Mulherin Sons & Co. v. O'Connor

32 S.E. 865, 106 Ga. 810, 1899 Ga. LEXIS 758
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedMarch 16, 1899
StatusPublished

This text of 32 S.E. 865 (Mulherin Sons & Co. v. O'Connor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mulherin Sons & Co. v. O'Connor, 32 S.E. 865, 106 Ga. 810, 1899 Ga. LEXIS 758 (Ga. 1899).

Opinion

Lumpkin, P. J.

The error alleged in the present bill of exceptions is the sustaining of a demurrer to the plaintiffs’ petition. They were John P. Mulherin, Charles P. Mulherin, and Mrs. M. A. Mulherin, but, for some reason not apparent, they sued as a partnership under the' name and style of “Wm. Mulherin Sons & Company.” The allegations set forth in their petition were, in substance, as follows: The partnership of Mulherin, Rice & Co., composed of William Mulherin, Patrick H. Rice, and Jeremiah J. O’Connor, was dissolved by the death of its senior partner. All the notes and accounts belonging to this partnership were by agreement left “with the-surviving partners and the estate of Wm. Mulherin to collect . . as-rapidly as possible.” Subsequently “the estate of the late Wm. Mulherin was divided among his heirs, and the interest of the gaid estate in the notes and accounts of the late firm of Mulherin, Rice & Company was set aside to your petitioners as a part of their distributive share of said estate.” Among the choses in action, held by this firm was a note of James Cothran [811]*811Jr., for $1,000, besides interest, secured by a first mortgage on. two described tracts of land in South Carolina. The mortgaged premises were worth the amount due upon this note. These tracts of land were brought to sale under the foreclosure of a second mortgage held by one McCormick, which sale was conducted by the sheriff of Abbeville county, South Carolina. Before the same took place, the plaintiffs notified the defendants to protect the interests of the former by bidding at the contemplated sale and making the property bring “the full face value of their mortgage.” The defendants, upon receiving this notice, informed the plaintiffs that they would not comply with the request thus made, but that if they bid at the sale they would do so “as individuals and in their own interest.” They also informed the plaintiffs that if the latter desired to make the property bring its full value, they had better attend the gale and represent themselves. The sale took place and the defendants purchased the property “for the sum of $700, in fraud of the rights of these plaintiffs and in violation of their trust as trustees of the interest of their late partners in the firm assets.” James Cothran Jr., the mortgagor, was insolvent, “and the balance due on said note secured as aforesaid is a dead loss to your petitioners.” Accordingly, “through the breach of duty of these defendants in the fraudulent purchase-for their own use of this valuable asset held by them in trust in the manner aforesaid, these plaintiffs have been damaged in the sum of $700.”

In our opinion, the court was right in sustaining the demurrer. In the first place, it would be a great strain to hold that, under the facts alleged, any trust relation whatever existed between the defendants and the plaintiffs. They sued as a partnership; but treating the members composing the plaintiffs’ firm as the heirs at law of Wm. Mulherin, deceased, and dealing with their action as if brought in their character as such heirs, it would seem that the duty of making the South Carolina property bring its full value devolved as much upon them as upon the surviving partners of the firm of Mulherin, Rice & Co. The petition alleges that the choses in action belonging to-that firm were left with the surviving partners and “the estate-[812]*812■of” Wm. Mulherin for “collection.” The interest of the deceased partner in these notes and accounts was set apart to the plaintiffs, and no reason is alleged why it was not incumbent upon them to look after that interest themselves. Certainly, Nice and O’Connor were under no more obligation to advance 'money for the purpose of buying in the property at the sheriff’s sale than were the plaintiffs. If, therefore, the property had 'been purchased by Nice and O’Connor for the benefit of all concerned and had brought the full amount due upon the note— say, for example, $1,400, — they, according to the plaintiffs’ theory, would have been under a duty of paying the pux’chaseprice, keeping the land, and settling with the plaintiffs with money. That-is to say, they would have had to advance the cash necessary'to satisfy the interest of the plaintiffs in the note, and then look for reimbursement to a resale of the property. Why this burden should fall entirely upon Nice and O’Connor, and the plaintiffs be wholly relieved therefrom, we are unable to perceive.

But even if the facts alleged can be regarded as establishing •a trust relation of any kiixd betweexi the plaintiffs and the defendants, we are still of the opinion that the latter were not liable as alleged. It will be observed that the sale was made by the sheriff of Abbeville courxty, S. C. It was not a sale by Nice axxd O’Connor, nor did they have anything to do with bringing it about. In Allen v. Gillette, 127 U. S. 596, Mr. Justice Lamar said : “The principle that a trustee may purchase the trust property at a judicial sale brought about by a third party, which he had taken no part in procuring, axxd over which he could not have had control, is upheld by numerous decisions of this court and of other courts of this couxxtry,” citing Prevost v. Gratz, 1 Pet. C. C. 364, 378; Twin Lick Oil Co. v. Marbury, 91 U. S. 587; Chorpening’s Appeal, 32 Penn. St. 315; Fisk v. Sarber, 6 W. & S. 18. In the-case last cited it was held by the Supreme Court of Pennsylvaxxia, that the assignee of an ixxsolvent debtor was “not incapable, by reason of his fiduciary character, of becoming the purchaser of the ■debtor’s real estate when sold by the sheriff upoxx a mortgage which encumbered it before the time of the assignment.” In [813]*813delivering the opinion of the court, Kennedy, J., (pp. 22, 23) quotes the following from the opinion of Mr. Justice Washington in Prevost v. Gratz, supra: “I know of no principle of equity which will invalidate the title of a trustee to land which the law has taken out of his hands and which he purchased. from one appointed by the same authority to sell it. This is. precisely like the case of an executor who purchases at a sheriff’s sale the personal property of ids testator, seized and sold under execution. The reasons which forbid a trustee from purchasing trust property where he himself is the seller do not apply in such a case.” It would not be difficult to cite other cases to the same effect. We are aware that in Fleming v. Foran, 12 Ga. 594, this court held that: “An executor can not become-the purchaser of land sold under an execution against his testator; but the sale will be set aside, however fair and.honest it may have been, on the application of the legatees, provided such application is made within a reasonable time; otherwise, it will be considered as a waiver or abandonment of the right.” We do not think, however, that the decision in that case in anywise conflicts with what we rule in the case now under consideration. The trust which the law imposes upon an executor is one of which he can not devest himself by any act or conduct, of his own. While, therefore, we would not, in view of the decision in 12 Ga., be at liberty to follow literally and to the full extent all that is laid down in the authorities above cited, the principle announced in them is certainly applicable when the fiduciary relation is one which the person standing in the position of a trustee may voluntarily terminate at pleasure upon giving notice of his intention to do so to the party whom he represents.

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Related

Twin-Lick Oil Co. v. Marbury
91 U.S. 587 (Supreme Court, 1876)
Allen v. Gillette
127 U.S. 589 (Supreme Court, 1888)
Fleming v. Foran
12 Ga. 594 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1853)
Bartholemew v. Leech
7 Watts 472 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1838)
Fisk v. Sarber
6 Watts & Serg. 18 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1843)
Prevost v. Gratz
19 F. Cas. 1303 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Pennsylvania, 1816)

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Bluebook (online)
32 S.E. 865, 106 Ga. 810, 1899 Ga. LEXIS 758, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mulherin-sons-co-v-oconnor-ga-1899.