H. G. Pugh & Co. v. Martin

262 S.W. 308, 164 Ark. 423, 1924 Ark. LEXIS 409
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMay 19, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 262 S.W. 308 (H. G. Pugh & Co. v. Martin) 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
H. G. Pugh & Co. v. Martin, 262 S.W. 308, 164 Ark. 423, 1924 Ark. LEXIS 409 (Ark. 1924).

Opinion

Wood, J.

W. H. Martin, as trustee, on the 30th day -of May, 1922, instituted this action in the chancery court of Garland County against the De Soto Spring Corporation and others to foreclose certain deeds of trust.- He alleged that the deeds of trust and the notes which they were given to secure had been duly transferred and assigned to him. The complaint set up that there was due in the aggregate at the time of the institution of the action something over $36,000. Piled with the complaint and made exhibits were the notes and deeds of trust duly executed by the De Soto Spring Corporation, and they described the property consisting of certain real estate and personal property in the city of Hot Springs. The corporation made no defense to the action, and a decree of foreclosure was entered on the 3rd of July, 1922. The decree granted the defendant five days within which to pay the debt and directed that, unless the same was paid, the property be sold, and appointed a commissioner to make the sale. On the day set for the sale, but prior to the time for the sale, the appellants intervened and filed a motion asking that the sale be postponed. The court granted the motion and reset the date for the sale. Various parties, including the appellants, filed exceptions to the repori of the proceedings by the commissioner and to the confirmation of the sale. By agreement of counsel the court set October 9, 1922, as a date for hearing all exceptions that had been filed to the report of the commissioner and the confirmation of the sale. On that date all exceptions were abandoned except those that had been filed by the appellant. The court disposed of the exceptions filed by the appellants by the following order:

“That on October 9, 1922, said petitioners presented a motion in this cause to set aside the decree of foreclosure herein, and offered proof in support of the allegations contained in said petition. The court being of the opinion that the allegations of said petition constituted no defense to the action, said action being founded upon promissory notes of the defendant, De -Soto Spring Corporation, secured by mortgages, and that no legal defense to said notes and mortgages was set up in said petition; that the facts alleged in said petition did not, if true, constitute fraud; that there were no sufficient allegations in said petition to show that said action was not properly 'brought, aad no defense having been made thereto up to the date of the judgment and decree in favor of plaintiff adjudging a foreclosure of said mortgages; the only issue in the trial being the validity of the notes and mortgages which were due and unpaid at the time of the decree, and upon this issue the court rendered its judgment and decree in favor of plaintiff, declaring a lien on the property described in the mortgages, foreclosing the mortgages and directing sale of the property if- the judgment should not he paid, the only question before the court at that time being the disposition of the surplus arising from the sale, concerning which the motion herein considered raises tío issue, the court is of the opinion that the motion to set aside the judgment of foreclosure and the sale had thereunder is insufficient to warrant the relief prayed for. The court therefore declined to hear proof in support of said motion, and overruled the same. From the ruling of the court the said interveners at the time excepted and prayed an appeal to the Supreme Court, which was granted. It is further ordered that this decree be entered as of date October 9, 1922, for the purpose only of showing the defendant’s offer to introduce evidence to sustain the allegations of their petition, which was refused by the court.”

The petition or motion of the appellants to vacate the court’s decree and set aside the sale contains substantially the following allegations: First, that since the rendition of the decree numerous suits have been filed against the corporation, and that judgments have been obtained through the- fraud of the executive officers of the corporation establishing liens against the corporation’s assets to the injury and damage of the petitioners. Second, that the action was instituted by "W. H. Martin, as trustee, without disclosing the true name of the owner or of the parties for whom he acted as trustee and the owners of the debt secured by the mortgage; that, but for this action on his part, certain parties, able and willing to buy the property, would have been present and become bona fide bidders at the sale. Third, that at the sale, had on September 2, 1922, under the decretal order of foreclosure herein, the property of defendant was declared sold to Nolan Blass, agent of Gras Blass Company, who had been advised of the defects of record heretofore referred to, but who is a business associate of Ike Kempner & Bros., the former owners of the $30,000 mortgage notes referred to herein in plaintiff’s complaint as having been assigned and sold to him, as trustee, and that -said Nolan Blass, having knowledge not possessed by other bidders at said sale, was thereby placed in position to bid thereat for the purchase of said property regardless of- said defects herein, which defects were as follows: No indorsement whatsoever appears on the said three notes of $10,000 each, except the notation of date and record of filing herein by the clerk of this court, and no record of the assignment of said deed of trust, given to secure said note, or a change or substitution of trustee indorsed thereon; that, as to the second mortgage of $4,000, no record herein has been made showing that same or the notes for which same were given to secure payment thereof, has been assigned to said plaintiff as trustee, or otherwise.

“Fourth. That the sale herein referred to was irregular and prejudicial to the best interests of petitioners, in that there was present at the time and place of said sale one J. M. Steele, agent for an unknown bidder, who made a bona fide offer of $55,000 for said property, which offer was $5,000 more than the price bid by Mr. Nolan Blass, agent for Gus Blass Company, to whom said property was declared sold by the commissioner, and that the said J. M. Steele, or his attorney, announced, prior to the beginning of the sale, that the bond that he would make for his bid, if he -should be declared the successful bidder, would be made through a surety company, or through bankers, and that, it being: then past the hours of business for all the local surety companies or bankers, a Saturday afternoon, followed by a Sunday, and Labor Day, Monday, a legal holiday, it might be impossible for his principal to perfect a satisfactory bond prior to a reasonable time during the next succeeding business days, or during the hours for the transaction of business by surety companies and bankers, on Tuesday following the Saturday on which said sale was'had. That there were present at least two other responsible bidders at the original and first call for bids on said property, who bid substantial sums over and above the amount for which said property was declared sold by the commissioner; that one of said bids was $54,975, or $4,975 in excess of the amount for which said property was declared sold at a subsequent or second call for bids, and that this bid was made by a nonresident bidder (Mr. August Schlafly of St. Louis, Mot), who .stated that he was the true owner of the two mortgage debts for which this foreclosure suit was alleged to have been originally brought.

‘ ‘Fifth.

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Bluebook (online)
262 S.W. 308, 164 Ark. 423, 1924 Ark. LEXIS 409, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/h-g-pugh-co-v-martin-ark-1924.