Huffaker v. First Nat. Bank of Brigham City

173 P. 903, 52 Utah 317, 1918 Utah LEXIS 74
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedJune 11, 1918
DocketNo. 3207
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 173 P. 903 (Huffaker v. First Nat. Bank of Brigham City) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Huffaker v. First Nat. Bank of Brigham City, 173 P. 903, 52 Utah 317, 1918 Utah LEXIS 74 (Utah 1918).

Opinion

THURMAN, J.

Plaintiff brought this action in the nature of a bill of inter-pleader. On the 16th day of February, 1911, he entered into two contracts with one Chris. Weiss for the purchase of two parcels of land in Box Elder county. The purchase price of $2,510 was to be paid in installments at different times, and at the time of the commencement of this action he had paid the entire purchase price, less the sum of $970. The contracts were in writing, made in duplicate, one for Weiss and one for Huffaker, and at the same time two warranty deeds, one for each parcel of land, were executed by Weiss, with the names of the grantees left in blank. These contracts and deeds were deposited with one W. T. Davis (afterwards made a defendant), as trustee, with instructions to insert the names of the grantees in the deeds and turn them over to Huffaker, or his assigns, when the purchase price of the land was fully paid. This was the status of the transaction until January, 1912, when Weiss and wife executed a warranty deed to Davis for these and other lands in trust for the protection of Huffaker [319]*319and other purchasers of the land conveyed, and also to secure a promissory note from Weiss to Davis for money borrowed in the sum of $560. The trust deed was recorded January 22, 1912. Thereafter, in February, 1915, Weiss and wife, by an instrument in writing, for a purported consideration, assigned all their interest in and to the Huffaker contracts to the defendant First National Bank of Brigham City, hereinafter called the National Bank. The assignment was made with the knowledge and consent of both Davis and Huffaker, but it was not recorded until October, 1916. Prior to the recording of this assignment the Inter-Mountain Nursery Company, hereinafter called the Nursery Company, had recovered judgment against Weiss, and the interest of Weiss, whatever it might be, in the contracts with Huffaker was sold under execution to satisfy the judgment, and a sheriff’s deed for the property sold was duly executed to the Nursery Company and recorded in July, 1916. In the same month the Nursery Company executed a deed to the defendant Security Saving Bank, hereinafter called Savings Bank, to secure a loan made to the Nursery Company. Other transactions were had between the parties, but they are of minor importance and immaterial. The plaintiff, being ready and willing to pay the balance due from him under the contracts with Weiss, found himself confronted with two claimants, the Savings Bank and the National Bank, each claiming the entire fund. He made them both defendants in the action, and alleged he was ready and willing to pay the balance due to the party found entitled thereto by the judgment of the court. The Nursery Company and W. T. Davis were made defendants, after the trial commenced, by consent of the parties, in order that all conflicting claims of interest might be adjudicated and determined. The court tried the case without a jury, and rendered judgment for the defendant Savings Bank for the fund in question. The defendant National Bank appeals.

, Appellant assigns numerous errors. Such as are material to a determination of the rights of the parties will now be considered.

The vital facts are not in dispute. The decisive questions, [320]*320as we view the case, are: (1) Did Weiss have any interest in the Huffaker contracts that could be levied upon in satisfaction of the judgment obtained by the Nursery Company under which the respondent Savings Bank claims title? (2) If Weiss did have such interest, did the respondent Savings Bank, or its grantor, the Nursery Company, have notice of the interest claimed by the National Bank, under its assignment from Weiss, at any time before the deed was executed to the Savings Bank under which it claims title in this case ? In our judgment the case turns upon the answers to these questions.

The trust deed executed by Weiss to Davis was not an absolute conveyance of all title, both legal and equitable. It was executed for the purpose of securing a loan, and also to protect persons who had contracted with him to purchase parcels of land covered by the deed, including the 1 plaintiff, Huffaker. If these purchasers failed to pay for the land under their respective contracts, according to the terms thereof, their interest therein was forfeited. If Weiss then paid the loan to Davis, Weiss would become the sole owner of the property unincumbered. If the purchasers completed their payments, Weiss would receive the money therefor, less what might be due to Davis on the loan, and the undisputed facts show that there was a balance coming to Weiss, under the Huffaker contract, in the sum of $970. There is therefore no question but that at the time the property was sold on execution to satisfy the Nursery Company’s judgment, and until the sheriff executed his deed in pursuance of such sale, Weiss had an interest in the property, subject to the execution under which it was sold, unless his assignment to the National Bank altered the situation. Comp. Laws Utah 1907, section 3240. The respondent cites many authorities in support of this proposition, but the statute alone is conclusive. This disposes of the first question involved.

Appellant bases its claim entirely upon the assignment from Weiss and wife, of date February 2, 1915. 'This assignment, as before stated, was not recorded until October, 1916. In the meantime the Nursery Company procured its judgment [321]*321against Weiss, Ms interest or equity in the Huffaker 2 contracts was sold to satisfy the judgment, a sheriff's deed therefor was executed to the Nursery Company, and conveyance made by it to respondent, the Savings Bank, in July, 1916, and duly recorded at least three months before appellant’s assignment was recorded. We find no substantial evidence that either the Nursery Company or the Savings Bank had either actual or constructive notice of any interest of appellant, or claim of interest, whatever, prior to the deed to the Savings Bank above referred to.

But appellant earnestly insists that the trust deed from Weiss to Davis to protect the purchasers of the land conveyed and to secure the note to Davis of $560, borrowed by Weiss, recorded January 22, 1912, was sufficient at least to put the Nursery Company and the Savings Bank upon inquiry which might have led to a knowledge of the interest claimed by appellant. It is conceded, as a legal proposition, that a conveyance made in trust and duly recorded is notice to all the world of the existence of a trust, and persons thereafter dealing with respect to the property are charged with the responsibility of making inquiry as to the nature of the trust and its limitations.

"Therefore, if a deed is made to a person designated 'Trustee,’ although the nature of the trust, or the beneficiary under it, is not designated, still the purchaser is obligated to inquire as to the nature and limitations of the trust.” Devlin on Deeds, section 738a.

In the present ease the nature of the trust and its limitations are expressed in the deed. There was, as we view the case, nothing required of a person charged with the duty of making inquiry, except to ascertain who the purchasers of the land were, and guard against interfering with their rights. There is no pretense, in tMs case, that the rights of the purchasers of the land were in any manner affected by the deed to the Savings Bank, or that the Savings Bank claims anything under its deed adverse to the purchasers. The same is true as to the rights of Davis, whose loan of $560 was secured by the trust deed.

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Bluebook (online)
173 P. 903, 52 Utah 317, 1918 Utah LEXIS 74, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/huffaker-v-first-nat-bank-of-brigham-city-utah-1918.