Dillard v. Serpell

123 S.E. 343, 138 Va. 694, 1924 Va. LEXIS 60
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJune 12, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 123 S.E. 343 (Dillard v. Serpell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dillard v. Serpell, 123 S.E. 343, 138 Va. 694, 1924 Va. LEXIS 60 (Va. 1924).

Opinion

Prentis, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from a decree which (after the complainant declined further to amend his bill) sustained a demurrer to a bill filed by the appellant against the appellee. The essential facts necessary to comprehend the questions involved may be thus stated:

The Virginia Fruit Juice Company, Incorporated, on January 12, 1917, conveyed valuable property to the complainant to secure $100,000.00 evidenced by 100 bonds for $1,000.00 each. The same company, on October 31, 1919, executed a second deed of trust upon the same property to the appellant as trustee to secure the payment of a negotiable note for $70,000.00 payable to the Trust Company of Norfolk. The debtor defaulted in the payment of some of the accrued interest and principal, and on July 15, 1920, was adjudged an involuntary bankrupt. The bill alleges that the several holders of these over-due bonds and note “chose to rely upon the security afforded by said deeds of trust to this complainant as trustee, and chose not to file proofs of their claims in the bankruptcy proceeding.” These deeds of trust provided that the grantor should [697]*697remain in quiet and peaceable possession of the property and take the profits thereof to its own use until default should be made in the payment of the debts in whole or in part, and that upon such default and so soon thereafter as he should be requested by the holders of one-half of the outstanding bonds secured by the first deed of trust, and upon request of the creditor secured by the second deed of trust, he should sell the property at public auction after advertisement, etc., and that out of the proceeds of sale, after paying the expenses attending the execution of the trust, including commissions to the trustee at the rate of five per cent, he should pay off the debts with interest. The grantor also covenanted that it would during the continuance of the trust keep the buildings and property insured against loss by fire, and assign the policies of insurance to the trustee as additional security for the payment of the debts, and that if it failed to do so either the trustee or the beneficiary might cause the property to be insured, and that the insurance premiums so paid should be a charge upon the trust property.

The deeds of trust,, then, are in the form which is customary in this jurisdiction. It is the usual method of securing debts and is used as a substitute for the mortgage.

The bill also alleges that on December 27, 1920, the trustee in bankruptcy, acting through Davis & Davis, attorneys, who were also attorneys for the petitioning ■creditors in bankruptcy, and counsel for the Trust Company of Norfolk, obtained a rule, citing the complainant, as trustee under these deeds of trust, to appear in the bankruptcy court for the purpose of having determined the validity and priority of all liens and claims against the bankrupt’s estate, including the liens created by the deeds of trust, and the priority of [698]*698the same, and for the purpose of marshalling the assets-of the bankrupt, including the property conveyed by said deeds of trust, and to determine whether the bankrupt’s property should be sold free of encumbrances, or subject to incumbrances. That none of the beneficiaries in the deed of trust were made parties to this rule to show cause, or asked to be made parties to the proceeding, so it devolved upon complainant, as trustee, to answer the rule. That he attended the hearing, contended for the priority of the liens of the two deeds of' trust, as a result of which they were decreed to be first liens on all of the property embraced therein. That-he contended that taxes to the extent of about-$7,000.00, which were liens upon the trust estate, were-a prior lien on the general assets of the bankrupt’s estate. That this contention was sustained and thus clearly augmented the security under the deeds of' trust. That certain reserved -title liens and supply liens asserted against the property were successfully resisted and rejected by the court, and the trust estate thereby augmented. That there were certain negotiations with attorneys representing the other interests, leading to an understanding as to his compensation,* and that finally the property was sold subject to the liens of the deeds of trust. That the purchaser at the-sale under the decree of the Federal court in the bankruptcy proceedings thereafter conveyed the entire-property to another, the Port Holding Corporation, subject of course to the liens of the deeds of trust.

There are other allegations of matters of detail, but the substance of the bill is that the complainant, being an attorney and familiar with all the previous, transactions relating to the trust estate, believed it competent for him to defend the interests of the ‘estate in the bankrupt court; that his services were of valuep [699]*699and that he is entitled to be compensated therefor. He also alleges that he performed certain services as trustee under the deed of trust for which he is also •entitled to compensation, enumerating the certification of bonds in accordance with the provisions of the .first deed of trust, 100 in number; and that from that time forward he was entrusted, as trustee, with a large number of fire insurance policies upon different classes of property embraced in the deeds of trust, the amount of insurance on the property varying from $175,000.00 to $300,000.00, and the number of policies varying from thirty to fifty; that this insurance expired at different times, and as the policies expired he- was •called on to deliver old policies and inspect new policies, for the protection of the trust fund; that when the Virginia Fruit Juice Company, Incorporated, was adjudicated a bankrupt he had to direct and superintend endorsements on all of the policies, amounting to twenty-nine in number and to $184,500.00 in amount; and that thereafter when trustees in bankruptcy were appointed, he had to obtain and supervise additional ■endorsements for said policies, and still later, in subsequent transfers of the property, he had the same services to perform, for none of which he has received any • compensation.

In this suit, he convenes the creditors secured by the deeds of trust and the present owner of the trust property, the Port Holding Corporation, as defendants, seeks to enjoin the assignment of the securities to new parties, because it would becloud the question of contribution in the case; and prays that the court may in its discretion determine “what is a just and proper compensation for the services rendered by your complainant as trustee under the two deeds of trust, afore.said, and for legal services for the trustee in said bank[700]*700ruptcy proceedings, and may determine to what extent- and in what proportion the various holders of the securities under both the deed of January 12, 1917, and the-deed of October 31, 1919, are liable to the complainant and shall contribute to said compensation, and may order and decree their contribution to your complainant accordingly, or may determine what fund or property, if any, is chargeable with the payment of the compensation awarded the complainant, and may decree accordingly.” He also tenders his resignation as trustee.

The question presented is novel in this State. While it is conceded that no compensation is awarded, a mere trustee in England, the general rule in this-country is that a trustee is compensated.

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Bluebook (online)
123 S.E. 343, 138 Va. 694, 1924 Va. LEXIS 60, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dillard-v-serpell-va-1924.