. The loans of petitioner to Mrs. Gibson “were made with the full knowledge, consent, and approval of” the Colonial Hill Company, which “through its officers and agents, and especially . . John S. Owens, who was then and now is” its president, and who was “present at the time said loans were closed,” and “ delivered to an ‘agent of . . petitioner the two warranty deeds from Colonial Hill Company to . . Mrs. Gibson, . . in order that the same might be sent to record,” participated in closing said loans “well knowing that petitioner thought” the deeds from Gibson to Atlanta Trust Co., trustee, “constituted first and prior encumbrances against the property, . . did not assert or disclose any lien or equity in its favor against said property, but allowed and encouraged and was largely instrumental in inducing . . petitioner to make said loans.” Owens knew petitioner was ignorant of the existence of the loan deeds from Mrs. Gibson to Colonial Hill Company, that petitioner thought it was making-first loans on the property, and, “with intent to deceive and mislead” petitioner, Owens “concealed the existence of said deeds” and “accepted $849.60 of the proceeds of said loans in satisfaction of a building loan which he had made to Mrs. Gibson upon said properties, and in other ways participated in the closing of said loans.” The conveyances to Cobb Operating Company and Mortgage Holding Company were without consideration, and when they were made each of these defendants “had and, by reason of the facts” alleged in the petition, were “charged with full knowledge and notice of all the facts . . which had then occurred,” and in equity and good conscience the title so taken is subject to the liens created by the loan deeds made by Gibson to Atlanta Trust- Co., trustee. ■ The deeds of Colonial Hill Company, as attorney in fact for Mrs. Gibson, and the subsequent deeds into Cobb Operating Co. and Mortgage Holding Co., constitute clouds upon the title held by petitioner, and it is without any present adequate remedy at law. Mrs. Gibson is insolvent.

The prayers were, for injunction restraining the changing of the status of the title; for appointment of a receiver to manage the properties; for decree establishing the loan deeds of Gibson to Atlanta Trust Co., trustee, as first and prior encumbrances; for decree that the rights of Colonial Hill Co., and those claiming under [81]*81it by reason of the deeds from- Mrs. Gibson to Colonial Hill Co., had been divested by the sheriff's sales under foreclosure of the deeds of Mrs. Gibson to Atlanta Trust Co., trustee; that in lieu of the granting of such relief the deeds from Gibson to Atlanta Trust Co., trustee, be declared to be of full force and effect, the property sold by the receiver, and the proceeds applied to the satisfaction of the debts secured by those deeds-; that the satisfaction of the claims of the several laborers and materialmen and Owens be set aside, and their liens revived and perfected for the benefit of petitioner, to the extent of the amounts paid by petitioner to them; that such liens when so revived and perfected be declared and decreed to be first and prior encumbrances upon the property, and that they be foreclosed for the benefit of petitioner; and for general relief. The matter was referred by the court' to an auditor, with power to settle issues arising on the pleadings and to pass upon all questions of law and fact.

Colonial Hill Co., Owens, Cobb Operating Co., and Mortgage Holding Co. demurred generally on the grounds that the petition failed to state a cause of action, and did not set up grounds for equitable relief; and that there was a misjoinder of defendants.

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Bluebook (online)
162 S.E. 272, 174 Ga. 78, 1931 Ga. LEXIS 17, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/colonial-hill-co-v-mortgage-bond-trust-co-ga-1931.