Galbraith v. Roddy

92 S.W.2d 419, 19 Tenn. App. 572, 1934 Tenn. App. LEXIS 7
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedNovember 3, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 92 S.W.2d 419 (Galbraith v. Roddy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Galbraith v. Roddy, 92 S.W.2d 419, 19 Tenn. App. 572, 1934 Tenn. App. LEXIS 7 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

PORTRUM,' J.

This case presents the question of the legality and right to enforcement of a covenant, contained in a mortgage, for the partial release of land when sold in lots or parcels. The covenant, to be hereinafter copied, provides that the mortgagee will release lots ■or parcels when $200 per acre of the purchase price is paid to him upon his debt.

The bill alleges that the mortgagors sold and conveyed a tract of three acres to the complainant, Charles E. Galbraith, for the recited consideration of $1 and the execution of a note payable to one of the mortgagors for the sum of $500, and that the complainant had tendered to the mortgagee, J. P. Roddy, the sum of $600 in legal tender representing $200 per acre, and had requested a release, but that the' said Roddy had refused the tender and declined to make a release. The sum was tendered in the bill and paid into court, and the court was asked to construe the covenant as contained in the mortgage and enforce the covenant by a mandatoiy injunction or by a decree declaring the rights of the parties and releasing the lien to this tract of land.

The defendant obtained time to defend, and, the indebtedness having since defaulted, the trustee advertised the entire tract for sale under a foreclosure procedure; and then the complainant filed a supplemental and amended bill asking for an injunction restraining the trustee from selling the 3-acre tract involved in the liti-' gation. This injunction was granted and the mortgage foreclosed with the exception of the 3-aere tract. The pleadings were then answered, denying the right of the mortgagors to carve out 3 acres from the boundary, which is alleged to be the most valuable and contained the dwelling house, and the denial calls for a construction of the instrument. The answer also contains broad allegations of fraud, but the only specific facts alleged that are pertinent to the inquiry are the facts that the tract of 3 acres was carvéd out of the entire boundary and is the most valuable 3 acres within the boundary, and that the purchaser of this tract is the son of Charles E. Galbraith, *574 one of the mortgagors, so that it is a collusive agreement between: the father and son to work an injury upon the mortgagee. If the son has a legal right to make this purchase under the terms of the mortgage, then it is not fraudulent, and, if he has not this right, then it is not fraudulent, for the mortgagee was not injured. The transaction was conducted openly and without concealment. Other facts were alleged in reference to the bidding of one of the mortgagors at the foreclosure sale, when he was unable to comply with his bid, and when his bidding obstructed the sale, but these facts have no bearing upon the issues involved in this litigation, and they did not injure the mortgagee, so we will not further notice them.

We think this a fair statement of the pleadings, and they put in issue solely the construction of this instrument, to be 'gathered from the face of the instrument and the surrounding facts and circumstances. There is perhaps another issue raised by intendment, which is that, after a construction of the instrument, the court sees from the facts and circumstances that there was in fact no meeting of the minds, and that the contract as made was such an onerous one that a court of equity cannot in good conscience lend its aid to the enforcement of its terms.

In 1930 the mortgagors, Fred G. Denton and Charles E. Galbraith, were engaged extensively in the real estate business in the city of Knoxville and surrounding territory, and prior to that time, or in 1928, they had purchased from George Tabler and others a farm of 130 acres; a part of the consideration being deferred and secured by a vendor’s lien. From this boundary of 130 acres they had sold a boundary of 6 acres, reducing the acreage in the farm to 124 acres, and against this there was a lien securing $13,000 of the purchase money. This tract of land lay to the west of the city of Knoxville and 8 miles from the courthouse; it was within 2 miles of Lyon’s View, the location of a state institution within the corporate limits of Knoxville; and it also lay near the suburban development known as Westmoreland Heights. . It was rolling land and traversed by three roads, and, due to its location and its topography, it was valuable for subdivision purposes, since there were many desirable building sites upon it. It was originally purchased for the purpose of subdivision and sale. In 1930 there was no demand for home sites, and the owners were being pressed upon their obligation for the payment of the purchase price, and it became necessary for them to seek a loan upon the property in order to pay the purchase price.

The defendant Mr. J. P. Roddy owned a country home situated on land adjoining this property, and for fear of building undesirable-structures and filling stations upon the land, he became interested in purchasing a portion of this land adjoining his in order to add the-purchased boundary to his holding. The record indicates that he was- *575 a man o£ wealth.; he was engaged in other productive businesses except that of farming, and he was interested in farming and he wanted to purchase this strip of land adjoining him.

The owner entered into an agreement with him to sell him this-strip of land consisting of about 45' acres at the price of $250 per acre, on condition he would refinance their loan for the purchase money, or loan them $13,000 to discharge the vendor’s lien, taking a mortgage upon the boundary of land as security, and upon a five-year term. It was further agreed that the loan would be made upon as-liberal terms as the Tabler loan or the terms for the payment of the purchase price. After this agreement was made, Mr. Roddy directed, his son-in-law, Mr. Ralph Cate, an attorney at the Knoxville bar, and also a real estate agent of years of experience, to prepare thje papers, or mortgage, and to examine the abstract, but he said the mortgagors would pay the expense. Mr. Cate was furnished with an abstract of title prepared by another lawyer of Knoxville, and he asked Mr. Roddy if he was satisfied with this abstract, or should he (Cate) make an independent investigation of the title, when he-was told that the abstract was satisfactory. Mr. Cate then prepared the papers, and he testified that he prepared them as best he could to express the real intention of the parties. At the time there was a discussion going on in his office between the parties in reference to-the terms of this covenant, but he cannot recall what was said.

The Tabler deed from which he must have taken his calls for the mortgage also contained the covenant for the partial release of lots when sold, but it was graduated according to the value of the land, i. e., the woodland was placed at one price, while the other land was fixed at another price, and there was an exception of the house and 10 acres around it. Undertaking, as he says, to draw the contract as intended by the parties, he inserted this covenant in the mortgage:

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Bluebook (online)
92 S.W.2d 419, 19 Tenn. App. 572, 1934 Tenn. App. LEXIS 7, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/galbraith-v-roddy-tennctapp-1934.