Metcalf v. Phoenix Title & Trust Co.

261 P. 633, 33 Ariz. 13, 57 A.L.R. 1015, 1927 Ariz. LEXIS 124
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 5, 1927
DocketCivil No. 2574.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 261 P. 633 (Metcalf v. Phoenix Title & Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Metcalf v. Phoenix Title & Trust Co., 261 P. 633, 33 Ariz. 13, 57 A.L.R. 1015, 1927 Ariz. LEXIS 124 (Ark. 1927).

Opinion

LOCKWOOD, J.

— Prior to April 20th, 1920, Angus McAlpine and Lillian McAlpine, his wife, were the owners of lot 8, block 79, of Globe townsite, located *15 in Gila county, Arizona. At that time there were two mortgages on said property given by the McAlpines to one H. H. Pratt, to secure notes totaling $3,500. 0'n April 20th, 1920, the McAlpines gave a mortgage on several parcels of real estate, including lot 8, block 79, to the Hassayampa Creamery Company, to secure a $10,000 note executed by them in favor of said company. This last note and mortgage were, on the twenty-first day of April, 1920, assigned by the creamery company to the Phoenix Title & Trust Company, a corporation, hereinafter called appellee, as collateral security for an indebtedness of the creamery company to appellee. On June 8th, 1922, a judgment of foreclosure was entered in the superior court of Gila county on the Pratt mortgages. Neither the creamery company nor appellee, which then held the $10,000 note and mortgage as collateral security, was made a party to these foreclosure proceedings. At the sale under the foreclosure Pratt became the purchaser of the property for the amount of his judgment, and immediately thereafter went into possession of the premises. On January 19th, 1923, the creamery company, having previously given notice of its intention to redeem from the sale as a subsequent lienor under its mortgage, paid to the sheriff the amount necessary to redeem, and obtained a sheriff’s deed to the property. The next day the creamery company conveyed the title held by it to B. H. Metcalf, hereinafter called appellant. Metcalf went into possession under the deed from the creamery company, and has remained in possession ever since. On May 1st, 1924, the $10,000 note and mortgage aforesaid, together with other collateral which had been assigned by the creamery company as additional security for the debt owed by it to appellee, was sold by the latter and bought in by it at the sale. Part of the land covered by the $10,000 mortgage vas. located in *16 Maricopa county, and . part, including the parcel involved in this appeal, was located in Gila county, so appellee, under the provisions of paragraph 4114,'Re-vised Statutes of Arizona of 1913, Civil Code, brought its suit for foreclosure in Maricopa county. In said suit the McAlpines, the creamery company, Metcalf and a number of other parties were named as defendants. The complaint set up the execution of the note and mortgage, and its assignment to appellee, and prayed for judgment against the McAlpines and the creamery company for the amount of the note and for foreclosure of the mortgage as against all of the defendants.

Metcalf answered, setting up that he claimed to be the owner in fee simple, clear of any lien or encumbrance by reason of the mortgage sued upon in the complaint, of the premises in question, ánd as a special defense set up the foreclosure under the Pratt mortgage, the redemption by the creamery company, and that he had furnished the money for such redemption under an agreement that the creamery company should convey the title to the lands to him, and that, as consideration therefor, the creamery company should have the right to purchase the property from him on the payment of the amount paid by him for the redemption within a reasonable time; that said agreement with the creamery company was with the knowledge and approval of appellee; and that the creamery company, although a reasonable time had elapsed, had not purchased the property from appellant as set forth in its agreement that it might. His prayer for relief was that appellee take nothing as against him, and that the' title to the property be quieted in him.

There was some oral evidence offered by appellee, but none of it material to the issues of this appeal, except that it was established the ássignment of the $10,000 note, and mortgage was for collateral pur *17 poses only, and that these securities, with others also held for collateral security of a debt from the creamery company to appellee, were sold by appellee, and bought in by it some time in 1924. Appellant offered as evidence the sheriff’s deed to the creamery company, the deed from it to him, the judgment in the Pratt foreclosure case, and a certified copy of the complaint and answer in a certain suit pending in G-ila county, being case No. 4933, entitled “Phoenix Title & Trust Company v. Hassayampa Creamery Company et al.”

The first three documents need not be considered by us -further than to state that they showed on their face a judgment of foreclosure authorizing the sheriff’s sale of the premises in question, the redemption by the creamery company according to the statute, the sheriff’s issuance of a deed to it covering the property, and its deed conveying all its title therein to appellant. The complaint in suit No. 4933 aforesaid set up the various transactions recited herein, and alleged that, although the deed between the creamery company and Metcalf on its face purported to be an absolute conveyance, it was in fact by the agreement of the parties a mortgage on the premises redeemed to secure the repayment by the creamery company to Metcalf of the amount of money he had advanced to redeem the property. Metcalf answered that the agreement between himself and the creamery company was “that defendant should redeem said lands from said sheriff’s sale, and should pay to said sheriff the full amount necessary for redemption and whereby it was agreed that the title to said lands should be conveyed by said Hassayampa Creamery Company to the defendant B. H. Metcalf, and whereby it was further agreed that, as consideration for such conveyance, the said Hassayampa Creamery Company should have the right and option to purchase from the said *18 B. H. Metcalf the said premises above referred to, by the payment to him of the full amount paid by him for such redemption, said option and privilege to be exercised within a reasonable time after said conveyance.”

Appellant further alleged that appellee had full knowledge of the terms of such agreement and approved thereof, and that, although a reasonable time had elapsed, the amount paid by him to the sheriff for the redemption had not been repaid to him.

The trial court, after considering the matter, filed its findings of fact and conclusions of law. The findings set forth in substance the facts above stated, and also contain the following clause:

“The court further finds that on or prior to January 19ith, 1923, the Hassayampa Creamery Company borrowed from defendant B. H. Metcalf the sum of $4,861.59 to pay to the sheriff of Grila county to effect said redemption under an agreement with said Metcalf whereby it was understood and agreed that the Hassayampa Creamery Company, in order to secure the repayment of said sum so loaned it by said Metcalf within a reasonable time, would give to said Metcalf a mortgage on said real estate so redeemed; that pursuant to said agreement the defendant Hassayampa Creamery Company did on January 20th, 1923, execute, acknowledge, and deliver to the said B. H.

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Bluebook (online)
261 P. 633, 33 Ariz. 13, 57 A.L.R. 1015, 1927 Ariz. LEXIS 124, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/metcalf-v-phoenix-title-trust-co-ariz-1927.