Farmers' Bank of Greenville v. Blount

8 F.2d 443, 1925 U.S. App. LEXIS 3289
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedOctober 20, 1925
DocketNo. 2356
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 8 F.2d 443 (Farmers' Bank of Greenville v. Blount) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Farmers' Bank of Greenville v. Blount, 8 F.2d 443, 1925 U.S. App. LEXIS 3289 (4th Cir. 1925).

Opinion

WADDILL, Circuit Judge.

A bill in equity was filed in this cause by the appellee, M. K. Blount, trustee in bankruptcy of R. Win-gate and R. Wingate & Son, bankrupts, against the appellant, the Farmers’ Bank of Greenville, and others. The bill was filed by direction of the United States District Court in the bankruptcy proceedings of R. Wingate and R. Wingate & Son, and had for its purpose the ascertainment and settlement of the amount and priority of the liens upon certain real estate owned by the bankrupts and sold in the bankruptcy proceedings, consisting especially of two tracts of land located on the Gum Swamp Canal, in Pitt county, N. C.; one tract containing 352.1 acres, and the other 187.5 acres. The gross proceeds of the sale of the two tracts of land was $49,-500, and the aggregate debts secured by mortgages and trust deeds as to which there was no controversy, and which admittedly have priority over those of the two liens in dispute hereinafter mentioned, was $33,619.-23, leaving a balance after payment of certain taxes and costs of suit of $14,205.77. This last-named amount is claimed on the one hand by the appellant as subject to- its debt of $18,000, due it on account of a loan for that sum made by it to the bankrupt, R. Wingate, and secured, as is claimed by the Farmers’ Bank of Greenville, by> the execution of a certain note by Wingate and wife for $37,500 to the Virginia-Carolina Joint-Stock Land Bank, hereinafter called the Land Bank, with its principal office in Norfolk, Va., the payment of which was secured to said Land Bank by trust deed from Win-gate and wife to the Guaranty Title & Trust Corporation. This security, appellant bank insists, inured to it by reason of the circumstances under which it was executed and the subsequent assignment of the note secured in the same to it. On the other hand, the appellee, the Southern Stockyards Corporation, trading as Smythe Bros., MeCleary, McClellan & Co., intervener, claims the said amount as applicable to the balance due on its lien on the property sold by virtue of a trust deed executed on December 4, 1920, by R. Wingate and wife to F. G. James, securing two notes, one for $26,000 and one for $25,000, due respectively on January 1, 1922, and January 1, 1923.

The facts surrounding the incurring and effort to secure the debts due, respectively, to the Farmers’ Bank of Greenville, on the one hand, and the Southern Stockyards, trading as Smythe Bros., MeCleary, McClellan & Co., on the other, may be briefly given. R. Wingate was a man of large means, engaged on a considerable scale as a sales and livery stableman and as a farmer, witfy the Farmers’ Bank of Greenville, N. C., and from this bank in the year 1919 secured two loans, one for $8,000 and another for $10,000, taking as special security for the indebtedness notes, choses in action, etc., due Wingate in his business. At the time of securing the $8,000 and the $10,000, Wingate’s purpose was to borrow a -much larger sum, $37,500, which was more than the Farmers’ Bank of Green-ville was willing to carry, and it was concluded by Wingate to apply for $37,500 from the Land Bank at Norfolk. It was understood between him and the Farmers’ Bank of Greenville that he would make such application and upon securing the loan would handle the amount received through the Farmers’ Bank of Greenville, with the view to their securing the money advanced by them, and pending this understanding they advanced to Wingate, on November 19,1919, the sum of $10,000.

Formal application was made to the Land Bank at Norfolk for the loan of $37,500. Wingate and his wife executing their formal notes for the same and their trust deed to the Guaranty Title & Trust Corporation, trustee, dated April 1, 1920, to secure the amount thereof. The title of the property was examined, and it was understood that the loan was to be effected, but the same from one eause or another was never consummated. Among other things, the determination of the constitutionality and validity of the Federal Land Bank Act was questioned, which,. however, was determined favorably to the bank; but from that delay, and the depreciation of values about that time, and other causes, the application for the loan was rejected, and finally declined altogether. Thereupon the Greenville Bank, on the 24th of December, 1920, made application to the Land Bank for a transfer of the $37,500 note executed in their favor, insisting that, by reason of the understanding that they were to be paid -out of the proceeds of loan when made, it was entitled to be indemnified under their trust deed to the extent of the $18,000 loaned by them, and on the 28th of December, 1920, R. Wingate by power of attorney directed the Land Bank to make such transfer. Subsequently, on the 8th of February, 1922, the Land Bank did make an assignment to the Farmers’ Bank of Greenville of any right, title, and interest that the said Land Bank might have in and to the $37,500 note executed by Win-gate and wife and secured by deed of trust to the Guaranty Title & Trust Corpora[445]*445tion, recorded in the office of the registrar of deeds of Pitt county, N. C., on the 12th of February, 1922, Book Q 13, page 411.

The indebtedness due to Smythe Bros., whereby they claimed the $14,205.77, arose in this way. They were largely engaged in business with Wingate, with the result that on the 4th day of December, 1920, a trust deed was executed by him a,nd wife to F. G. James, trustee, on the property sold^ herein, to secure two notes, one for $26,000 and the other for $25,000. This trust deed was duly recorded on December 4,1920, on the registry of deeds in Pitt county, N. C., and on the date of Wingate and Wingate & Son’s bankruptcy, on the 2d of March, 1922, there was due thereon an amount in excess of the balance remaining for distribution as aforesaid, arising from the proceeds of the sale of land.

The crucial question to be determined in this case is whether this lien shall be paid, or whether the sum of $18,000 due the Green-ville Bank aforesaid, and for which it claims a lien under the transfer of the note executed to the Land Bank, shall be first paid; its contention being that an equitable lien exists in its behalf, and that it should be subrogated to the rights of the Land Bank in the mortgage given by Wingate to secure the $37,500 note as aforesaid. The learned judge of the lower court by the decree appealed from decided the questions at issue as to the ownership of the balance arising from the sale of the lands of $14,205.77 against the appellant and in favor of the Southern Stockyards, Incorporated, and that the amount in hand should be paid in partial liquidation of the balance due under the deed of the 4th of December, 1920, to F. G. James, trustee, and that no lien, or right of lien, either by equitable assignments, subrogation, or otherwise, existed in favor of the appellant, the Farmers’ Bank of Greenville, under the trust deed securing the $37,500, in favor of the Virginia-C.arolina Joint-Stock Land Company of Norfolk; it appearing that this transaction was never consummated and that the proposed loan to be secured thereon was never in fact made.

It will thus bo seen that there are really but two questions for determination on this appeal, and they are whether the appellant, the Farmers’ Bank of Greenville, has a lien upon the funds distributed by the court, either by reason of an equitable assignment of the note secured by trust deed to the Guaranty Title &

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Bluebook (online)
8 F.2d 443, 1925 U.S. App. LEXIS 3289, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farmers-bank-of-greenville-v-blount-ca4-1925.