Haggart v. Wilczinski

143 F. 22, 74 C.C.A. 176, 1906 U.S. App. LEXIS 3703
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 6, 1906
DocketNo. 1,490
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 143 F. 22 (Haggart v. Wilczinski) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Haggart v. Wilczinski, 143 F. 22, 74 C.C.A. 176, 1906 U.S. App. LEXIS 3703 (5th Cir. 1906).

Opinion

SHELBY, Circuit Judge.

This suit was brought in the court below by the appellants against the appellees, and the jurisdiction of the court is shown by proper averments of the diverse citizenship of the parties. The Circuit Court sustained a demurrer to the bill and dismissed it. To show the questions raised by the appeal, it is necessary to make a condensed statement of the material averments of the bill.

On and before February 1, 1891, Joseph Wilczinski owned in fee simple the Matilda plantation, lying in-Washington county, Miss., and containing 1,534 acres. On that day, he and Julia Wilczinski, his wife, executed a deed of trust to Charles C. Currier, as trustee, to secure several promissory notes, amounting in the aggregate to $35,000, payable to the Alliance Trust Company, Limited, a corporation under the laws of Great Britain. The last onq of the notes was due January 1, 1896. The deed of trust conferred the usual power on the trustee to sell the mortgaged property in case of default in paying the notes. In case of the refusal of the trustee to act, it was provided that the Alliance Trust Company and their legal representatives might appoint a trustee to act in place of Currier. • Currier resigned his office of trustee January 3, 1898. H. C. Williamson was thereupon appointed trustee by A. S. Caldwell, as attorney in fact for the Alliance Trust Company; the appointment being made after the death of Joseph Wilczinski, the mortgagor. Williamson, the substituted trustee, advertised and sold the lands under the deed of trust, and James Haggart and William McMaster bid $35,000 for the same, buying it, in fact, for the Alliance Trust Company. At that time there was due on the mortgage, including interest, $44,027. The $35,000 so bid was treated and held by the Alliance Trust Company as a credit on the mortgage. In 1902, Haggart and McMaster conveyed the land to James A. Crawford, who, during the same year, conveyed it to the Citizen’s Bank, a corporation under the laws of Mississippi, and the bank conveyed it to B. R. Allen. These several deeds, made subsequent to the foreclosure sale, contained warranties of title. Each of the subsequent vendees paid in money or in notes $35,000 for the land. After James Haggart bid for the land, he died, and his heirs at law are made parties complainant. When Williamson, as trustee, made the sale, Wilczinski’s several children, who succeeded to his interest in the land at his death, were infants, and two of them are infants yet.

In 1903 B. R. Allen brought suit in the chancery court of Washington county, Miss., against Joseph Wilczinski’s'heirs, the'Alliance Trust Company, James Haggart, William McMasters, and others, seeking to have his title confirmed and the title of the Wilczinski heirs canceled as a cloud on his title. The defendants demurred to [24]*24the bill, raising the question of the validity of the sale made by Williamson as substituted trustee. Thereupon Allen amended his bill, adding a prayer to be subrogated to the rights of the Alliance Trust Company under the deed of trust, and for a foreclosure. The Wilczinski heirs demurred to that part of the bill only which asserted title in Allen. The demurrer was sustained by the chancery court, and the decree was affirmed by the Supreme Court of Mississippi. These decisions were to the effect that A. S. Caldwell had no authority to appoint a trustee in the place of Currier, who resigned his trust, and that therefore the sale made by H. C. Williamson, substituted trustee, was void. In brief, the holding was that Allen had no title, for he deraigned title from Williamson’s sale. The court, after disposing of the main question as to the legality of Allen’s title, used this language:

“Of course, the appellant (meaning the Wilczinsld heirs) must do equity if he seeks equity, and, just as certainly, he would be estopped to set up any statute of limitation against the enforcement of the claim, and the appellee (meaning the Alliance Trust Company) has nothing still to do except to enforce its security in the proper way.” Allen v. Alliance Trust Co. et al., 84 Miss. 319, 331, 36 South. 285, 287.

Upon the rendition of the decision by the Mississippi Supreme Court that he had no title, Allen “announced his intention to abandon the said plantation and insist upon the covenants of warranty against the bank, and dismissed his bill brought in the chancery court.” The amount now due on the mortgage, disregarding the credit of $35,000, the amount of the bid for the land at the foreclosure sale, is over $70,000. The bill in the case at bar, after stating the foregoing facts, concludes with a prayer for an accounting, for a judicial foreclosure of the mortgage, and for general relief. To this bill, the heirs at law of Joseph Wilczinski, deceased, demurred, assigning as causes of demurrer :

“(1) That, treating said amended bill as seeking to foreclose the mortgage therein mentioned, it appears by said amended bill that the cause of action, and the right to foreclose said mortgage, did not accrue within six years before the commencement of this suit, and that said plaintiffs are barred from any relief by the statute of limitations of the state of Mississippi, in such cases made and provided, notwithstanding the alleged declaration of the Supreme Court of the state of Mississippi that the Alliance Trust Company could still proceed to enforce its mortgage in the proper way, as alleged in said amended bill, since it appears from the exhibit to said amended bill that said declaration of the Supreme Court was obiter dictum, and not an adjudication of any issue before the court.
“(2) That, treating said amended bill as seeking to cancel the title of these defendants to the lands described as a cloud on plaintiff’s title, it appears by said bill that the plaintiffs have no such title or interest in said land as to enable them to maintain this suit; but, on the contrary, it appears by said amended bill and exhibits thereto that the title to said land has already been adjudicated between the parties to this suit by. the Supreme Court of the state of Mississippi as being the demurrants. Therefore plaintiffs are not entitled to the relief sought, or to any relief.”

The Circuit Court sustained this demurrer and dismissed the bill. The complainants appeal to this court, and assign the decree of the Circuit Court as error.

[25]*25We are advised by counsel for appellants, in their printed statement and argument filed in this court, that, “on the decision of the Supreme Court of Mississippi that the sale was void, the property was reconveyed to appellants and the successive warranties made good.” We do not find in the record any deed from Allen to appellants, but, as Allen is made a party defendant as interested in the accounting, the facts as to the character of-his further interest in the case, if any, may be shown in the progress of the suit. Allen is a citizen of Mississippi, and several other defendants being citizens of that state, if it appeared that he was a necessary party complainant, it would defeat the jurisdiction of the Circuit Court. It is sufficient to say that, even without the conveyance referred to by counsel, it does not appear on the record before us that Allen is a necessary party complainant.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
143 F. 22, 74 C.C.A. 176, 1906 U.S. App. LEXIS 3703, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/haggart-v-wilczinski-ca5-1906.