Edwin K. Atwood, Alice B. Atwood, Ruth P. Fisher and Thomas H. Fisher v. Gilbert Kerlin

264 F.2d 4
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedMarch 16, 1959
Docket24899_1
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 264 F.2d 4 (Edwin K. Atwood, Alice B. Atwood, Ruth P. Fisher and Thomas H. Fisher v. Gilbert Kerlin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Edwin K. Atwood, Alice B. Atwood, Ruth P. Fisher and Thomas H. Fisher v. Gilbert Kerlin, 264 F.2d 4 (2d Cir. 1959).

Opinions

SWAN, Circuit Judge.

The judgment from which plaintiffs have appealed was entered, on defendant’s motion, in a suit brought by plaintiffs on January 18, 1951, to establish the existence of an express trust under a quit claim deed from plaintiffs to defendant, dated March 19, 1945, describing land on Padre Island, Texas, to require defendant to account thereunder, to terminate the trust, and for other alternative relief. Federal jurisdiction rests on diversity of citizenship. 28 U.S. C.A. §§ 1332, 1391. Four days after the present suit was commenced, defendant Kerlin in Texas brought action against the present appellants and others to obtain an adjudication of the respective rights of the parties as to the land.1 That suit was not finally terminated until the mandate of the Court of Civil Appeals was filed on December 12, 1955, opinion reported in Fisher v. Kerlin, 279 S.W.2d 637. In the meantime the present suit lay dormant.

Almost immediately after final decision in the Texas case, plaintiffs moved in the present suit for a summary judgment requiring defendant to account. By order of April 2, 1956 Judge Ryan directed defendant to file his account and directed plaintiffs to file their objections thereto, if any. This order was complied with, and on September 12,1956 defendant moved for an order approving his account and dismissing, for failure to state a cause of action, plaintiffs’ supplemental complaint filed subsequent to defendant’s account. This motion, with numerous supporting and opposing affidavits, was fully considered by Judge Ryan, and was granted in a carefully reasoned opinion, dated May 13, 1957, which appears in D.C., 169 F.Supp. 135. The judgment on appeal was entered on July 29, 1957. Without reciting in detail all the terms of the judgment it will suffice to note that it approved defendant’s account, awarded plaintiffs the indebtedness therein shown, $16,656.07, dismissed plaintiffs’ supplemental complaint, and denied leave to file a proposed amendment thereto. No testimony was taken, the case being decided on the pleadings, voluminous affidavits and exhibits.2

It is conceded by both parties that all issues determined by the Texas action are res judicata in the present suit. Much of the voluminous record is concerned with background history of title litigation in Texas. A brief summary will suffice. In 1941 Kerlin filed a tres[6]*6pass to try title action in Cameron County, Texas, against the King Ranch, not a party to the present suit, and the present plaintiffs, for 6,000 acres of land referred to herein as the King tract and located at the southern end of Padre Island. During the pendency of that action, the United States Government commenced condemnation proceedings and took title to the King tract and also to a larger tract referred to herein as the Jones tract and located immediately to the north of the King tract. During 1941 the King Ranch and defendant settled the trespass action, and in 1945, plaintiffs and defendant agreed upon a similar settlement of their controversy, pursuant to which the quit claim deed of March 19, 1945 was delivered. Under the terms of the deed defendant Kerlin assumed the task of prosecuting plaintiffs’ claims for an award in the pending Government condemnation proceeding. In 1950, he worked out an arrangement whereby the Government paid a small sum for the use of the land while the condemnation proceeding was pending and revested title to the King tract in Kerlin and title to the Jones tract in Kerlin and Jones jointly.

Immediately after the conclusion of that action, plaintiffs instituted the present suit in the District Court, and four days later Kerlin filed suit in Texas to obtain an adjudication of the rights of the parties under the 1945 quit claim deed. As the opinion in Fisher v. Kerlin, 279 S.W.2d 637 makes clear, the Texas suit construed the quit claim deed, determined Kerlin’s duties thereunder and the rights of the parties in the lands therein described and in money received by Kerlin from dealing with said lands. It decided that the present plaintiffs (referred to in the opinion as the Atwoods) had title to an undivided 1,000 acres out of the south 2,000 acres of the 6,000 acre King tract, and to an undivided 550.1 acres out of the 3,300.11 acre tract north of the 6,000 acre King tract. It also rendered judgment that the Atwoods recover a one-sixteenth royalty and one half of the bonuses and rentals paid to Kerlin on the south 2,000 acres of the 6,000 acre King tract and on the 550.1 acres of the acreage lying north of the King tract. Kerlin was left under the duty to account for money received from the United States under its condemnation proceedings, and from the lessees under two oil and gas leases which he had made, one with Stanolind Oil & Gas Co., the other with Magnolia Petroleum Co. His account filed on May 1, 1956, was held by Judge Ryan to be a proper accounting for the money so received.

The appellants’ brief presents their contentions under seven headings. Point I argues that the quit claim deed of March 19, 1945 created “An Express Inter Vivos Trust” in their favor. This argument is made notwithstanding the statement in the Texas opinion, 279 S.W.2d 637, at page 642: “We rest our decision upon a constructive trust rather than an express trust.” However, an affidavit submitted in opposition to defendant’s motion to approve his account, states that in view of the Texas judgment “the sole and only questions undetermined under the Complaint and Supplemental Complaint are (a) the settlement of the account of the Defendant Gilbert Kerlin, as trustee (whether as express or constructive trustee is irrelevant), and (b) a determination of Kerlin’s liability, if any, under Plaintiffs’ Supplemental Complaint.” 3

In Point II appellants argue their right to “a day in court.” Their brief asserts (page 28) that the primary question involved on their appeal is whether entering a summary judgment deprived them “of their right to their ‘day in court’ by a trial upon the merits of the Trustee’s account, as well as the other issues raised in Plaintiffs’ pleadings.” They rely strongly upon the principle enunciated in Subin v. Goldsmith, 2 Cir., 224 F.2d 753, 758, certiorari denied 350 U.S. 883, 76 S.Ct. 136, 100 L.Ed. 779, and similar cases, holding that where controverted facts are peculiarly within [7]*7one party’s knowledge and a question of such party’s good faith is involved, a summary judgment in his favor without trial is improper. This principle is completely inapplicable to the case at bar. In disposing of the objections to the account, Judge Ryan held that no hearing was necessary since the objections could be determined by reference to the documents and exhibits submitted, none of which was in dispute.4 Despite appellants’ assertion that “every crucial fact in the respective affidavits * * * is directly controverted and contradicted” nowhere do they state what those facts are nor what specific issue requires a trial. So far as we can ascertain from a study of the record there are no “controverted facts,” merely disagreements as to the legal consequences of admitted facts, or disputes as to the legally correct interpretation of documents and exhibits.

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Bluebook (online)
264 F.2d 4, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/edwin-k-atwood-alice-b-atwood-ruth-p-fisher-and-thomas-h-fisher-v-ca2-1959.