Matchan v. Phoenix Land Investment Co.

198 N.W. 417, 159 Minn. 132, 1924 Minn. LEXIS 588
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedApril 17, 1924
DocketNo. 23,792
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 198 N.W. 417 (Matchan v. Phoenix Land Investment Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matchan v. Phoenix Land Investment Co., 198 N.W. 417, 159 Minn. 132, 1924 Minn. LEXIS 588 (Mich. 1924).

Opinion

Stone, J.

Action to set aside certain conveyances and to have the real estate in question declared the property of First National Holding Company. After trial by the court and a decision adverse to defendant Phoenix Land Investment Company, it made a motion for a new trial, from the denial of which it appeals.

Extended consideration of the facts is unnecessary, but the record is so lengthy and involved that a mere effort to bring out its high lights may seem like extended statement, although the fact will be to the contrary.

The property consists of two lots in Minneapolis upon which are situated the Summit and Bryant Apartments. The litigation arises from the activities of defendant R. R. Betcher. (He, with the other [134]*134members of Ms family herein referred to, were made parties defendant, but defaulted. That default,, however, is nominal only. The Betcher interests have been well protected by the vigorous defense of the Phoenix Company). The title was originally taken by him but placed in the name of one Blomquist, the purchase price being procured through a $12,000 mortgage negotiated in the name of Blomquist. This occurred in 1912. Betcher then negotiated two mortgages on the property, each for $30,000. Out of the funds so obtained, the $12,000 mortgage was paid, and the erection of the apartment buildings put under way.

In October, 1912, through the procurement of Betcher, Blomquist and his wife conveyed the property to the Minneapolis Holding Company. This conveyance was without consideration moving either from Betcher or the grantee.

In September, 1914, the property was sold , at execution sale, but it was. refinanced by Betcher and the title placed in the First National Holding Company, the receiver of which is the plaintiff and respondent herein. All of this was subject to the two $30,000 mortgages negotiated in 1912. They were foreclosed and the property sold at the resulting sale in 1915. But in February, 1916, there was a redemption by the First National Holding Company. Betcher had been successful in another refundment of Ms debts so far as they were secured on this real estate. New mortgages were negotiated which remain liens on the property.

Both the Minneapolis Holding Company and the First National Holding Company were corporations; each of them, according to the findings, “for the purposes of equity” identical with Betcher. That identity the trial judge aptly characterizes as “the clue to the labyrinth of tMs case.”

Otherwise than by executing the notes secured by the mortgages in question, “Blomquist never paid any. consideration for, nor made any investment in said property, and * * * acted merely as the agent and cover of defendant R. R. Betcher.”

The two corporations, already referred to as his instruments, not being sufficient for his purposes, Betcher organized a third, defendant Phoenix Land Investment Company, and in July, 1916, caused [135]*135tbe First National Holding Company to convey the property through a “dummy” to the Phoenix Company. There was no consideration for that conveyance. The First National Holding Company got nothing for it. It was¡ really the sole act of E. E. Betcher.

During all the times in question, Betcher and- all his corporations have been insolvent, and when the property was conveyed to the Phoenix Company, there were certain creditors whose claims he had to adjust. He agreed with them that, upon the organization of the Phoenix Company, some of its stock should be issued in liquidation of their claims. Accordingly, stock was issued to those creditors as follows: To Louise M. Blomquist, acting for her husband, the original Blomquist, 150 shares; to E. G. Chapman, 20 shares; to N. C. Bennett, 90 shares; to Gamble & Ludwig, 16 shares. All the rest of the stock was issued to and for the benefit of Betcher; the four blocks just specially mentioned being intended to represent the claims of the named stockholders as creditors of Betcher.

At the time of the conveyance to the Phoenix Company, the property was worth much more than -the encumbrances against it.

The relief granted plaintiff by the decision under review was a restoration to the possession and control of the property, and the enjoyment of the income therefrom, and an adjudication that the legal title be held by defendant as a trustee for plaintiff and the creditors of the First National Holding Company, the Minneapolis Holding Company, and defendant E. E. Betcher, arising out of the indebtedness existing on December 29, 1916, at about which time the property had been conveyed to the Phoenix Company.

At this point it is well to introduce the intervener, Kreofsky. In December, 1921, for cash advances made to them in 1915, or before, he recovered judgment against Betcher and the First National Holding Company for upwards of $41,000. No part of that judgment has been paid. Under it and in July, 1920, a levy was made upon the property in question.

On February 27, 1923, while this action was on trial, there appeared a satisfaction of this judgment and a release of the levy made under it, both of which were annulled by the decision below because of the fraud and undue influence of Betcher and the in[136]*136competence, at the time being, of the intervener. Either ground is sufficient to sustain the result and on this record we are not justified in disturbing it.

The intervener received not more than $1,000 for the discharge of his $41,000 judgment. It was procured from him through the activities of one Harman, under circumstances so insufficiently proven and so insufficiently explained as well to justify the conclusion of fraud. Intervener sought to have the property subjected to his claim upon an “equitable mortgage” theory which it is not necessary to explain because that relief was denied him. But he was reinstated as' a judgment creditor of Betcher and the First National Holding Company. That relief was granted upon certain terms which do not require discussion. Apparently, they have been, or will be, complied with and, if they are, under the decision below, the intervener will be let in with other creditors to share in the distribution of the assets available for the payment of the general creditors of the First National Holding Company. The named stock holders, creditors of Betcher, who accepted, in liquidation of their claims against him, stock in the Phoenix Company, were protected, in his usual careful manner, by the learned trial judge. His decision was stated to have no effect as a determination of their rights, as creditors of the First National Holding Company. In other respects also, jurisdiction was reserved so that ancillary issues, can be determined as they arise, to the end that in this one suit, equitable jurisdiction may be adequate to the task of deciding all of the issues and fairly determining the rights of all parties at interest.

These findings for plaintiff and intervener are opposed, for the Phoenix Company, by the simple claim that it owns the property free from any claim of plaintiff or intervener.

That is the story of the case, sufficiently stated for present purposes.

Our brief resume will not meet with appellant’s approval. Most of its evidence and all its arguments are strongly the other way at controlling points. The view we take is necessarily that adopted by the learned trial judge, for our review of the record discloses noth[137]*137ing justifying a disturbance of the findings and the resulting conclusions of law.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
198 N.W. 417, 159 Minn. 132, 1924 Minn. LEXIS 588, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matchan-v-phoenix-land-investment-co-minn-1924.