Porter v. King

1 F. 755, 1880 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 37
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 1, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1 F. 755 (Porter v. King) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Porter v. King, 1 F. 755, 1880 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 37 (W.D. Pa. 1880).

Opinion

Acheson, J.

This controversy concerns a bond, and mortgage securing the same, bearing date March 3, 1877, from Hamilton Lacock and wife to S. 13. W. Gill, who was adjudicated a bankrupt, November 28, 1877. The bond is conditioned for the payment of the sum of $5,200, in two years from date, with interest payable semi-annually. The mortgage is upon real estate in Allegheny City, and was recorded April 3, 1877, in Mortgage Book, vol. 225, p. 485. These securities were found by W. 1). Porter, the assignee in bankruptcy of Gill, among the papers of the latter, and were taken possession of by the assignee. Rev. Matthew M. Pollock, one of the defendants, claims to be the assignee for value of $ 1,000 of said mortgage, by an assignment from Gill dated April 9, 1877, and to enforce his claim instituted legal proceedings against the assignee in bankruptcy. The other defendant, William C. King, claims to be the purchaser and assignee for value of tlie whole of said bond and mortgage, by assignment from Gill, dated April 12,1877, and to enforce [756]*756his claim filed a bill in this court against the assignee in bankruptcy.

The latter thereupon filed his bill in this case, praying, inter alia, that the defendants might interplead in respect to said bond and mortgage, and settle their conflicting claims. The defendants having severally answered the bill, there was a-decree of interpleader and an issue was formed between them.

The case was eventually heard upon a master’s report, and exceptions thereto, and the testimony taken by him.

The material facts are as follows: The bond and mortgage in question were given by Hamilton Lacock and wife to Gill, for money borrowed to pay off another mortgage against the Lacocks, held by Mrs. Eliza Lewis. Prior to making the mortgage, Gill told Hamilton Lacock he was getting the money from King, and he informed him he had got it from King. Gill paid off the Lewis mortgage, and therefore there is no question as to the liability of Lacock and wife upon the mortgage, the subject of this controversy. This mortgage bears date March 3d, and was acknowledged March 8th, and was left for record April 3, 1877.

About March 13, 1877, the Rev. Matthew M. Pollock gave to Gill $1,000, to be invested in a mortgage. Ho particular mortgage was then mentioned, but in a few days thereafter Pollock called on Gill for an assignment, when Gill said he 'would send it by mail, and mentioned the property the mortgage was on and its amount, which statements corresponded with the assignment afterwards sent to Pollock. On April 9, 1877, Gill mailed to Pollock, whose post-office address was Jolly, Ohio, a written assignment bearing that date, and executed under the hand and seal of Gill. This paper, after reciting a mortgage from Hamilton Lacock and wife to S. B. W. Gill, dated March 3, 1877, recorded in Mortgage Book, vol. 227, p. 151, for $5,200, with a brief but correct description of the premises, assigns to Pollock “$1,000 of the money secured by the above stated mortgage, with interest thereon from March 30, 1877.” This assignment reached Pollock in due course of mail, to-wit, in about four days. He did not pro[757]*757cure his assignment to be entered of record, nor did he give notice of it to the mortgagors. It was not until some considerable time after Gill had absconded, (which he did about September 17, 1877,) that the Lacooks first heard of the assignment to Pollock.

On the twelfth day of April, 1877, Wm. C. King purchased from Gill the said bond and mortgage. The bond was then in Gill’s hands. The mortgage he had left in the recorder’s office for record on April 3, 1877. King paid Gill, for the bond and mortgage, $4,800 or $4,900 in cash, and upon the back of the bond Gill executed, under his hand and seal, an assignment to King, bearing date April 12, 1877, of “the within bond and all money secured thereby.” There was nothing on the bond or mortgage to show any prior assignment, and King purchased the securities and paid the consideration therefor in good faith, and in entire ignorance of the assignment to Pollock. Shortly after his purchase King had the actual possession of both bond and mortgage, but, upon Gill’s suggestion that he had a good safe in his office, and that it was convenient for him to collect the interest, King left the papers with him, taking the following receipt:

“Received from Mr. Wm. G. King, April 25,1877, the bond and mortgage of H. Lacock and Martha, his wife, dated March 3,1877, for five thousand two hundred dollars, for two years, interest payable semi-annually, which said mortgage and bond has been assigned to him. I am to hold the same for safe-keeping and collection of interest.
“S. B. W. Gill.”

Gill also gave King (and he thinks at the same time he received the above receipt) the recorder’s receipt, which then read as follows:

“Recorder’s Office, Allegheny County,
“Pittsburgh, April 3, 1877.
“Received the following for record: One mortgage from
Hamilton Lacock to S. B. W. Gill. Assigned to W. G. King April 12, 1877. $2.50 paid.
“R. J. Richardson, Recorder.”

[758]*758From the statements in these receipts King supposed that Gill had made an assignment to him of the mortgage on the margin of the record; hut, in fact, Gill did not assign the mortgage of record. This, however, was not discovered by-King until after Gill had absconded. Within three days after Gill had left, King gave formal notice of his claim to Hamilton Lacock.

On September 11, 1877, Lacock paid Gill, for King, the first instalment of interest, for which Gill gave Lacock a receipt which states that the mortgage is “now held by Mr. Wm. C. King.” This interest Gill paid over to King. S. B. W. Gill was a member of the Pittsburgh bar, and until he left, in September, 1877, his professional standing was good, and he possessed the confidence of the community.

I have been thus particular, in stating every fact which I regard as material, because I am constrained to dissent from the conclusion of the- learned master in respect to the conflicting assignments to Pollock and King, which he thus states: “Neither of them being entered of record in the recorder’s office, on the margin of the recorded mortgage, it is simply a question as to whose assignment was first delivered.’’ And, treating the assignment to Pollock as delivered when it was deposited in the post-office on April 9, 1877, he reports a decree in his favor for the portion of the mortgage assigned to him. But the case, it seems to me, is not one for the application of the maxim, qui prior est tempore potior est jure. There are here other considerations, besides that of time, which cannot be ignored if we would reach a just conclusion.

Mathew M. Pollock, it must be observed, parted with no money or other valuable thing upon the faith of the Lacock bond and mortgage. He had left in Gill’s hands $1,000, to be by him -invested in a mortage at his discretion; and not in this particular mortgage, which was not then so much as mentioned.

In confiding his money to Gill, Pollock, in the first instance, trusted exclusively to his personal responsibility and integrity. His subsequent arrangement with Gill, which the latter carried out, was for an assignment which was entirely inadequate for [759]

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Bluebook (online)
1 F. 755, 1880 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 37, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/porter-v-king-pawd-1880.