In re Graves

182 F. 443, 1910 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 155
CourtDistrict Court, D. Vermont
DecidedOctober 21, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 182 F. 443 (In re Graves) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Graves, 182 F. 443, 1910 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 155 (D. Vt. 1910).

Opinion

MARTIN, District Judge.

This is the same case that was before the court in July, 1908, reported 163 F. 358, 20 Am. Bankr. Rep. 818. The closing paragraph of that opinion reads as follows:

“The cause is referred back to the referee to find the balance due on said note after deducting the value of the property covered by said mortgage and taken under said decree. If the counsel for the trustee and the counsel for the claimant agree as to what the balanco should be, the referee is instructed to report that fact, with the amount agreed upon, to the court.”

The claimant requested the court to withdraw the reference from the then referee of Bennington county, as he .had given his opinion that the property was worth at least $18,000, and therefore had partially prejudged the question pending. This request was granted by the court, and the name of Hon. A. E. Cudworth, referee for an adjoining county, was submitted to the parties and no objection made to his appointment. He is a lawyer of high standing and large experience at the bar, and also in the trial of cases as special master, auditor, referee in bankruptcy, etc. He heard the evidence and found that the mortgaged property that was taken on foreclosure by the claimant, sold at public auction, and bid off by an agent of the claimant, was worth $27,-000. If this report of the special master is accepted, and that amount exceeds the amount due on the claimant’s note, including costs and taxes paid on said land, then this claim should be disallowed.

The claimant now petitions the court for a new trial: First, for that he has been ready and willing to sell the property for a sum equal to the amount of the note, viz., $23,500. Second, for that there is some cloud on the title to the property which was not presented before the master because the claimant was then negotiating with prospective buyers and it might prevent a sale. Third, for that the special master’s report of the value of the property is excessive, and that the claimant has offered to convey said property to the trustee, or any one else, for $23,500. Fourth, for that the claimant is entitled “to prove his claim in full against the estate of said Allen R. Graves in bankruptcy, and that likewise he is entitled to the full payment of said claim with interest to the date it is paid; such payment to be made first by applying, as of the date the same came into his possession, the property received by him upon the mortgage foreclosure at its cash value at that time, and then by dividends' from the bankrupt estate, until said claim, with interest, is fully paid.” And also prays that the court review the evidence, that he may find therefrom the property to be worth much less than the mastér has found it to be.

The first reason alleged in this petition was presented to the master on hearing, and all the circumstances connected therewith were before him. The trustee was under no obligations and had no authority to buy this property from the claimant or to take it into his hands to handle and control. The claimant foreclosed his mortgage in the state court, and obtained title to the real estate in question, sold it at public auction, and bid it in for less than the amount due on his note.

The second cause stated is somewhat peculiar. It is claimed that there is a defect in the title, known by the claimant at the.time of the hearing before the master, but not called to his attention because of ne[446]*446gotiations with a prospective purchaser. . Was the claimant going to sell and convey to that prospective purchaser and keep this cloud on the title hidden, or did he hope to overreach him, in some manner, by simply.giving a quitclaim deed? Whatever may have been his intention, it can have no effect' upon the court in granting a new trial, as it is not newly discovered evidence..

As to the third ground, I have carefully reviewed the evidence before the master, and from it I concur in his findings as to the value.

As to the fourth reason, the property being worth more than the amount due, the debt is paid, and that claim is without foundation. In argument counsel for the defendant criticised the holding of the court in Re Graves; supra, to the effect that:

“Having foreclosed on tbe property.of another and obtained full and complete title thereto, be should have dividends only on the balance after deducting the value of the mortgaged property which he has received from said corporation, which is his principal debtor.”

They have cited several authorities, but none of them are applicable to the facts in this case.

In the case at bar the Vail Light & Lumber Company executed the note andl gave a mortgage on the property in question to secure its payment. The bankrupt was simply an indorser, and long before bankruptcy proceedings the claimant had foreclosed his mortgage in the state court without joining the bankrupt as a party thereto, had obtained a decree, and the equity of redemption had expired nearly a year preceding the bankruptcy proceedings of the endorser. ■ The bankrupt court had no jurisdiction of the property so foreclosed!, and at the time of the adjudication the title of the property pledged by the Vail Light & Lumber Company had been taken and the property converted by the claimant. There can be no claim against the bankrupt unless the amount due on the claimant’s note exceeds the value of the property so taken. Under such a state of facts, there can be no lien resting upon the bankrupt’s estate except for the balance due. It is wholly unlike the case of the- Beaver Knitting Mills, 154 Fed. 320, cited by the claimant! In that case the Beaver Knitting Mills assumed the payment of the entire mortgage by a purchase of the mortgaged property and the property itself was in the hands'of the court of bankruptcy;

Loveland (3d Ed.) p. 357, is cited:

“Where a maker and an indorser, whose liability is fixed, are both adjudged bankrupts, the whole debt, it seems, may be proved against either or both estates.” '

That is, the whole debt as it existed at the time of the filing of the petition in bankruptcy. If one-half, two-thirds, or any-other fracr tional part thereof, was paid before bankruptcy proceedings-, the whole deb't is the amount then due and no more, and that amotmt only is provable against the bankrupt estate. The special master has found that the property pledged by mortgage, and taken by the claimant long preceding bankruptcy proceedings, was of greater value than the amount due on the note; thus the debt is paid, and there is nothing to be proved. . . ! . .

[447]*447It is unnecessary to discuss the other cases cited, as they are equally inapplicable to the facts of this case.

The claimant has also filed exceptions to the report of the special master for errors made in the trial of the case:

First. For that the referee ruled that the burden of proof in the case was on the claimant. What the master ruled was this: That upon the files before him, furnished by Referee Sheldon, Mr. Clement stands relatively in the position of plaintiff and should present his proofs— “going ahead!” in the presentation of evidence. It will be observed that Referee Sheldon held that the claimant had no standing in court and denied him the right to prove his claim. At the time that the special master made this ruling, the claimant had not proved his case at all. The ruling of the special master was correct.

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Bluebook (online)
182 F. 443, 1910 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 155, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-graves-vtd-1910.