In re Cole

37 F. Supp. 860, 1941 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3594
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Washington
DecidedFebruary 25, 1941
DocketNo. B—7900
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 37 F. Supp. 860 (In re Cole) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Cole, 37 F. Supp. 860, 1941 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3594 (E.D. Wash. 1941).

Opinion

BLACK, District Judge.

Whatever the technical situation of this proceeding might be under the pleadings or whatever the technical authority of the Court might be if the statutes relating to this matter had been strictly followed in so far as they fix procedure, clearly the parties, by their respective courses of action, including stipulations and submission of testimony, in fact authorized this court to now fix the value of the farm lands of the farm debtors and the conditions and time for redemption at that value by the farm debtors, and to determine whether there should be a sale in the event no redemption should be had.

It was stipulated in open court at the beginning of the hearing that included in the matter to be considered the court might have before it on review such approval as the Conciliation Commissioner made of the appraisal and rental, regardless of whether the approval of the Conciliation Commissioner as to the appraisal and the rental may have been made on the 9th of March, 1940, or in August, 1940, or whether at some intervening date, and whether it was in writing or orally.

And regardless of what may have been the technical rights of the parties to introduce new evidence to supplement the record of the Conciliation Commissioner and the appraisers both sides at the hearing before this Court did introduce a substantial amount of oral evidence. Considerable documentary evidence was also introduced. The farm debtors prior to the hearing subpoenaed and had in attendance several witnesses who testified at considerable length as to their respective opinions in connection with the market or rental value of the property, or both. During the hearing it was stipulated that a certain appraiser of the petitioner, Home Owners’ Loan Corporation, if personally present, would testify that he had been an appraiser of the petitioner since 1934, had appraised approximately forty thousand pieces of property in this state, most of which were for mortgage purposes but many with respect to sales, so applying all of his time for'approximately six years; that it was the practice to sell on appraisals of such appraiser and that of two thousand properties acquired by the Home Owners’ Loan Corporation between sixty and seventy-five per cent, had already been sold on such appraisals, with all of which he was familiar; that he had appraised this particular property and that its present fair and reasonable cash market value as of the time of the hearing and at the time of the appraisal by the appraisers was at least $5,250. The attorney for the farm debtors objected only as to the materiality of such testimony and as to the qualification of the witness.

Certainly such testimony was material and the witness was qualified. The only question, of course, would be as to the weight, if any, that the court should accord to same.

The prayer of the petitioner’s petition was that the court should review all orders and proceedings had before the Conciliation Commissioner and should enter such order or orders as to the court seemed equitable, just and lawful, including among other relief prayed for, an order authorizing the real estate to be sold at public auction, and the appointment of a trustee.

As above mentioned, by the action of both parties preceding and during the hearing the proceeding became, one for court decision upon evidence submitted and not merely for review.

The evidence submitted to the court established the following:

The real estate in question is an orchard tract of 8.8 acres in Douglas County three miles from Wenatchee. The farm debtors bought same in 1922 on a contract at a price of $23,000 and thereafter certain improvements were placed thereon. Included in the improvements on the property is a modern house, besides a barn and a packing shed. The home has five rooms on the main floor in addition to such rooms as may be in the basement; it is fully modern with hardwood floors, electric and water service, hot air heat, excellent plumbing. And it is surrounded by an especially attractive and expensive terraced rock garden and with trees and shrubbery.

Some time after the purchase in 1922 the farm debtors obtained a deed to the property and ultimately placed two mortgages thereon.. By 1934 one of such mortgages had been foreclosed and the farm debtors thereupon made application to the Home Owners’ Loan Corporation for a loan and such corporation paid off all of the encumbrances, including back taxes against the property. The amount advanced by the Home Owners’ Loan Corporation was $11,-195 payable at the rate of $88.53 per month. This amount was many thousand dollars less than the aggregate of the encum[862]*862brances which had been against the property and which in part had been retired by the Home Owners’ Loan Corporation at a substantial discount.

The farm debtors from 1934 paid none of such agreed monthly payments nor even the taxes or fire insurance but some amounts were received by the Home Owners’ Loan Corporation through a crop mortgage, etc. The parties are in dispute as to whether this was voluntary on the part of the farm debtors or compelled.

At any rate the total amount due the Home Owners’ Loan Corporation at the present time is substantially in excess of the $11,195 advanced by the Home Owners’ Loan Corporation in 1934 for the relief of the farm debtors.

In 1939 the farm debtors were adjudicated bankrupts in voluntary bankruptcy proceedings under the general bankruptcy laws and obtained their discharge. Sub-' sequently these farm debtors filed a petition for relief as farm debtors under Section 75 of the Bankruptcy Act, 11 U.S.C.A. § 203, and failing to secure a composition and extension under agreement with the creditors such original proceeding was dismissed and the farm debtors filed a petition to be adjudged bankrupts under Section 75, sub. s.

Thereafter appraisers appraised the real estate as having a fair and reasonable market value of $1,000 and the Conciliation Commissioner ordered that the debtors should have possession of the real property for three years and should pay $115 annually as rental. The Home Owners’ Loan Corporation, feeling aggrieved, came to this court -for' relief, insisting, among other things, that the real property had an actual cash market value in excess, of $5,250. In normal years the orchard produces about eight thousand boxes of apples annually.

The farm debtor in his testimony before this court insisted under oath that the total value of the 8.8 acres, including orchard and all improvements, was $880 and that such was the value of the property free of all taxes and encumbrances whatsoever. His testimony, in effect, was that there was no rental value to the property at all other than taxes and water and that he at the present time had the complete use and possession of four similar properties by merely paying the taxes and water or less and could secure additional orchards under similar arrangements. The farm debtor further testified that he did not know and could not even estimate what the house cost, but that it was worth very little. His further testimony was that the original part of the house was very old, being an old settler’s shack, that the new part was built around it about thirteen years ago as a makeshift and was in poor condition with the foundation giving way, the concrete being a poor job, with the floor not substantially built and with the roof in poor condition and leaking. No interpretation of his testimony concerning the house is possible except that the house had never been in good condition or repair or of any substantial value.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
37 F. Supp. 860, 1941 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3594, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-cole-waed-1941.