Greenfield v. Stout
This text of 50 S.E. 111 (Greenfield v. Stout) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
In 1894, Weston conveyed the land which is-the subject-matter of the present suit to “E. H. Pullen, vice-president of the National Bank of the Republic, of the city of New York.” The deed recited that it was given to secure the payment of certain promissory notes, and was “intended to operate as provided in sections 1969-1970 & 1971 of the Code of 1882, in regard to the sales of property to secure debts, and to pass the title of the property described unto the said E. H. Pullen, Vice-Pres. of the said National Bank of the Republic.” It also stipulated that if the debt to secure which it was given was not paid at maturity, “ the said [304]*304E. H. Pullen, Vice-President, his agent or legal representatives, may and by these presents is authorized to sell at public outcry,” etc., the property conveyed by the deed; and that “ the said E. H. Pullen, Vice-President as aforesaid, his agent or legal representatives, may make to the purchaser or purchasers of said property good and sufficient title to the same.” It appears that this deed was recorded on the mortgage records in the office of ■ the clerk of the superior court of Berrien county. Subsequently Weston died, and in 1901 his administrators conveyed the land in "dispute to D. Greenfield. D. Greenfield died, leaving a will in which he appointed A. D. Greenfield, the plaintiff in the present action, his executor. In September, 1904, Stout, cashier of the National Bank of the Republic, proceeded to advertise the land for sale under the power contained in the deed from Weston to Pullen; whereupon the plaintiff, as executor of the estate of D. Greenfield, filed his petition to enjoin the sale. A temporary restraining order was granted, but at the hearing this was dissolved and an injunction refused. The plaintiff excepted.
We do not mean, to hold that the bank has no interest whatever in the land which was conveyed to its vice-president. On the contrary, the evidence of Stout on the trial in the court below, as well as the contentions of the parties in the hriefs filed in this court, seems to indicate that it has a clear equitable title to the land, and that by appropriate proceedings in a court of equity it may subject the property to'the payment of its debt. Pullen, in his individual capacity, may advertise and sell the property under the power contained in the deed to him. If for any reason this can not be done, the hank may, by appropriate proceedings, go into equity and ask that the deed be so reformed as to make it speak the intention of the parties. Dozier v. McWhorter, 117 Ga. 789. But nothing is more clear than that the property can be sold in this manner by no one except, the holder of the legal title; and as neither the hank nor Stout, its cashier, holds the title as it now stands, neither of them' can bring the land to sale. See, on this subject, Luquire v. Lee, 121 Ga. 624.
[306]*306
Judgment reversed.
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50 S.E. 111, 122 Ga. 303, 1905 Ga. LEXIS 186, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/greenfield-v-stout-ga-1905.