Hoffman v. First Bond Mortgage Co., Inc.

164 A. 656, 116 Conn. 320, 1933 Conn. LEXIS 41
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedFebruary 21, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 164 A. 656 (Hoffman v. First Bond Mortgage Co., Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hoffman v. First Bond Mortgage Co., Inc., 164 A. 656, 116 Conn. 320, 1933 Conn. LEXIS 41 (Colo. 1933).

Opinion

Hinmah, J.

On February 28th, 1925, Kaplan and Rulnick executed and delivered to the named defendant as trustee forty promissory notes of $500 each and four hundred of $100 each aggregating $60,000, payable to the bearer, or if registered, to the registered holder, and to secure these notes mortgaged to the defendant corporation as trustee land in Hartford on which is now a brick building containing stores and apartments. The present plaintiff is the holder and owner of fifty of the $100 notes, and the balance of the notes are held and owned by sixty-seven persons residing in various towns and cities in several States. By mesne conveyances the title to the premises became vested in Louis Schreiber, Inc. The notes became due and were unpaid and on March 3d, 1931, the defendant as trustee commenced an action to foreclose the mortgage. On April 17th, 1931, the court rendered a judgment of foreclosure by sale, the amount of the mortgage debt being found to be $62,400. Pursuant to statute (§ 5083) the real estate was appraised at $85,000. On May 1st, 1931, the defendant moved for permission to bid at the foreclosure sale, for the benefit and protection of the noteholders, a sum sufficient to cover the amount of the mortgage debt and taxes, municipal assessments, and costs, representing that, notwithstanding the appraisal of $85,000, there was grave doubt whether any outside bid sufficient in amount to protect the noteholders would be made, owing to the depressed condition of the real-estate market. The plaintiff and one other holder of $5000 of notes opposed the motion, but it appeared that more than a majority in amount of the noteholders wished the defendant to bid as proposed, and it did not ap *323 pear that there were more than the two nonassenting noteholders. On May 13th the motion was granted and at the foreclosure sale on May 16th, no substantial bid for the property being made except that of the defendant trustee, the latter purchased the real estate, bidding therefor the sum of $60,000, which was less than the amount of the judgment debt, and brought into court only the amount of the expenses of the sale. On May 22d, a supplemental judgment was rendered confirming the sale and approving the conveyance to the defendant trustee. No appeal was taken from this judgment, and the defendant as trustee entered into possession.

About a month later the present action was commenced, the prayers for relief including claims for a partition of the real estate, or a sale thereof and a division of the proceeds among the noteholders, and the appointment of a receiver to make the sale and, pending it, to manage the property. By order of court, James T. Knox was cited in to defend for the benefit of all the other noteholders, the trial court found for the defendants upon all the issues and prayers for relief and rendered judgment accordingly. The finding on this appeal, in addition to the foregoing facts, discloses the following: Since the defendant took possession it has managed the real estate in a capable and efficient manner, and the rentals, although obtained under very adverse conditions, are substantially sufficient to pay carrying charges and interest to note-holders. There has been no improvement in the real-estate market of Hartford but, on the contrary, market conditions are worse than in 1931. The defendant has received no offer which would yield the note-holders payment in full or nearly in full. The real estate is reasonably worth $74,500, but at a forced sale under present market conditions it appears certain *324 that no price approaching $60,000 could be obtained and might well be $25,000 or lower. The defendant Knox for the other noteholders is opposed to partition or sale under these conditions, and desires to have the defendant trustee continue in the management of the real estate. The defendant corporation intends to continue to hold and manage the real estate as trustee in the expectation that eventually the noteholders will receive more than could now be realized by a sale at auction.

The appellant’s principal contentions relate to the conclusions, drawn from the facts found, that the purposes of the trust created by the mortgage have not been attained or the trust terminated, and that the defendant, in holding and managing the real estate, is still acting in the capacity of trustee under an active express trust. The plaintiff claims that, instead, the defendant holds title as trustee of a dry and passive trust, or even if the trust be held to be active, that the trustee may not hold the premises for an indefinite time but must sell them as soon as reasonably possible.

Clearly, up to the time of the foreclosure sale the defendant was and acted as trustee of an express trust created by the mortgage, with active powers and duties thereunder. The mortgage specifically vested the right to enforce it exclusively in the trustee in case of default. Thereupon it “may proceed to call said notes, or to enforce the rights and lien of said noteholders under this mortgage, either by foreclosure, or any other proper proceeding, in any proper court, by way of remedy, as said trustee shall deem most effectual to protect said noteholders.” It is provided further that if by strict foreclosure the equity of redemption is extinguished, the trustee shall hold title to the premises in trust for the owners or holders of the notes “to be sold, disposed of, or conveyed by said trustee at its *325 option, for such price and upon such terms and conditions as said trustee may deem for the best interest of such note owners or holders.” The plaintiff admits that “unquestionably this language, in the event of a strict foreclosure, would have served to create an express trust with the specified active duty of selling, disposing of, or conveying the premises.” The mortgage further provides “in case a decree of foreclosure by sale is passed, or in case of a sale after strict foreclosure as above, the proceeds of such sale . . . shall be paid to such note owners or holders pro rata in accordance with their holding of said notes.” No express provision is made for subsequent sale by the trustee in case of its own purchase at the foreclosure sale, and the appellant maintains that upon such purchase the defendant became a mere passive depositary of the property and holds the bare legal title without discretion and without active duties, so that the cestuis que trustent are entitled to possession of the property and may call upon the trustee for a conveyance of the legal estate. DeLadson v. Crawford, 93 Conn. 402, 411, 106 Atl. 326; Cone v. Dunham, 59 Conn. 145, 157, 20 Atl. 311. However, the plaintiff concedes that, owing to the large number of note-holders, conveyance to or partition among them would be impracticable and himself invokes the equity powers of the court to substitute immediate sale of the property and a distribution of the proceeds.

The trial court held that the provision in the mortgage concerning sale after strict foreclosure extended, by inference, to acquisition of the title by the trustee through purchase in foreclosure by sale. The appellant contends that this inference is unwarranted and inadmissible. But even if he be correct in this, the exigency which arose must be regarded as one which was so unanticipated that no express or implied pro *326

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
164 A. 656, 116 Conn. 320, 1933 Conn. LEXIS 41, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hoffman-v-first-bond-mortgage-co-inc-conn-1933.