Hastings v. Manhattan Trust Co.

77 F. 347, 23 C.C.A. 191, 1896 U.S. App. LEXIS 2250
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedNovember 9, 1896
DocketNo. 752
StatusPublished

This text of 77 F. 347 (Hastings v. Manhattan Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hastings v. Manhattan Trust Co., 77 F. 347, 23 C.C.A. 191, 1896 U.S. App. LEXIS 2250 (8th Cir. 1896).

Opinion

THAYER, Circuit Judge.

This suit was brought by the Manhattan Trust Company, the appellee, against the Minneapolis Realty Company, hereafter termed the “Realty Company,” and A. W. Hastings, the assignee of the realty company, who are the appellants; also, against the Northwestern Guaranty Loan Company, hereafter termed the “Guaranty Company,” the Minneapolis Trust Company, as assignee of the guaranty company, and against Francis B. Hart and Fmogene L. Hart, — for the purpose of divesting the legal title to certain lands out of the said A. W. Hastings, as assignee, and vesting the same in the Manhattan Trust Company. The circuit court of the United States for the district of Minnesota, where the case originated, granted the relief prayed for, and two of the defendants below, to wit, A. W. Hastings, as assignee, and the Minneapolis Realty Company, have appealed.

The undisputed facts disclosed by the record are these: On September 1, 1890, Francis B. Hart and Imogene L. Hart, his wife, mortgaged the tract of land to which the litigation relates, to the aforesaid guaranty company, to secure the repayment of the' sum of $17,085, which was loaned to them by said company for a period of [348]*348six months. On August 26, 1891, no part of the note which was given for the money so borrowed had been paid to the guaranty company, and there was then due from said Hart to the guaranty company, including the amount due on said note, the sum of $18,797. Hart thereupon executed and delivered to the aforesaid realty company eight other notes, aggregating $18,797, for which he received a check, drawn by the realtv company on the guaranty company as its banker, in the sum of $18,797. This check was indorsed and delivered to the guaranty company. On September 1, .1891, the guaranty company assigned to the realty company the aforesaid mortgage, dated September 1, 1890; and on the same day the realty company executed a receipt for the same, and delivered it to Francis B. Hart. The receipt recited, in substance, that the assigned mortgage was held by the realty company as collateral to secure the payment of the eight notes that had been executed by Hart in its favor on August 26, 1891. At the date of these transactions, and prior and subsequent thereto, the realty company kept an account with the guaranty company as its banker. When the guaranty company received from Hart the check of the realty company in the sum of $18,797, of date August 26,1891, this account showed a balance in favor of the realty company in the sum of $2,423.93; but on August 31, 1891, the realty company indorsed and ■ delivered to the guaranty company the eight notes which had been executed by Hart, for which it received a credit on its account with the guaranty company in the sum of $18,797. After the transfer, as aforesaid, of the eight Hart notes, they were sold by the guaranty company to eastern parties. They became due on February 26, 1892, but were not paid by the maker. They were accordingly taken up by the guaranty company, and remained in its possession until April 21, 1892. At the latter date, these notes were charged back to the realty company; and said company thereupon drew its check on the guaranty company, in favor of the guaranty company, in the sum of $17,264.43, which check was ostensibly given by the realty company to take up or repurchase the notes. The book entries with reference to this transaction show that the account between the two companies was debited, on the one hand, with the sum of $17,264.43, and credited, on the other hand, with a like amount. When the last-mentioned check purports to have been drawn, the account showed a balance to the credit of the realty company in the sum of $10,788. Thereafter the realty company caused the original Hart note and the mortgage securing the same (which was held as collateral to secure the payment of the notes dated August 26, 1891) to be sold, and at such sale the realty compány became the purchaser of the collateral, on June 6, 1892, for the sum of $19,561.47. Afterwards the realty company brought an action to foreclose the aforesaid mortgage of date September 1, 1890, and secured a decree of foreclosure in the proper court, under which decree it became the purchaser of the mortgaged property for the sum of $20,227.85, at a sale made by the proper officer on November 21, 1892. No money was advanced or paid by the realty company at either of the last-mentioned sales, [349]*349except such sum as was necessary io pay the costs of the two proceedings. On May 10, 1893, the account of the realty company on the books of the guaranty company was credited with the sum of $17,085, which credit purported to be the amount of a check that day drawn by the guaranty company in favor of the realty company, to take up the original Hart note and the mortgage securing the same. On the same day, Frank J. Percival, the secretary of the guaranty company, obtained the original Hart note and mortgage from the attorney who had had charge of the foreclosure proceedings, and transmitted the same, together with an assignment of the mortgage, to the Manhattan Trust Company. The note and mortgage in question were delivered to said trust company in exchange for other securilies which the trust company held as security for the payment of certain debentures which had been theretofore issued and sold by tbe guaranty company. The trust company supposed that: said note and mortgage were the property of the guaranty company, and it accepted the same from that company in exchange for such other securities, without any actual knowledge of the transactions heretofore described that had taken place between the guaranty company and the realty company. The relations existing between the guaranty company and the realty company in August, 1891, and from that time forward until both companies failed and became insolvent, were exceedingly close and intimate. They occupied adjoining offices in the same building, kept their books and records in the same vault, and the affairs of both companies were managed by the same persons; that is to say, the same persons who acted, respectively, as president, vice president, and treasurer of the guaranty company acted in a similar capacity for the realty company.

The decision of the case at bar hinges on the question whether the entries in the account between the guaranty company and the realty company, relative; to the Hart note and mortgage of date September 1, 1890, as they appear on the books of the guaranty company, represent actual transactions between the two companies, or whether they were purely fictitious and colorable, and were made to conceal the true ownership of said mortgage. In other words, the question to be determined is whether the realty company ever became, or intended to become, the owner of the Hart note and mortgage, or whether it acted throughout for the accommodation of the guaranty company, and permitted itself to be vested with an apparent title to the mortgage, and, after the foreclosure proceedings, with an apparent title to the mortgaged property, for the benefit of the guaranty company. Frank J. Percival, the secretary of the guaranty company, under whose direction all the entries in the aforesaid account respecting the mortgage appear to have been made, testified, in substance, to the following facts: That the realty company never liad any interest in the Hart note of $17,085, and the mortgage securing the same, which are now in controversy; that the note and mortgage in question were simply passed through the account of the realty company on the books of the guaranty company, to give the [350]

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77 F. 347, 23 C.C.A. 191, 1896 U.S. App. LEXIS 2250, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hastings-v-manhattan-trust-co-ca8-1896.