Kinney v. Millsap

71 F.2d 578, 1934 U.S. App. LEXIS 3142
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJune 22, 1934
DocketNo. 7118
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 71 F.2d 578 (Kinney v. Millsap) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kinney v. Millsap, 71 F.2d 578, 1934 U.S. App. LEXIS 3142 (5th Cir. 1934).

Opinion

HUTCHESON, Circuit Judge.

The action is for breach of covenants of warranty and against incumbrances in a deed Kinney made to plaintiff. The claim is that Poliak’s successful assertion that Kinney’s apparent title was only for the purposes of security, and that he held it subject to Poliak’s right to redeem, had broken them. The defenses are that there has been no real eviction, and therefore no breach of the warranty covenant, and only a nominal breach of that against incumbrances. Specifically, it is claimed that Millsap brought about his own eviction, was himself the cause of any damage that he suffered. It is asserted that though Poliak’s right to redeem was finally established by decree, this was brought about by, and would not have come to pass but for, Millsap’s collusion with Poliak. These are the facts.

On October 28, 1905, for a consideration of $16,000, $5,000 cash and $11,000' in notes which were later paid, Kinney conveyed the property to Millsap. The deed contained the following- covenants: “And I, the said Kinney, do for myself, and for my heirs, executors and administrators, covenant with the said Millsap, his heirs and assigns, that I am lawfully seized in fee simple of the premises; that they are free from all encumbrances; that I have a good right to sell and convey the same as aforesaid; that I will, and my heirs, executors and administrators shall, warrant and defend the same against the lawful claims of all persons.” About a year later Poliak filed his suit to redeem. This suit was based upon the claim that the moneys ho had gotten to redeem the property from an earlier foreclosure were gotten on mortgage, and that the deed to Kinney evidenced only a security title. The suit, vigorously defended by both Kinney and Millsap, resulted in a decree sustaining Poliak’s right to redeem and fixing the amount he must pay to obtain a reconveyance. This amount Poliak arranged to deposit. On October 22, 1931, the Supreme Court, correcting the decree by requiring the payment of an additional sum to be paid in within ninety days to effect the redemption, and, if not, the cause to be dismissed, affirmed it. By this time the property, caught in the collapse of real estate values, had declined to a value of around $2,600, and when Poliak was notified that in addition to the $6,855 he had already put up he must put up $1,300 more in order to redeem, it was decided that Poliak “could not, well, would not, raise the amount' necessary to pay it.” His counsel, Cooper, got in touch with Edmundson, counsel for Millsap, and told him of “our decision to let the matter go by default and draw down the amount we had paid into court already.” Edmund-son came to Cooper’s office and talked the [579]*579mailer over. lie asked how much the Poliaks would soil the land for in case he (Edimmclson) could get a buyer who would pay enough money in so that the Poliaks could comply with the Supreme Court’s decree. Shortly afterward Mr. White Gibson, who, as Millsap^s counsel, filed this warranty suit, furnished Cooper one Woodruff as a purchaser, for $10,000, $5,000 cash and $5,000 notes. Millsap having some months before surrendered possession of the property, Woodruff on January 191, 1932, took a deed for it, from the Poliaks, and within the ninety days paid into the registry the additional amount, which Millsap accepted as sufficient. A few days later, in the early part of February, White Gibson, who had acted for Wood-ruff in the sale transaction, filed suit for Mill-sap on Kinney’s warranty. On March 12, 1932, Kinney, who had refused io take down his part of the amounts tendered into court, on the ground that they were insufficient, moved the" Supreme Court to dismiss the bill for failure to redeem within the time fixed. Both Millsap’s and Poliak’s counsel appeared in opposition to this motion; in fact, Mill-sap’s counsel, Edmundson, conducted the defense in the Supreme Court. On April 9, .1932, that court sustained Kinney’s position that Poliak had made an insufficient payment, but it allowed thirty days more to pay the additional sum. This amount, $129.87, was advanced through Gibson by crediting it on Woodruff’s notes. Neither Gibson, Edmund-son, Poliak, nor Woodruff gave testimony in ihe cause, and it stands admitted as Cooper lias testified to it, that there would have been no redemption had not Edmundson, Millsap’s counsel in ihe Poliak suit, through the medium of Gibson, Millsap’s counsel in this suit, made the arrangements which made it possible and brought it about. Millsap did indeed testify: “I did not furnish any of the money or know anything about it, that was paid into court in January. I did not have anything to do with paying the money when they claimed it was finally redeemed through Mr. White Gibson. I did not either directly or through my attorney, Mr. White Gibson, pay that money on April 9th.” He did not, however, testify that Edmundson did not represent him in inducing Poliak not to abandon the redemption and take his'money down. He testified that White Gibson represented him in his warranty suits against Kinney; that he brought two, one in February, which he dismissed, and another when the Supreme Court rendered the last decree. That he abandoned possession in the fall of 1831 on Mr. Edmundson’s advice. That Mr. Edmondson was his attorney. “Mr. Edmundson first began to represent me in the redemption suit filed by the Poliaks two years after the purchase of it in 1927, and he continued to represent me throughout.”

At the conclusion of the evidence the defendant moved for a directed verdict. The District Judge thought plaintiff entitled to recover unless Millsap colluded to bring about a breach of Kinney’s covenants. lie thought this a fact issue for the jury. He thought Millsap’s surrender of possession before the redemption decree became final in April, in itself no obstacle to Millsap’s suit. He thought, too, that Millsap’s opposition to Kinney’s motion, entered after Millsap had accepted the money in the registry, was no bar to this suit, unless it was part of a collusive plan to rid himself of the depreciated land in order to recover on Kinney’s warranty. lie therefore fully instructed the jury that it was Millsap’s duty not to collude with the Poliaks in order to defeat the title Kinney had conveyed to him. He particularly advised them that if they believed that the Poliaks were not able to accomplish the redemption for financial reasons, and that Millsap being desirous that the redemption should be accomplished, aided and abetted in furnishing the money, they should find for Kinney.

Defendant is here complaining of the failure to instruct a verdict. He maintains* that the evidence is conclusive that Millsap defeated his own title, brought about his own loss. There can he, there is, no doubt that; Millsap owed Kinney a duty of good faith, ' and that if he brought about the redemption by inducing Poliak to complete it, and aiding him to do so after Poliak had announced his intention to abandon it, he cannot recover. Hester v. Hunnicutt, 104 Ala. 2,82, 16 So. 162; Rancho Bonito Land & Live-Stock Co. V. North, 92 Tex. 72, 45 S. W. 994; Hamilton V. Farmer, 173 Ark. 341, 292 S. W. 683; Tuggle v. Hamilton, 100 Ga. 292, 27 S. E. 987; Congregation of Sisters v. Jane, 110 Miss. 612, 70 So. 818-820.

The only question in the ease is whether the evidence, as matter of law, shows that he did this. Appellee points to his testimony that he furnished no money, and that he knew nothing about the transaction his attorneys ’ Edmundson and Gibson were carrying on. He points, too, to the verdict of the jury accepting this testimony. We do not think that this will do. What he testified to, and what the jury found, was that he did not in person collude.

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Bluebook (online)
71 F.2d 578, 1934 U.S. App. LEXIS 3142, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kinney-v-millsap-ca5-1934.