Deauville Associates, Inc. v. Magraw

197 F.2d 87, 1952 U.S. App. LEXIS 2585
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedMay 20, 1952
Docket13661_1
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 197 F.2d 87 (Deauville Associates, Inc. v. Magraw) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Deauville Associates, Inc. v. Magraw, 197 F.2d 87, 1952 U.S. App. LEXIS 2585 (5th Cir. 1952).

Opinion

HUTCHESON, Chief Judge.

This is an appeal by Deauville Associates from an order 1 striking its petition as intervening lis pendens purchaser for reimbursement of advances made by defendants Winkel and Lasser and Deauville Associates, and for. subrogation. It is the latest and Deo volente the last in the long series of appeals to this court growing out of the ill fated and much litigated dealings of Lasser and Winkel with Lucy Eristavi-Tchitcherine, owner of substantially all the stock of Deauville Corporation, and, with one Kowal, whose creation and creature Deauville Associates is.

Begun with the execution by the corporation of a contract for the sale to Lasser et al., of its properties and followed by the later “abandonment of the sale of said property and the merger” of all of the agreements for its sale and all transactions connected with them into the stock deal, these dealings have been most prolific of litigation.

*88 To what extent .the death of appellant Tchitcherine 2 and the subsequent receivership of the property has been responsible for this condition must be left to conjecture. The fact remains, however, that ever since the reversal by this court of the summary judgment of the court below ordering specific performance of the contract, Cause No. 1148 M Civil has been the storm center, the battleground of a struggle for the property of Deauville Corporation, with charges and recriminations against litigants and lawyers alike the order of the day.

Throughout this period, what has given force and direction to all the winds that blew has been a three pronged controversy. Waged by Lasser and Winkel, at first with Princess Tchitcherine and, after her death, with the receivers on the one hand, and with Kowal and his corporation, Deauville Associates, claiming as their assignee on the other, it has finally come down to the controversy over the efforts of Deauville Associates to intervene .as of right and acquire the property of the Deauville Corporation. This triple controversy' has generated proceeding after proceeding, appeal after appeal, almost without end.

In our opinion this day filed in the companion appeal to this one, 5 Cir., 197 F.2d 91, we have dealt in passing with the litigation in this court growing out of the efforts of the appellant, Deauville Associates to intervene in these proceedings, not as a Us pendens purchaser, but as of right.

Affirming the order dismissing the last of them, we approved the action of the court in providing in the decree entered January 23, 1951, “that the right of Deau-ville Associates, Inc. to file its claim, if any, in this court for any refund which it claims it is entitled to receive in this case is hereby preserved.”

Pursuant to the permission so given, in-tervenor on that same day filed in the cause its petition for reimbursement and for subrogation, and the court, on motion of the receiver to strike each of the paragraphs of the petition, and, on the petitions of Roger Edward Davis and the United States, for a determination of priorities, entered its order striking each of the nine numbered paragraphs of inter-venor’s claim, and fixing priorities.

Appealing from, and superseding, that order, intervenor is here assigning two grounds of error: (1) the striking of all its claims; (2) the allowance to Davis of $1500 as attorneys fees.

Upon the first ground, appellant insists that the order striking its claims was repugnant to the opinion and final decree of Dec. 10, 1948, which, cancelling their contract, required that Lasser and Winkel, through whom intervenor claims, be placed in statu quo by repayment to them of all monies properly expended by them.

Pointing to the undisputed evidence showing advancements for the benefit of Deau-ville Corporation, made both by Lasser and Winkel and by Kowal, whose solely owned corporation and alter ego it is, intervenor, citing Fowler v. Lee, 106 Fla. 712, 143 So. 613; Federal Land Bank v. Godwin, 107 Fla. 537, 145 So. 883, and Stowers v. Wheat, 5 Cir., 78 F.2d 25, insists that the denial of the subrogation it seeks does violence to equitable principles of the first order.

Pointing also to the admission of record that Deauville Associates should be reimbursed to the extent of $27,650, with interest, paid on the mortgage by Kowal, made *89 by the receivers in their tender of payment, 3 appellant insists that certainly as to those sums the court should have decreed subro-gation. Insisting that in arriving at the sums to be fixed in the judgment of Dec. 10, 1948, as the amounts due Lasser and Winkel, no account was taken of their sub-rogation claims for moneys paid by them on the mortgage, appellant points to the colloquy 4 in the record on that score and urges that, in law, claims of subrogation were not, and could not have been, included in that judgment.

Upon a careful consideration, on the record as a whole, of the order striking the nine paragraphs of intervenor’s claim without affording it a hearing as to the equities thereof, we are of the clear opinion, for the reasons hereafter briefly stated, that the district judge plainly erred as to Paragraphs IV and V; that paragraphs VI and VII were properly stricken; and that the order, while affirmed as to the striking of these two paragraphs must be reversed as to the other paragraphs, and remanded for further and not inconsistent proceedings.

Our reasons for thinking so are, that in the general state of confusion and controversy arising out of the contracts between the parties, there is no basis for treating as a stranger or volunteer any of those making advances, and that what any one of them did for the preservation of the res by discharging liens against, or otherwise preserving it, must be taken account of, and those making advances must be protected to the extent that the advances really enured to the benefit of the property. The principles permitting subrogation and those preventing unjust enrichment unite in requir *90 ing this. In Stowers v. Wheat, 5 Cir., 78 F.2d 30, this court, stating, “Subrogation is perhaps the purest of equities”, gave careful consideration to, and carefully set down, the rules governing its application, and as carefully applied them to the facts of the case. Those principles are still of force. They apply in all their vigor to this case unabated and undiminished by the claim erroneously made below that, though unadjudicated in fact because not put in issue, these claims to subrogation must be considered as having been adjudicated in law because they might have been.

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Bluebook (online)
197 F.2d 87, 1952 U.S. App. LEXIS 2585, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/deauville-associates-inc-v-magraw-ca5-1952.