Ellis v. Hibernia Savings, Building & Loan Ass'n

179 S.E. 110, 180 Ga. 437, 1935 Ga. LEXIS 284
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedMarch 2, 1935
DocketNo. 10383
StatusPublished

This text of 179 S.E. 110 (Ellis v. Hibernia Savings, Building & Loan Ass'n) 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
Ellis v. Hibernia Savings, Building & Loan Ass'n, 179 S.E. 110, 180 Ga. 437, 1935 Ga. LEXIS 284 (Ga. 1935).

Opinions

Atkinson, Justice.

On December 15, 1931, Mrs. Sarah E. Sennett instituted an equitable action against the Hibernia Savings, Building and Loan Association and Peter E. Clarke. Mrs. Sennett died, and Erampton E. Ellis as administrator of her estate was substituted as plaintiff. After institution of the suit Peter E. Clarke was adjudged insane, and H. W. McLarty was appointed his guardian ad litem. The case was heard on demurrers interposed by each defendant. The court overruled the demurrer of Clarke, to which ruling there was no exception. The court sustained the general demurrer interposed by the Hibernia Savings, Building and Loan Association, and as to that defendant dismissed the action. The plaintiff excepted.

The petition as amended alleged substantially the following: The plaintiff is a widow 88 years of age, who at the time of the transactions hereinafter referred to resided beyond the limits of the State. Prior to 1907, and continuously until 1931, Peter E. Clarke as her trusted agent and friend handled money for her in making-loans and collections thereof on real estate. While acting as such agent in 1913 Clarke in behalf of petitioner loaned, from funds in liis hands as agent, $1000 to Mrs. Wilson, for which a security deed was duly executed. The deed conveyed certain land in DeKalb County, Georgia, of the value of $7000. Clarke continued to handle this loan as well as other loans for plaintiff. The Wilson loan became in default, and Peter E. Clarke employed J. Caleb Clarke as attorney at law, and proceeded to foreclose the security by suit in which a judgment was rendered on June 12, 1919, in favor of plaintiff for the principal debt with accumulated interest and attorney’s fees, amounting approximately to $1500. Execution was issued, and the property brought to sale in October, 1919. Peter E. Clarke, acting as her agent in handling the collection of this loan, bid in the property at $1000, and received a deed in his individual name. He did not remit to her the proceeds of the sale or report the sale to her, but concealed from her the fact of the sale, and subsequently wrote to her letters stating that no collection had been made of the loan. On the basis of such conduct, it was alleged that Peter E. Clarke, in taking title to the property in his own name without the knowledge of petitioner, and his failure to remit the proceeds,'constituted him in equity a trustee ex maleficio for her benefit. On May 15, 1923, approximately four years after the sale, [439]*439Peter F. Clarke individually procured a loan oí $5200 from the Hibernia Savings, Building and Loan Association, giving as security therefor a deed conveying the realty above referred to. At that time he was a director and secretary and treasurer of the association just named, and acted as a member of its loan committee passing on the loan. He participated in the directors’ meeting at which the loan was approved, and signed the minutes as secretary. The check issued by the association for the money loaned was signed in its behalf by Clarke as one of the officers. “Thus the association had notice and knowledge of Mrs. Sennett’s interest in the property, since it was represented in the transaction by Peter F. Clarke, who had full knowledge of the facts, and of the interest of Mrs. Sennett. Furthermore, the record of the foreclosure sale, duly recorded in the office of the clerk of the superior court of DoKalb County, constitirted part of the chain of title to the property, and was notice of the actions of Peter F. Clarke in breach of his fiduciary duty to Mrs. Sennett.” In paragraph 16 of the petition it was alleged: “At the time of the deed . . the Hibernia Savings, Building and Loan Association, through its agents acting in its behalf, had notice or actual knowledge of the misconduct of Peter F. Clarke above mentioned, and of the equity of Mrs. Sarah E. Sennett in the said property, for the following reasons:

“The application of Peter F. Clarke for this loan was referred to the Beal Estate Committee. This committee had the function of considering the application, the security offered, and the circumstances of the case, and deciding whether the loan should be made. There were three members of this committee. Peter F. Clarke was a member. The Beal Estate Committee, including Peter F, Clarke, considered this application in behalf of the association, and decided that it should be made! Also, the board of directors including Peter F. Clarke met and approved the application in behalf of the association. The regularly employed attorney of the association was then directed to examine the title to the land offered as security, this being the same land described in paragraph three of the petition. This attorney had authority, in behalf of the association, to examine the title to the said land, and to report any defects in the title of Peter F. Clarke, whether appearing of record or personally known by the attorney. He did examine the title to the land for the association. He was the at[440]*440torney who had handled the foreclosure of the loan deed of Mrs. Clifford W. Wilson in favor of Mrs. Sennett, and so he had actual knowledge of Peter F. Clarke’s fiduciary relation to Mrs. Sennett and of Peter F. Clarke’s actions with reference to the purchase of the property in his own name, and that he paid nothing therefor, and he had knowledge of Mrs. Sennett’s equity in the property. When the loan of $5200 was made to Peter F. Clarke, the loan check of $5200 was signed in behalf of the Hibernia Savings, Building & Loan Association by Peter F. Clarke as secretary and treasurer, and he alone signed the check in behalf of the association. Thus the association was not a bona fide purchaser or lender.”

Other allegations were substantially as follows. Clarke subdivided the land into lots, and during the period intervening between 1924 and 1927 made sales of designated lots, deriving therefrom $18,250.-00, and in the consummation of the sales the. Hibernia Savings, Building and Loan Association executed quitclaim deeds to the respective purchasers. From the proceeds of the subdivision and sale at least $4819.20 was collected in behalf of the Hibernia Savings, Building and Loan Association by Peter F. Clarke, and was retained by the association. The only claim of the association to said funds was under and through Peter F. Clarke. The said funds were used in the business of the association and mingled with its assets, in which shape they continued to remain. Said funds increased the association’s assets, and are now traceable in the assets of the association, and are impressed in equity with a trust in favor of petitioner. In May, 1931, Peter F. Clarke executed to the Hibernia Savings, Building and Loan Association a deed conveying all the land upon a purported consideration of “ten dollars and other valuable considerations.” There was in fact no cash or property given as present consideration of the deed. It was given as part payment on the pre-existing debt of Clarke to the association; and therefore the association was not a purchaser for value. At the time.of accepting the deed the Hibernia Savings, Building and Loan Association “had notice, or actual knowledge, through its agents acting in its behalf, of the misconduct of Peter F. Clarke, above mentioned, and of the equity of your petitioner in said property,” and “its action in accepting the deed assisted Peter F. Clarke in his misapplication of the property described in the deed; and for this wrong the association should be held accountable. By tak[441]*441ing this deed the association was unjustly enriched at the expense of Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
179 S.E. 110, 180 Ga. 437, 1935 Ga. LEXIS 284, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ellis-v-hibernia-savings-building-loan-assn-ga-1935.