McIntire v. Pryor

173 U.S. 38, 19 S. Ct. 352, 43 L. Ed. 606, 1899 U.S. LEXIS 1416
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 20, 1899
Docket109
StatusPublished
Cited by57 cases

This text of 173 U.S. 38 (McIntire v. Pryor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McIntire v. Pryor, 173 U.S. 38, 19 S. Ct. 352, 43 L. Ed. 606, 1899 U.S. LEXIS 1416 (1899).

Opinion

Me. Justice BjsowN,

after stating the case, delivered the opinion of the court.

■ Two questions are presented by the record in this case: First, that of fraud in the sale and subsequent manipulation of the property in suit; and, second, that of laches in instituting these proceedings.

1. The question of fraud necessarily involves the examination of a large amount of testimony, and a scrutiny of the successive steps taken, which finally’resulted in the transfer of the property from its original owner, Mary Pryor, to its present owner of record, Martha Mclntire.

The bill avers and the answer admits the execution of a deed of trust May 2, 1880, by the plaintiff and her husband to Edwin A. Mclntire as trustee, to secure a note for $450, payable to Hartwell Jenison one year after date, with interest at eight per cent. The transaction originated four years previously, (May 2, 1876,) when the plaintiff and her husband .placed upon the sáme property .a deed of trust, in which Brain-ard H. Warner and Henry Mclntire were named as trustees, to secure a note of $500, payable to George E. Emmons two years after date, with interest at ten per cent. This loan had been made through the agency of B. H. Warner & Co., real estate agents, and the note appears to have been purchased as an investment by Jenison, who was then a clerk in the Treasury Department. Upon the maturity of this note, May 2, 1878, twenty-five’ dollars were paid by way of .interest, and fifty dollars on account of the principal, but nothing was done until 1880, when the deed of trust for $450 was given. Jenison appears to have purchased the first note *43 at the suggestion of Henry Melntire, a brother of Edwin A., who was also a clerk in the Treasury Department. Jeni-son states that Edwin A. collected what was paid upon the note and attended to the second deed of trust himself, in ■which his name was substituted as trustee in the place of the trustees named in the first deed. Jenison appears never to have seen the Pryors, nor their property, having entire confidence in Mclntire’s integrity. The property seems to have been worth at that time from $1800 to $2400, and was occupied by the plaintiff’s husband as a wood and coal yard. Both the Pryors were uneducated colored people, Pryor making his living by whitewashing, sawing wood, and selling coal, and his wife by taking in washing. The husband died about three months before this suit was begun.

The note fell due May 2,1881. Neither principal nor interest was paid, and upon the following day, May 3, a warranty deed appears to have been executed by plaintiff and her husband to Martha Melntire, a sister of the principal defendant, for the nominal consideration of five dollars. It does not clearly appear why this deed was executed, as it was never recorded. Upon its face it is an ordinary warranty deed, and although the Christian name of the grantee, Martha, is obviously written over an erasure, attention is called to this fact in the testamentary clause. The grantors’ signatures are probably genuine, although the deed appears to have been procured of the plaintiff in total ignorance of its contents or purport. Indeed, she had never seen Martha Mcln-tire and knew absolutely nothing about her. Edwin A. Mclntire’s explanation is that Pryor came to him; said that he could not pay the note, and asked him whether he could get a purchaser of the property who would take it off his hands and assume the incumbrance and taxes, which he represented to be twenty or thirty dollars; that he offered it to his sister as an investment; had the deed made to her for a nominal consideration, with the understanding that she •would assume the incumbrance and give Pryor a lease on the property for a year. He afterwards ascertained that the taxes were ten times the amount he had supposed, and reported the *44 fact to his sister, who thereupon declined to take the property, which accordingly went to a foreclosure. In explanation of the erasure he said the deed was first made to his uncle David Mclntire, who was looking out'for bargains in real estate, and then altered to Martha Mclntire and noted on the deed itself.

It seems somewhat singular that neither of these parties should have been' willing to give five dollars for a piece of property worth at least $1800, and subject only to the lien of a mortgage of about $475, and $250 of special taxes; and equally singular that the Pryors should have been willing to dispose of their equity in the property for so small a sum. Indeed, it is difficult to believe that they knew what they were doing when they signed the deed.

But as nothing has ever been claimed by virtue of this deed, it is practically out of the case, except so far as it tends strongty to show an original design on the part of Edwin A. Mclntire, who had entire charge of the transaction and witnessed the deed, to vest the title to the property in some member of his family, whom the other evidence in the case shows him to have used as a mere eatspaw for himself. •

Failing to induce his sister to take the property, Mclntire, as trustee, obtained .written authority from Jenison to sell upon foreclosure of the deed of trust, ádvertised the property for sale upon June 10, and after a postponement sold the same on June 17, but to whom the property was struck off, and who was the real purchaser, is somewhat uncertain. There is a wide divergence in the testimony on this point. Plaintiff swears that the first intimation she had of the sale was’ the display of the auctioneer’s flag in front of the property, which was then occupied as a coal yard. Not understanding what it meant, her husband went to see Mclntire, who came down that day, and “ said that'the trustee was pushing him, and he was compelled to put the flag up and have a-sale, but that he would allow my husband to bid it in and would knock it down to him.” Three or four witnesses,-who were present at the sale, swore that the property was struck off to Pryor. Plaintiff swore to the same effect, but she was so far from where the auctioneer stood that it was very doubtful whether she *45 could have heard it. She also swore to an agreement that she was to pay a rent of six dollars a month for the property, which was to be applied on the purchase money. Certain it is that rent was paid for the property after the sale and until some time in 18S3, sixteen receipts for which, signed by Mclntire, are produced. This testimony with regard to the sale and the arrangement for payment is wholly denied by Mclntire, who produces a bill for auctioneer's services, showing the sale of the property to Jenison, to whom on June 29, 1881, Mclntire executed a deed of the property in alleged pursuance of the foreclosure sale, upon an expressed consideration of $806, but kept the same from record unknown to Jeni-son for a period of nearly ten months, and until April 21, 1882, when he caused the same to be. recorded. Did the case stand upon this testimony alone we should entertain grave doubts whether the oral evidence was sufficiently definite and credible to overcome the testimony of Mclntire, the documentary evidence of the receipts for rent and the deed to Jenison in pursuance of the sale; but all doubts in this particular are fully resolved by the subsequent conduct of Mcln-tire with reference to the property.

It seems that Jenison, being unable or unwilling to pay the expenses of foreclosure, which amounted to $87.88 and ac-.

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Bluebook (online)
173 U.S. 38, 19 S. Ct. 352, 43 L. Ed. 606, 1899 U.S. LEXIS 1416, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcintire-v-pryor-scotus-1899.