Gough v. Clift

81 Ind. 371
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1882
DocketNo. 8842
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 81 Ind. 371 (Gough v. Clift) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gough v. Clift, 81 Ind. 371 (Ind. 1882).

Opinions

Morris, C.

The appellant brought this suit against the appellees as the assignees of her husband, Charles T. Gough. The facts stated in her complaint are as follows:

On the 28th day of April, 1874, the appellant was, and still is, the wife of said Charles T. Gough; on that day, he was the owner of certain real estate in fee simple, situate in Henry county, Indiana, and he and the appellant as his wife executed a mortgage on the same to one Enoch Nation, to secure money borrowed of him by said Charles; on the 12th day of November, 1874, the said Charles and the appellant executed to said Nation another mortgage on said real estate, to secure the payment of a further loan made by said Charles of said Nation. It is averred that the appellant joined in said mortgages only as the surety of her husband; that the mortgages were duly recorded in Henry county, within forty-five days from the time of their execution.

On the 4th day of March, 1875, the said Charles T. Gough, being in failing circumstances, and a resident of Wayne county, Indiana, executed to the appellees an assignment of all his property, real and personal, including the land in Henry county, upon which said mortgages had been executed for the benefit of his creditors; that the assignment was duly filed and recorded in the counties of Wayne and Henry, and that the appellees had given bond and qualified according to law, and entered upon the discharge of their duties as such [373]*373assignees; that personal property to the amount of more than $20,000 came into the hands of the appellees as such assignees of said Charles T, Gough, yet they did not pay said mortgages, nor either of them, nor any part thereof, although the mortgaged premises were worth $2,000 over and above the amount of said mortgage debts; that they negligently suffered said mortgage debts to remain unpaid, until the same became due; that said Nation brought suit in the Henry Circuit Court to foreclose said, mortgages, making the appellant and the appellees parties; that on the 17th day of September, 1875, said Nation recovered in said action a judgment for $5,307.29, and a decree for the foreclosure of said mortgages; that said premises were, on the 13th day of November, 1875, duly sold by the sheriff of Henry county, by virtue of a certified copy of said decree, to the said Nation, for the sum of $5,504.90; that a certificate of purchase was duly delivered by said sheriff to said Nation for said land.

The appellees, as such assignees, failed to redeem said mortgaged premises from said sale, although they had, as such assignees, in their hands, $20,000 of assets; that said land was worth $2,000 over and above the purchase-money paid for the same by said Nation; that on the third day of June, 1876, having given due notice of the time and place of sale, the appellees proceeded to offer said land for sale, publicly announcing to those present, that said land was to be sold subject to said mortgages and said foreclosure sale, and that the purchaser must redeem the same from such sale; that the appellant had no interest in said premises, and that the same would be sold free from all claims in or to the same on her part as the wife of said Charles T. Gough; that one Axiom S. Elliott, on the faith of the representations made by the appellees, purchased said land for $1,165, which sum was paid to and received by them; that the appellees agreed to execute to said Elliott a deed for said land as soon as the sale should be approved by the proper court; that said sale was reported to the proper court, approved and ratified, and the appellees em[374]*374powered to execute a deed to the said Elliott, who was to redeem said land; that the appellant was at once informed of said arrangement to redeem, and, relying upon it, took no steps himself to redeem said land; that the appellees did not execute a deed to Elliott as directed, but instead of so doing, for the purpose of defeating the appellant’s claim to any interest in said land, the appellees omitted to make said deed, and allowed and procured the said Elliott to omit redeeming said land from said sheriff’s sale, but to make an arrangement with the purchaser at said sheriff’s sale by which the year allowed by law for the redemption of said land from said sale should expire, and that the purchaser at the sheriff’s sale should take a deed from the sheriff, and then convey to said Elliott, all of which was done accordingly, and the said Elliott became the owner of said land.

It is further stated, that at the time the appellees sold said land, the right and equity of redemption held in the same by them was of no value whatever, and could not have been sold for anything, had it not been for the representations of the appellees that the appellant had no right to or interest in the same; that her interest in said land was of greater value than the $1,165 realized by the appellees from the sale of the same; that she had an inchoate interest in said land, being one-third thereof in fee, which was in no way incumbered otherwise than by said mortgages; that the appellees had colluded with Elliott and others to defeat the appellant’s rights; that she had demanded of the appellees the amount received by them for the sale of said land, but that they refused to pay it to her.

The questions arising in this case are of considerable importance, and involve some difficulty. They have been ably discussed by counsel on both sides.

The premises mortgaged to Nation have been twice sold, once to Nation for $5,504.90, paying his mortgages and the debts secured thereby, and the cost of foreclosure and sale. They were also sold by the appellees for $1,165. The mortgaged [375]*375premises have, therefore, produced $6,669.90, being $1,165 more than sufficient to pay the mortgage debts. Had Nation bought the mortgaged lands for $6,669.90, and no assignment had been made by Charles T. Gough to the appellees, to whom would the $1,165, the surplus of the proceeds of the sale,be^ long, to Charles T. Gough, the husband, or to the appellant? Upon what possible ground could the appellant claim this surplus as against her husband? Not simply because she was his wife, for as such, as a general rule, she . could not claim ■anything; she could not, as his wife, assert her interest in his ■estate until his death; nor could she claim such surplus under the act of March the 11th, 1875, for, by its terms, it does not apply to judicial sales in which the wife’s inchoate interest is ■directed to be sold by the judgment or decree upon which the sale takes place; nor, should we go further, and regard the surplus as real estate, as a part of the mortgaged land, could the appellant claim it. She could not, as we have seen, claim it under the act of 1875, for by the decree her inchoate interest in the land was directed to be sold; she could not claim it simply as the wife of Charles T. Gough, for, as such, as before stated, her right attaches only at his death.

Charles T. Gough transferred all his interest in the mortgaged lands to the appellees for the benefit of his creditors. He also transferred to them, as is alleged in the complaint, some $20,000 or more of personal assets, for the same purpose. It is earnestly insisted by the appellant’s counsel, that it was the duty of the appellees to pay off the debts due from their assignor to Nation, redeem the mortgaged premises and protect the appellant as the surety of her husband, Charles T. Gough.

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Related

Evansville Improvement Co. v. Gardner
128 N.E. 471 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 1920)
United States Mortgage Co. v. Sperry
26 F. 727 (U.S. Circuit Court, 1885)

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Bluebook (online)
81 Ind. 371, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gough-v-clift-ind-1882.