Fitzgerald v. McKee

121 So. 127, 153 Miss. 198, 1929 Miss. LEXIS 43
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 14, 1929
DocketNo. 27313.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 121 So. 127 (Fitzgerald v. McKee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fitzgerald v. McKee, 121 So. 127, 153 Miss. 198, 1929 Miss. LEXIS 43 (Mich. 1929).

Opinion

Cook, J.

This is an appeal from a decree of the chancery court of the Second district of Coahoma county, dissolving an injunction which had been theretofore granted to restrain the foreclosure of two certain deeds of trust.

The material facts, as shown by the bill of complaint and exhibits thereto, are substantially as follows: On the 31st day of October, 1922, Mrs. Eosa Mays Horner and Mrs. K. M. Lyford, residents of Helena, Arkansas, were each indebted to Mrs. H. M. Orr, also a resident of Helena, Arkansas, in the sum of six thousand twenty-two dollars and fifty-six cents, evidenced by promissory notes, and to secure this indebtedness each of said debtors executed separate deeds of trust on land and 'property situated in Coahoma county, Mississippi. With the exception of the names of the grantors and the description of the property conveyed, these deeds of trust appear identical in phraseology. This indebtedness was not paid as it matured; and, after it matured, and at a time when a large part thereof was unpaid, the indebtedness and deeds of trust securing the same were transferred to John B. McKee and W. L. McKee. Thereafter, through the firm of Eoberson & Cook, as attorneys, the owners and holders of this indebtedness instituted foreclosure proceedings under section 2772, Code 1906, and amendments thereto, by advertising the property for sale under the provisions of the deeds of trust. Subsequent to the publication of notice of sale under the deeds of trust, and prior to the date of the sale, the complainant in the court below, Mrs. Victoria Fitzgerald, purchased from Mbs. Horner and Mrs. Lyford the land and property on which the liens had been created under these deeds of trust, *203 and thereupon Mrs. Fitzgerald began negotiations with John B. McKee, one of the joint owners of the said indebtedness, and with his attorneys, seeking to pay off the indebtedness and all costs and expenses of the foreclosure proceedings, and thereby end these proceedings. In pursuance of this purpose she wrote a letter to Messrs. McKee, the trustee in the deed of trust, and Roberson & C'ook, attorneys for the Messrs. McKee, in which she made an unconditional tender of eight thousand three hundred sixty-two dollars and seventy cents in full’ settlement of. the indebtedness and costs and expenses. To this letter there was attached a receipt in full for the trustee’s fees, and attention was called to the fact that proper credit had not been given for the sum of two thousand five hundred fifty-nine dollars and sixteen cents paid by the*original debtors, and also to the fact that the notes secured by the deeds of trust were payable in Arkansas and governed by the laws of Arkansas; and the contention was advanced that under the laws of Arkansas, the provision in the notes for the payment of attorney’s fees was unenforceable and void, and, consequently, that no attorney’s fees were due.

On the following day, the attorneys for McKee addressed a letter to the attorneys for Mrs. Fitzgerald, in ■response to the letter of tender in which the tender was rejected for two reasons: First, that some of the bills' tendered were not legal tender under the acts of Congress; and, second, that the attorney’s fees provided for by the two deeds of trust were not included in the tender; and special attention was called to a provision of the two deeds of trust which reads as follows:

“From the proceeds of sale, the trustee shall pay:
“First. The costs and expenses of executing this trust, including a fee to the trustee of five per centum on the amount of said sale, for his services, and a further fee *204 of ten per centum, on the amount of said notes, for the services of an attorney, as provided by said notes.”

Thereafter Mrs. Fitzgerald’s attorneys replied to the letter of Roberson & Cook, attorneys, and renewed the tender, including legal tender notes, with such additional interest as had accrued, and made therein the following statement:

“As we conceive the law, the original contracts, both notes and deeds of trust, were made between citizens of the state of Arkansas, notes payable in Arkansas at the Interstate Bank & Trust Co., at Helena, Arkansas, and the contracts governed by the Arkansas law which forbids the payment of attorney’s fees on such notes. Mrs. Fitzgerald therefore will not pay such attorney’s fees on these notes.”

No answer was made to the last above-melitioned letter, and thereupon Mrs. Fitzgerald, in order to prevent the sale of the property by the trustee, filed the original bill in this cause and secured the issuance of an injunction writ restraining the sales, and paid into court the amount previously tendered. The bill of complaint sel forth, in detail, the facts above stated, and made exhibits thereto the various letters and instruments above referred to; and it is apparent from the bill and exhibits, as well as the concessions of counsel, that the only point in controversy between the parties was the question as to whether or not the complainant was liable for attor-• ney’s fees as contended for by the defendants, it being conceded that the complainant was entitled to a credit of two thousand five hundred fifty-nine dollars and sixteen cents, as claimed by her and that the amount tendered was the amount due with the exception of the attorney’s fees claimed by the defendants.

To this bill of complaint, the defendants filed a demurrer, alleging as the grounds thereof the following:

“First: There is no equity on the face of the bill.
*205 "Second: The bill shows upon its face that the complainant has failed to do equity, in that she has failed to tender the total amount of indebtedness due under the allegations of said bill.
"Third: The bill shows upon its face that the complainant has failed to tender to the defendants the attorney’s fees provided to be paid by the trustee, upon the foreclosure of the Exhibits C and D to the bill of complaint. ’ ’

A motion to dissolve the injunction upon the demurrer to the bill of complaint was then filed, and, after notice, this motion was heard and sustained, and a decree entered dissolving* the temporary injunction and awarding statutory damages of five per cent on eight hundred thirty dollars, attorney’s fees found to be due and owing by the complainant; and from this decree the complainant prosecuted this appeal, while the defendant prosecuted a cross-appeal from the action of the chancellor in allowing damages on the amount of the attorney’s fees claimed instead of on-the entire amount of indebtedness due.

The notes secured by the deeds of trust referred to in the bill of complaint, and discussed at length by counsel in their briefs, do not appear in this record, and, consequently, we cannot know the exact provisions thereof in reference to attorney’s fees. The bill of complaint, however, charges, and the demurrer admits, that the contracts between the original parties were made in the state of Arkansas, and that the notes secured by the deeds of trust were executed with the express understanding that the indebtedness and notes evidencing the same should be payable at' the Interstate Bank, at Helena.

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Bluebook (online)
121 So. 127, 153 Miss. 198, 1929 Miss. LEXIS 43, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fitzgerald-v-mckee-miss-1929.