McBirney v. Bader

1937 OK 588, 73 P.2d 156, 181 Okla. 237, 1937 Okla. LEXIS 111
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 19, 1937
DocketNo. 27267.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 1937 OK 588 (McBirney v. Bader) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McBirney v. Bader, 1937 OK 588, 73 P.2d 156, 181 Okla. 237, 1937 Okla. LEXIS 111 (Okla. 1937).

Opinion

PHELPS, J.

This was an action on a note and for foreclosure of the mortgage given to secure it. Personal judgment was sought against the original makers of the note and mortgage, and against a corporate grantee which had assumed 'and agreed to pay the indebtedness, by the terms of the deed conveying the property to it. Personal judgment was also sought against the three trustees of a business trust to which that corporate grantee had in turn negotiated for the sale of the property under the expectation that said business trust would likewise assume and pay the mortgage indebtedness. The trial court granted judgment foreclosing the mortgage, and rendered personal judgment against the original mortgagor, and also against the corporate grantee which had assumed the mortgage debt, but did not render personal judgment against the trustees of the business trust. The plaintiff appeals, contending that the trial court should also have entered personal judgment against the trustees.

The facts are many and varied, but only those will be stated which are pertinent to the issues controlling in the case. John McD. Parks and Deli'a Parks, then owners of the real estate involved, mortgaged the property to secure the payment of their note to the Exchange National Bank, on which note there was due at the time of the trial the sum of $9,911.09. The plaintiff is trustee to the successor of the mortgagee. John McD. Parks and Delia Parks afterward conveyed the premises to the King-Parks Company, a corporation, by deed, in which the grantee, the King-Parks Company, assumed and agreed to pay the mortgage indebtedness. Delia Parks died prior to the bringing of this action, and is not involved herein. We shall hereafter treat the subject as if John McD. Parks had been the sole mortgagor.

In April of 1930 the defendants W. C. Bader, F. I. Bader, F. W. Vaden, and John McD. Parks were conducting three separate *238 businesses of their own, for tbe sale of meat market equipment and butcher supplies'. They desired to consolidate their three profitable businesses and undertook to accomplish that consolidation under the form of a business trust. For this purpose they executed a trust agreement covering the powers and responsibilities of the trustees and the working of the trust. Therein' they named certain separate pieces of property belonging to each of them individually and provided that said property would be transferred to themselves as trustees of the trust estate. Each of the contracting parties was to be a trustee, and each was to own certain beneficial interests in the trust estate, and would receive “beneficial certificates” to be issued to them in the value and to the extent of the fair cash value of the assets which they were to contribute to the trust estate.

A “schedule” was attached to the trust agreement, listing the various pieces of property which the individuals proposed and agreed to contribute to the trust estate, and it included the real estate which is the subject of the present mortgage foreclosure. Though it was owned by the King-Parks Company, it appears that the beneficial certificates therefor were to be issued to John McD. Parks. The portion of the schedule listing the property herein involved, and which was proposed therein to be conveyed to the trust, reads as follows:

“From the King-Parks Company, a corporation, of Tulsa, Oklahoma, the following described * * * property:
“Certain improved real estate, described as follows: The easterly 60 feet of Lot 4, and the south 25 feet of the easterly 40 feet of lot 5 of block 126, original townsite of Tulsa, subject to a first mortgage of nine thousand one hundred and fifty dollars and seventy cents ($9,150.70) to the Exchange National Company, Tulsa, Oklahoma, which the trustees agree to assume and pay.”

It will thus be observed that the understanding was that upon the real estate being-conveyed to the trust the trustees “agree to assume and pay” the mortgage in suit. At this point it may be observed, for it is one of the vital points in the case, that unless the property was conveyed to the trust the trustees assumed no liability, for the foregoing excerpt plainly shows that the trustees in said instrument do not thereby assume the mortgage but “agree to” assume 'and pay. Obviously it was not intended that there would be an assumption of the debt unless the property should be conveyed to the trust. This is furthermore evident by the fact that the consideration to be received by Parks from the trust, for said property, was not yet determined or made certain, for the following paragraph follows the description of the property:

“It is mutually agreed that the value of the property above set out shall be determined by the trustees and beneficial certificates issued for the full fair cash values thereof.”

The deed contemplated by the trust agreement was executed by the King-Parks Company, and on the face thereof there appeared no provision that the grantee was to or did assume and agree to pay the mortgage. However, it appears to be conceded by all parties that the separate instrument constituting the trust agreement could serve the same purpose as if the provision had been Inserted in the deed itself and it is therefore unnecessary to consider that point, and we accordingly assume for the purposes of this case that the inclusion of the provision in the trust agreement would serve the same purpose as if the provision had been placed in the deed.

But there is some conflict in the evidence over the question of whether there was ever a complete delivery of the deed to the contemplated grantee, the trust estate. Parks, who appears to be considered as the real grantor, had a box in the office safe of the trust estate, and it appears that he placed (he deed in that box, where it remained for about two years, during the events and developments hereinafter described. However, the trustees took physical possession of the premises, and negotiated • with several loan companies over the possibility of obtaining an additional loan on the place, and were unsuccessful.

In the foregoing excerpt from the schedule to the trust agreement the mortgage of nine thousand and some dollars was the only mortgage mentioned. It appears that after the execution of this agreement it was learned that there was also a second mortgage of about $7,000 on the property, and when the trustees undertook to learn the value of the property, in order to determine the amount of beneficial certificates to be issued to Parks in return therefor, they discovered that the property was not worth the sum of both mortgages. Accordingly, al *239 though the trustees endeavored over a period of two years to work out that detail, they were unsuccessful, so that no certificates were ever issued to Parks for the property, and the trustees never recorded the deed. Parks eventually removed the deed from his box in the office safe and kept it. This was with the agreement and consent of the other trustees. In other words, that part of the deal was simply called off. During all of this time the mortgagee had no knowledge of this transaction, had not recognized it, and therefore had in no manner changed its position by reason of these negotiations. In fact, when the present suit was filed, the trustees were not even made parties to the action. And the deed had not been and was never recorded.

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Related

Robertson v. Robertson
61 So. 2d 499 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1952)
State Ex Rel. Commissioners of Land Office v. Hall
1942 OK 41 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1942)

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Bluebook (online)
1937 OK 588, 73 P.2d 156, 181 Okla. 237, 1937 Okla. LEXIS 111, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcbirney-v-bader-okla-1937.