Lovett v. Peoples First Nat. Bank of Quitman

178 So. 124, 130 Fla. 142, 1937 Fla. LEXIS 826
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJanuary 20, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 178 So. 124 (Lovett v. Peoples First Nat. Bank of Quitman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lovett v. Peoples First Nat. Bank of Quitman, 178 So. 124, 130 Fla. 142, 1937 Fla. LEXIS 826 (Fla. 1937).

Opinions

Per Curiam.

The appeal is from final decree as follows :

“This, matter comes on for final consideration upon the Bill of Interpleader as filed by Complainant, and the Answers thereto as filed by Mamie A. Lovett, Peoples First National Bank of Quitman, Georgia, and South Georgia Grocery Company, a corporation, said Answers also by agreement between the parties and their counsel being taken and considered as a Bill of Complaint on the part of each answering defendant, as regards the several claims made regarding the insurance money impounded in the registry of the Court in connection with the Interpleader proceedings. Testimony was taken in part before the Court and in part before an Examiner, and'all of the testimony was duly transcribed and filed together with nmerous exhibits on behalf of the parties, all of which will appear from the record itself. Argument both oral and by brief was presented to the Court by counsel for the parties.

“The main contention centers around who shall receive the money now in the registry of the Court and which was paid to settle an insurance claim on the loss of a dwelling house by fire. Mrs. Lovett, as mortgagee, claimed the pro *144 ceeds of the insurance and the aforesaid Bank and Grocery Company claimed that Mrs. Lovett’s mortgage on the property as executed to her by her husband, D. S. Lovett, is invalid on the ground that no bona fide consideration passed therefor, and that it was executed for the purpose of defeating creditors and that they, therefore, should receive the money to apply on indebtedness due them by Mr. Lovett in his lifetime. In pursuance of their claims the Bank and the Grocery Company had instituted suit in the Circuit Court of Madison County and a copy of the judgment obtained by the Bank in its suit appears in the evidence. The Grocery Company obtained a judgment in Georgia and made same the basis for its suit in Madison County, but outside of a general allegation there is nothing in the record here to' show what was the final disposition of the same. Each of these litigants alsp had writs of garnishment issued and served on the insurance company. The time of service of the writ issued.on behalf of the Bank is shown by the record, but the record does not disclose the time of service of the writ issued on behalf of the grocery company.

“Upon a consideration of the circumstances shown by the whole record the Court is of the opinion that the mortgage in question is violative of the provisions of Section 5771, Compiled General Laws of Florida, and is, therefore, invalid and of no legal effect. By this the Court does not intend to determine that Mr. Lovett was personally dishonest but that the conclusion of the court from the record is, that he was confronted by difficulties, and that the mortgage in question was executed by him for ‘protective’ purposes as has been done many times by the best of men in times of stress as a temporary buttress against the sacrifice of their property on the auction block of judicial sale to satisfy litigating creditors who cannot or will not wait *145 until better times come to- their debtors. If Mr. Lovett had lived there is no doubt in the mind of the Court that he would have satisfactorily arranged these matters in due time.

“From the record the court also concludes that the Peoples First National Bank of Quitman, Georgia, has a first and prior lien for the payment of its claim, which is superior to that of South Georgia Grocery Company.

“It appears from the record that the sum of $2675.00 was paid into the registry of the Court by the aforesaid, and that out of this sum there has already been paid by agreement of the parties and their counsel, the sum of $200 as attorney fee to Cockrell & Cockrell for their services in the Interpleader proceedings, and that a balance of $2475.00 remains in the court registry subject to disposition.

“It appears that the amount of the judgment obtained by the aforesaid Bank is $1938.54, and that the amount of the judgment- obtained by aforesaid Grocery Company in Georgia is $557.25.

“Therefore, it is ordered and decreed that the Bill of Complaint of Mamie A. Lovett for an accounting and for foreclosure of aforesaid mortgage be, and the same is hereby dismissed, and said mortgage adjudged invalid and void.

“It is further ordered and decreed that after the payment of all the legal court costs of this Interpleader proceedings as same shall be taxed by the Clerk of this Court in accordance with law, that the Clerk of this Court do pay over to the aforesaid Peoples First National Bank of Quitman, Georgia, a corporation, out of the aforesaid sum in the registry of the Court the sum of $1938.54, and that the balance remaining in said deposit be paid over to the aforesaid, South Georgia Grocery Company, a corporation, to *146 apply on its aforesaid claim of $557.25 as aforesaid, said costs to be paid out of said ftmds in Court registry.”

We think the controlling question in this case is stated by appellee, as follows:

“Where it appears that a husband who is indebted in large sums to others, without any agreement with, or demand from, his wife, voluntarily executed notes payable to her on demand, each bearing a different date from the others and all antedating the. time of their execution,, and at the same time voluntarily executed a mortgage upon his real estate to secure such, which said mortgage contains a provision obligating mortgagor to carry insurance on the building located on mortgaged land in blank amount, payable to mortgagee in case of loss, and without delivering the said notes and mortgage to the wife, took the mortgage to the office of the Clerk of the Circuit Court, who was the brother-in-law of the mortgagor, and requested such Clerk to file it and not record it until he notified him further, and the Clerk, pursuant to such request, put his file .mark thereon as of the date the mortgage was handed to him, and then put the mortgage in a secret drawer with certain deeds purporting to convey real estate from the mortgagor to three of his very young children, which deeds were at the same time left with the Clerk with like instructions, and the said documents were not actually placed on record for some time and not until after a dwelling house on the mortgaged premises had been destroyed by fire, and writs of garnishment had been sued out by creditors and served upon the insurance company that insured the building, will a Court of Equity enforce an equitable lien against the insurance fund in favor of the wife, notwithstanding the insurance and service of the writs of garnishment, where it is also made to appear that the wife claims the *147 notes represent debts due her for money that she, at different times over a period of years, turned over to, or permitted, her husband to use as his own and as he saw fit, without any agreement to repay the principal or interest, and without any accounting whatever to her?”

The Chancellor answered this question in the negative and it appears to us that whether or not that answer was correct is to be determined by deciding whether or not the record established the facts assumed in the question.

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Bluebook (online)
178 So. 124, 130 Fla. 142, 1937 Fla. LEXIS 826, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lovett-v-peoples-first-nat-bank-of-quitman-fla-1937.