Hamner v. Cocke

191 So. 429, 186 Miss. 567, 1939 Miss. LEXIS 255
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 16, 1939
DocketNo. 33784.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 191 So. 429 (Hamner v. Cocke) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hamner v. Cocke, 191 So. 429, 186 Miss. 567, 1939 Miss. LEXIS 255 (Mich. 1939).

Opinion

Ethridge, P. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Everett Cocke, receiver for the Peoples Bank of Water Valley, Mississippi, brought suit in the Chancery Court of Yalobusha County against O. T. Hamner and Earl Fudge as individuals, and Ray Sissell as trustee, to reform a settlement made between the receiver of the hank and O. T. Hamner, by which the latter was relieved of certain indebtedness due the bank in his individual *572 capacity, and as endorser on the notes of others, in consideration of the payment of an additional $740, and foreclosure of the deed of trust involving the securities of the bank upon certain property embraced in the deed of trust.- It was found that in the foreclosure mentioned, the lot actually described therein was a different lot from that on which a filling station was located, and which was also embraced in one of the deeds of trust and assigned to the bank as collateral security.

It appears that O. T. Hamner was indebted to the bank prior to the transaction mentioned, on two* notes, one for $19.50, the other for $1,554; and that he was also an endorser on a note for another. To secure the amounts mentioned, $19.50' and $1,554, O. T. Hamner gave a deed of trust upon certain lands described by metes and bounds, containing about sixty acres, and in addition to this security, assigned notes and deeds of trust on Earl Fudge to O'. T. Hamner, the three notes aggregating a balance due of something in excess of $8,000.

The deeds of trust to O. T. Hamner, of which there are two described lands in one of them as: “That part of Lot No. 276 west of the Illinois Central Railroad, as per the J. W. Mercer map and survey of the city of Water Yalley, Mississippi, all in second district of Yalobusha county and State of Mississippi, and more particularly described as follows: Beginning at a point on the east line of said Lot 276, 200 feet from the northeast of T. E. Green lot, which is Lot 276; thence run west to the west line of Lot 276; run thence with the said west line of said Lot 276-, 30- feet; run thence east to the point of beginning, being the same property conveyed to Earl Fudge by Mrs. Martha L. Johnson and Wiley Johnson on November 13, 1930, as the same appears of record in Deed Book ‘Y’ at page 503 of the records of deeds in the Chancery Clerk’s office at Water Yalley, Mississippi, all lying and being situated in the City of Water Yalley, Mississippi. ’ ’

The second deed of trust describes the property therein as: “All that part of Lot 276 west of the Illinois Cen *573 tral Railroad according to the J. W. Mercer may and survey of the City of Water Valley, Mississippi, and all in the City of Water Valley, Mississippi, and in the second district of Talohusha county, Mississippi, and more particularly described by metes and bounds as follows : Begin at a point on the west side of Main street and on the east side of said Lot No. 276 west, which point is 298 feet north of the southeast corner of said Lot No. 276 west, measured along the east line of the said lot, and run thence north 69 degrees and 45 minutes west to the west line of said Lot No. 276, west, a distance of 64 feet 5 inches, to a point, and run thence easterly parallel to the north line above and in a straight line 72 feet 8 inches to a point on the east line of said Lot No. 276 west, which is 30 feet south of the point of beginning, and run thence northwardly along the east line of said Lot No. 276, 30 feet to the point of beginning.”

It was recited in this deed of trust that it was given to correct an error and to give a more accurate description of land to be conveyed by the deed of trust executed on the 26th day of March, 1931, by Earl Fudge to Ray Sis-sell, trustee, for the benefit of O. T. Hamner, which deed of trust is of record in the office of the chancery clerk of the second district of Yalobusha county, in book 11, at page 343; and that this deed of trust secured the same debt as is secured by the said deed of trust, which debt is additionally secured by deed of trust given by Earl Fudge to Ray Sissell, trustee, for the benefit of O. T. Hamner, on March 11, 1930, and is of record in the office of the chancery clerk of said district and county in book 11, at pages 281, 282; the lien and security of the said deeds of trust not to be affected in anywise by the giving of this instrument as additional and cumulative security, but to remain in full force and effect.

It appears that after the bank was in receivership, the receiver applied to the chancellor for authority to foreclose a deed of trust given by Earl Fudge to 0:. T. Hamner, securing the indebtedness mentioned, and that the Chancery Court entered an order directing the trustee to *574 foreclose on the property described in the petition therefor, it being supposed by the receiver and the chancellor in taking such action, that this was the lot upon which a filling station, known as the Pearce filling station, was located. But through error the 30-foot lot was described in the order of the chancellor, and in the petition to him, •and in the foreclosure or trustee’s deed; the receiver of the bank bidding for the 30'-foot lot the sum of $2,000, in the belief that he was bidding on the filling station lot. The trustee testified that in crying off the property at said sale, after reading of the description thereof, he stated to those present that this was best known as the Pearce filling station property. This 30¡-foot lot was of little value, estimated at $400' to $750.

After the sale and buying in of the property, which it appears that at the time all parties thought to be the filling station lot, arrangement was made by the receiver of the bank and O'. T. Hamner that if the latter would pay the additional sum of $740, to be obtained from the Federal Land Bank upon the property embraced in the deed of trust above mentioned, the 60 acres owned by Hamner, the bank would release Hamner from the indebtedness secured by.his deed of trust, and would also release him as endorser on the papers of J. W. Hamner, Jr.; the loan was procured from the Federal Land Bank through the appropriate agency, and the $740 thereby obtained was turned over to the receiver of the bank, who thereupon surrendered to O. T. Hamner his notes and deeds of trust.

In the settlement it was agreed, however, that one, T. O. Gore, who was also an endorser on the J. W. Hamner, Jr., note, would not be affected or released, and that the liability of Earl Fudge on the note held by the bank would not be released, but that the Earl Fudge note was credited with the $2,000 bid at the sale under the deed of trust.

After the foreclosure of the deed of trust, in the negotiations looking to the compromise, O1. T; Hamner wrote the receiver of the bank that the bank should obtain at *575 least $3,000 for the filling station property. O. T.

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Bluebook (online)
191 So. 429, 186 Miss. 567, 1939 Miss. LEXIS 255, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hamner-v-cocke-miss-1939.