McCown v. Williams

10 F. Supp. 168, 1935 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1643
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. South Carolina
DecidedMarch 12, 1935
DocketNo. 734
StatusPublished

This text of 10 F. Supp. 168 (McCown v. Williams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McCown v. Williams, 10 F. Supp. 168, 1935 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1643 (southcarolinaed 1935).

Opinion

MYERS, District Judge.

The plaintiff brought this case in the court of common pleas for Florence county, S. C. The defendant C. Frank Williams removed the same to this court, and the plaintiff has now made a motion to remand. The defendant C. Frank Williams maintains that there is a separable controversy between him and the plaintiff with which the defendant O. L. Williams has no connection, and to which he is not a necessary or even a proper party. The plaintiff contends that the complaint sets forth a joint cause of action against the two defendants.

The plaintiff is a resident and citizen' of the District of Columbia, and the defendant C. Frank Williams is a resident and citizen of Illinois. The defendant O. L. Williams is a resident and citizen of Sumter county, S. C. The defendant O. L. Williams was personally served with the summons and complaint and the defendant C. Frank Williams was served by publication in accordance with the state practice.

The defendant C. Frank Williams has moved this court to quash the service of [169]*169the summons and complaint on him, in that the plaintiff brought a personal action against him which is triable only in the state in which he resides. It is proper to dispose of the motion to remand before considering the motion to quash the service, and viewing the case as I do the question of service on the defendant C. Frank Williams should be passed on by the state court.

The complaint sets forth in substance that on April 7, 1916, the McCown-Clark Company, a South Carolina corporation, gave a mortgage to the Jefferson Standard Life Insurance Company of Greensboro, N. C., on real estate situate in Florence and Darlington counties, S. C, to secure the payment of a note for $20,000. That said Insurance Company assigned the said mortgage to the plaintiff when there was due thereon $13,067.75, and that she thereafter assigned the said mortgage to the defendant C. Frank Williams. The complaint further alleges that the said mortgage was assigned to the defendant C. Frank Williams, who was then her son-in-law, in trust, without consideration, for her benefit; that subsequent to the trust assignment O. L. Williams, the father of the defendant C. Frank Williams, acquired title to the mortgaged premises subject to plaintiff’s mortgage and with knowledge that C. Frank Williams held the mortgage in trust for the plaintiff. The complaint charges that the defendants, O. L. Williams and C. Frank Williams, without the plaintiff’s knowledge and without any consideration moving to the plaintiff or to the defendant C. Frank Williams, collusively connived and conspired together for the purpose of defrauding the plaintiff of the said mortgage, and in furtherance of their fraudulent design and conspiracy satisfied and canceled the said mortgage of record. The plaintiff by her complaint is seeking to foreclose the mortgage and alleges that no part of the mortgage debt has been paid since she acquired same.

The defendant C. Frank Williams takes the position that the complaint presents a separable controversy between himself and the plaintiff, viz.:

A controversy growing out of the alleged transfer by the plaintiff to the defendant C. Frank Williams of the note and mortgage described in the complaint in said action upon the alleged understanding and agreement that the said C. Frank Williams would hold the said note and mortgage for plaintiff and for her sole use, benefit, and behoof, and would assign and transfer said note and mortgage back to the plaintiff at any time she might make such request.

In order for the plaintiff to obtain the relief she is seeking, it is necessary that the satisfaction of the mortgage be canceled, because so long as it remains in its present status it is oí no value to the plaintiff. Segregating this feature of the case, it is clearly demonstrable that C. Frank Williams and O. L. Williams are joint parties to the plaintiff’s effort to set aside the cancellation. It is alleged that they conspired together and fraudulently canceled the mortgage. If this presents a tort, then they are joint tortfeasors and the action against them to this extent would be joint and several, at the election of the plaintiff. If the cancellation is regarded in the light of the complaint, any attempt to set it aside is a joint action against both of the defendants, because they necessarily committed the act together, at the instance of O. L. Williams, and by agreement between the two. The two are inseparable in their relation to this feature of the case.

A suit against a number of defendants charged with having obtained property through a fraudulent conspiracy is not separable, and cannot be removed by one defendant alone. O’Neil v. Birdseye (D. C. N. Y. 1917) 244 F. 254.

It is important to note that the cancellation ol the mortgage could not be effectually accomplished without establishing as to the defendant O. L. Williams the trust relationship between the plaintiff and the defendant C. Frank Williams in regard to the mortgage. This is obvious, because O. L. Williams would be in no .wise bound to relinquish the benefits of the cancellation unless his knowledge of the trust relationship was established. If the defendant C. Frank Williams had absolute title to the mortgage, it would be his privilege to satisfy it with or without consideration.

Counsel for the defendant C. Frank Williams attempt to segregate those allegations of the complaint which set out the trust agreement without regard to the commingling of these allegations with the entire cause of action as alleged. Under the allegations of the complaint the defendant C. Frank Williams is a proper party to a final determination of the relief sought by the plaintiff. All of the steps in the complaint to afford plaintiff the desired relief are so closely allied and interdependent that there can be no extraction of one phase of the [170]*170controversy from'the complaint in order to set it up as a distinct issue between the plaintiff and the defendant C. Frank Williams.

Where the relief asked in a bill of equity could not be granted unless all who were made defendants were parties, it followed that all of them were necessary parties, and there could not be a separate controversy as to one of them. Graves v. Corbin (Ill. 1890) 132 U. S. 571, 10 S. Ct. 196, 33 L. Ed. 462; USCA § 71, p. 233, title 28.

As I view the plaintiff’s complaint, if it is necessary to establish the trust relationship as to the defendant C. Frank Williams, it is more essential to establish it as to the defendant O. L. Williams, who is an indispensable party to the full and complete determination of this question, as the action looks towards the disturbance of the benefits received by him by virtue of the satisfaction. The defendant C. Frank Williams, on the other hand, is only incidentally involved in any relief sought by the plaintiff in the establishment of the trust. It is alleged in the complaint that when O. L. Williams acquired the property covered by the mortgage, he knew of the trust agreement between the plaintiff and the defendant C. Frank Williams, which places him in such privity with the defendant C. Frank Williams and the plaintiff that he is bound by the trust agreement to the same degree that the defendant C. Frank Williams was and is bound; in fact, he stands in C. Frank Williams’ shoes. The plaintiff, therefore, in seeking to establish the trust in C. Frank Williams must of necessity make O. L.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
10 F. Supp. 168, 1935 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1643, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccown-v-williams-southcarolinaed-1935.