Goode v. King

76 S.W.2d 300, 189 Ark. 1093, 1934 Ark. LEXIS 96
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 19, 1934
Docket4-3528
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 76 S.W.2d 300 (Goode v. King) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Goode v. King, 76 S.W.2d 300, 189 Ark. 1093, 1934 Ark. LEXIS 96 (Ark. 1934).

Opinion

Smith, J.

Richard M. Moore owned at the time of his death a farm known as the old Marshall farm, situated on the right bank of Spring River in Lawrence County. He was survived by his widow, Mrs. M. C. Moore, and three sons, whose initials were N. R., J. C. and B. M. Moore, respectively. After the death of his father, N. R. Moore borrowed $1,500 from J. S. Pruitt, and gave Pruitt a note for that amount, which was signed by N. R. Moore and Pearl Moore, his wife. This note created a lien upon the maker’s interest in his father’s farm. Pruitt, the payee named in the note, died, and Wells, his administrator, brought suit to enforce the lien there granted in payment of the. note. The Bank of Ravenden and J. C. and B. M. Moore, the two brothers of the maker of the note, filed an intervention in this suit, and also a demurrer to the original complaint, which was sustained, but upon an appeal to this court it was held that the demurrer should have been overruled, and the decree of the lower court was reversed, and the cause was remanded with directions to overrule the demurrer. ;See Wells v. Moore, 163 Ark. 542, 260 S. W. 411. No directions were given upon the reversal and remand of the cause except to overrule the demurrer, and the present appeal arose out of subsequent proceeding's.

In this intervention filed by the bank and J. C. and B. M. Moore, it was alleged that N. R. Moore, while acting as cashier of the bank, had been found short in his accounts with the bank to the admitted extent of $3,750, and to make the shortage good N. R. Moore had conveyed his interest in the lands which he had inherited from his father to his brothers, J. C. and B. M. Moore, who assumed the payment of the shortage, and, by way of security therefor, mortgaged to the bank the interests which they had inherited and also the interest which they had acquired in the deed from their brother, N. R. Moore. It was not then certain that the full amount of N. R. Moore’s shortage had been determined, and the mortgage was drawn to cover any other shortage which might later be discovered, and it was subsequently determined that the total shortage approximated $7,000.

J. C. Moore died and was survived by four minor children and by his widow, Mary Ellen Moore, who subsequently married Charles Goode, and she is referred to throughout the record and in the briefs as Mrs. Goode. The widow of Richard M. Moore, who had joined in the execution of the mortgage to the bank to secure the payment of the shortage of her son, N. R. Moore, was made a party defendant to the cross-complaint which the bank filed along with its intervention to foreclose the. mortgage against her and against her surviving sons, N. R. and B. M. Moore, and against the widow and minor heirs of J. C. Moore. These cross-defendants were all properly served with process upon the filing of the cross-complaint, and D. L. King was employed as an attorney to represent the cross-defendants.

Without tracing the progress of that litigation, it may be said that it eventuated in a decree ascertaining and adjudging the amount of N. R. Moore’s shortage to the bank, and directing the foreclosure of the mortgage given to secure its payment.

Much of the testimony contained in the record now before us was devoted to an attempt to show that King had been unfaithful to his clients and had conspired with the bank and its representatives to improperly present certain defenses which could and should have been offered in the foreclosure suit. These were, first, that the execution of the mortgage had been secured through coercion by threats to send N. R. Moore to the penitentiary if it were not executed, and that the mortgage was finally executed for the purpose of compounding a felony, and that, through and in consideration of the execution of the mortgage, a felony was compounded, and N. R. Moore was not prosecuted for his crime as he would otherwise have been. The second defense which it is insisted King should have, made — but did not make — is that there were certain credits to which N. R. Moore was entitled and which would have been allowed, had they been properly asserted.

We will not review the testimony on these issues of fact, but are content to say that the testimony utterly fails to establish either contention.

After the rendition of the decree, and subsequent to the sale thereunder, an attempt was made, which appears to have been in the utmost good faith, to borrow the money to pay the. judgment rendered in the decree of foreclosure. It may be said that a settlement had been made of the original suit brought by Wells, administrator, to foreclose the lien created by the note from N. R. Moore, to Pruitt. The terms and details of that settlement are not disclosed, but we regard this as unimportant. The fact remains that an apparently valid decree has been rendered, in which all interested persons had been made parties, upon proper and sufficient service, including the four minor children of J. C. Moore. This decree determined the sums secured by the mortgage and ordered its foreclosure.- It was rendered June 24, 1925, and pursuant to its provisions the land described in the mortgage was ordered sold, and it was advertised to be sold on October 24, 1925. In the meantime futile, efforts were being made to borrow the money to pay the judgment. These failing, King personally agreed to pay the judgment, and he. took an assignment thereof to himself as security for the loan which he proposed to make. The fact is established beyond the possibility of doubt that King advanced from his personal funds the money for this purpose, six thousand dollars of which were derived from the sale of Government bonds which he then owned. The debt secured by the mortgage bore interest at the rate of ten per cent., as did also the judgment. King actually advanced $8,986.25 in cash, which he paid to the- bank, and at the time of payment took an assignment from the bank of its judgment for the debt and of the decree declaring the lien and ordering its foreclosure. It is equally certain that at that time King had no intention of acquiring the title, to the land, and made the advance for the benefit of his clients and at their request.

The sale as advertised was not held, but was indefinitely postponed, and the sale- which was later had under the decree of foreclosure did not occur until Decem■ber 18, 1926. During this interval the attempts to finance the proposition were, continued, but it was found that, an inaccurate description of the land in the mortgage, which had been carried forward into the decree, was an objection which rendered this more difficult. It was shown that in the preparation of the mortgage the land described had been copied from a tax receipt, which was supposed to embrace all the lands comprising the Moore farm, and which included also forty acres, a part of the farm, which Mrs. M. C. Moore, the mother of N. R. Moore, and the widow of Richard M. Moore, owned individually7, and which was therefore not conveyed by the deed from N. R. Moore to his brothers, J. O. and B. M. Moore. Much testimony was offered to the effect that this forty-acre tract, although a part of the Moore farm, had been fraudulently7 included in the mortgage to the bank in the execution of which Mrs. M. C. Moore had joined. There are two answers to this contention. The first is that. the. testimony7 does not show any7 frauck or deception or mistake in the inclusion of Mrs. M. O. Moore’s own individual forty7 acres in the mortgage.

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Bluebook (online)
76 S.W.2d 300, 189 Ark. 1093, 1934 Ark. LEXIS 96, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goode-v-king-ark-1934.