Harris v. Bailey Avenue Park, Inc.

32 So. 2d 689, 202 Miss. 776, 1947 Miss. LEXIS 340
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 10, 1947
DocketNo. 36529.
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 32 So. 2d 689 (Harris v. Bailey Avenue Park, Inc.) 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
Harris v. Bailey Avenue Park, Inc., 32 So. 2d 689, 202 Miss. 776, 1947 Miss. LEXIS 340 (Mich. 1947).

Opinion

McGehee, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This suit was brought in Chancery on October 24,1944, hy M. B. Brown and others as stockholders of the appellee, The Bailey Avenue Park and Negro State Fair Grounds of the Colored Men’s Business Association of America, Inc., and they seek to have cancelled the claim of ownership asserted hy the appellant Henry M. Harris under and by virtue of his purchase at a foreclosure sale, held on May 4, 1934, under a deed of trust given in his favor by the said corporation on November 3, 1930, of approximately twenty acres of land, located about a half mile north of the' City of Jackson, and now shown to worth two and a half to three times its then value.

The principal ground relied upon for the cancellation of the title claimed by the appellant is that he acquired the property at the foreclosure sale as a constructive trus *784 •tee for tlie use and benefit of tlie said corporation, of wliicli lie was then a director and an alleged vice-president, although. the deed of trust was legally authorized and validly executed by the said corporation in his favor for a cash loan,-originally made to the corporation in 1928, for the sum of $3,80.0, but which thereafter renewed from year to year, the last renewal thereof being on said November 3, 1930, for the sum of $4,000.

The bill ,of complaint also prayed for an accounting as to the revenues derived by the appellant from the operation of the Mississippi Negro State Pair on the said land during his possession of the .same in order that the appel-lee corporation might be credited therewith against any indebtedness that may be found to be due and owing to the appellant;, and the bill further prays that he be required to convey the legal title of the land to the said corporation upon payment to him of any indebtedness found to be due under such an accounting.

. In the original bill the corporate appellee was also named as a defendant along with the appellant Harris, and the Mississippi Negro Agricultural Exhibit Corporation, and others, none of whom,, except the said appellee former owner and the appellant, were claiming any sort of title or connection with the property involved. ..

Thereafter on May 5,1945, the erstwhile former owner and defendant, the appellee Bailey Avenue Park and Negro State Fair Grounds of the Colored Men’s Business Association of America, Inc., became a complainant along with the said M. B. Brown and others in an amended bill and joined in the prayer thereof for relief. And the .appellees contend that by agreement with a former attorney of all the defendants to the original bill, the trial court was authorized to deal with the amended bill as if the same had been filed at the time of the filing of the original on October 24, 1944, and which date it will.be observed .wa^ nevertheless more than ten years after the foreclosure .of. the deed of trust in question.

*785 Tlie trial court held that the appellant .acquired the property as a constructive trustee for the use and benefit of the mortgagor; that the statute of limitations was not applicable in favor of such trustee; and awarded the immediate possession of the same to the appellee corporation. Thereupon, this interlocutory appeal was granted to settle the controlling principles of law involved and so as to avoid the expense of having the accounting which was asked for until and unless the interlocutory decree should be affirmed on appeal and the cause remanded for that purpose.

We think that the situation presented a proper case for the allowance of this interlocutory appeal.

The proof disclosed that the appellant, while serving as a director in the appellee corporation during the year 1928, borrowed the said sum of $3,800 from a local bank in Jackson on his own private property and loaned the same to the corporation on its note .and deed of trust on the twenty acres of land here involved, which instruments were duly executed as aforesaid, and by the complainants M. B. Brown, as president, and S. A. Adams, as secretary, of the appellee corporation, after the said officials had been duly authorized to exepute the same. This was .likewise true as to the renewals, the last of which were foreclosed on the said 4th day of May, 1934.

That at the time the appellant made this loan the said corporation was in serious financial difficulties and owed, among other debts, an- indebtedness in favor of one L. A. Cato which was secured by a deed of trust on a part of the twenty.acres of land, and another one in favor of L. L. Posey and his wife Mrs. Mattie E. Posey secured by a deed ■of trust on the remainder of said land. That there were no second mortgage loans-.obtainable on real estate from .any local bank or elsewhere at that time. That upon failure to. pay any of said loans, and at the instance of one of the creditors, L. L. Posey, who was the attorney for all .of .the; parties in interest, the Mississippi Negro Agricultural Exhibit Corporation was organized in 1933 for the *786 purpose of raising funds with which to take care of these pressing obligations and liens upon the real estate of the said appellee corporation, but which plan proved to be a failure for the reason that only the sum of $602 was ever paid in for the capital stock of this new corporation, and no stock therein was ever issued.

It is further shown without dispute that the appellant had prior to the foreclosure sale made repeated requests to the appellee corporation for the repayment of his loan, but that no attention was given to the same; that the said debtor, being wholly without funds, ceased to function as a going concern after the Negro State Pair was held in 1932, and there was no meeting of its directors from that time until 1944 after this suit had been filed; and that in 1933 the Pair was operated by appellant at the instance of the prior lienors.

That the deed of trust in favor of the appellant contained an unusual provision to the effect that upon default in the payment of the indebtedness therein mentioned the trustee L. L. Posey, Jr., should, “at the request of L. L. Posey or Mrs. Mattie R. Posey, or either of them,” sell all the property described in appellant’s deed of trust by publishing a notice in a local newspaper for three consecutive weeks immediately preceding the sale and by posting a notice thereof at the courthouse; And it is shown without dispute that the foreclosure of the property in question was not had at the instance of appellant, and that he did not know that it was being foreclosed until some one called his attention to the newspaper notice thereof. That he did not know that the property had been bought in for him by the said L. L. Posey until sometime after the sale, since he had merely depended upon his said attorney to act for the best interest of all parties concerned in the matter. However, he took charge of the property following the foreclosure sale and the trustee’s deed in his favor was duly filed for record on January 21, 1935. In other words, the proof failed to disclose that appellant was *787 guilty of any actual or concealed fraud in connection with said purchase of the property.

That at the time of the foreclosure sale there was due and owing on the prior deeds of trust held by L. A. Cato and Mr. and Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
32 So. 2d 689, 202 Miss. 776, 1947 Miss. LEXIS 340, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harris-v-bailey-avenue-park-inc-miss-1947.