Rudeen v. Lilly

196 F.2d 300, 1952 U.S. App. LEXIS 2469
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedApril 30, 1952
Docket12910_1
StatusPublished

This text of 196 F.2d 300 (Rudeen v. Lilly) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rudeen v. Lilly, 196 F.2d 300, 1952 U.S. App. LEXIS 2469 (9th Cir. 1952).

Opinion

BONE, Circuit Judge.

Appellees who are co-partners and citizens of Oregon, instituted this action to foreclose a mortgage dated August 4, 1948 and executed in their favor by Great West Lumber Corporation, an Idaho corporation. The action was originally commenced in the Circuit Court of Oregon for Klamath County and later removed to the lower court. The property covered by a mortgage was a tract of land described as “NE- *301 34 of SE-)4 Section 13, Township 23, South Range 9 East Willamette Meridian,” located in Klamath County, Oregon and

“a complete sawmill installed thereon with buildings consisting among other things as follows: 2 circular saw head-rakes, edger, automatic trim saw, conveyors, conveyor chains, numerous gas engines and other equipment in connection therewith.”

The mortgage was executed, signed and delivered to appellees on behalf of Great West Lumber Corporation by R. O. Camozzi acting in the capacity of “President and General Manager” thereof, and it recited that it was intended to secure the payment of a debt of $10,000.00 due to appellees from said corporation in accordance with the tenor of a promissory note for said amount made payable to appellees. The mortgage was executed on behalf of said corporation 1 and signed by the said Camozzi as, and acting in the capacity of “President and General Manager” thereof. The said note also bore date of August 4, 1948; default in payment thereof resulted in the bringing of the foreclosure action above noted.

In the instant mortgage foreclosure action, Great West Lumber Corporation, Carl Rudeen (a resident of Idaho) and Klamath County, Oregon, were named as defendants. One of the allegations of the complaint was that appellant Carl Rudeen claimed “some right, title, interest anddien in and on the property” referred to in the mortgage instrument, and that such claim of interest, if any, was inferior in time and right to appellees’ superior lien upon the said property. The complaint further alleged that Klamath County, Oregon, claimed a lien for taxes upon some or all •of the property covered by the mortgage; the prayer was that the court ascertain the amount of such taxes and that the claim -therefor be segregated and applied to specific properties and that the tax liens, if any, which were prior to appellees’ lien, be paid.

Great West Lumber Corporation and Klamath County, Oregon defaulted and did not appear in this action.

Appellant Rudeen answered and defended on several grounds which we summarize as follows: That Camozzi attempted to execute the note and mortgage without actual or apparent authority so to do; that' the indebtedness represented by the note has been fully paid; that prior to January 27, 1949 the defendant Great West Lumber Corporation was the owner of a complete sawmill situated on the real property described in the mortgage; that between August 4, 1948 and Jánuary 27, 1949, notices of tax liens for internal revenue taxes due the Federal Government from Great West Lumber Corporation were filed with the County Clerk of Klamath County, Oregon and pursuant to notice, said real property and said sawmill located thereon was offered for sale by the United. States Internal Revenue Service to satisfy said liens for such taxes; that at such sale held on January 27, 1949, Rudeen was the highest bidder for said real and personal property and purchased the same (with additional personal property) for $8,000.00 and received certificates of purchase for said property; that he is the owner thereof, and is in possession of the same subject only to the right of redemption of Great West Lumber Corporation.

Further averments of Rudeen, .by way of defense, were that R. O. Camozzi executed the said note and mortgage to secure appellees upon a pre-existing debt then due them from Great West Lumber Corporation and that the said acts of Camozzi were not the acts of the corporation he purported to represent; that appellees’ said mortgage clouds Rudeen’s title acquired under the Government sale to satisfy the lien of internal revenue taxes and this cloud should •be removed by the decree of the court.

The pleadings were superseded by a pretrial order, and upon trial the lower court made and entered comprehensive Findings of Fact which covered all material issues in *302 evidence. Because of their length they are here summarized:—

The court found that Camozzi was the President and General Manager of Great West Lumber Corporation and the sole and only officer of that (Idaho) corporation present in Oregon during the times involved in this action; that the stockholders and directors thereof became inactive and failed to hold regular meetings or to take an active part in the affairs of the said corporation or to supervise the activities of its said President and General Manager but acquiesced in all of his. acts, and under the by-laws of said corporation and the custom and practice thereunder, said stockholders and directors conferred and delegated both actual and apparent authority upon its said President and General Manager to take charge of, operate, manage and control all of the affairs of the corporation in Oregon, including the operation of the sawmill in Klamath County here involved, and also including'all things which he considered to be necessary or proper in connection therewith; that as to the mortgage here involved such actual and apparent authority included power to execute the mortgage' dated August 4, 1948, to plaintiffs (appellees) to secure a promissory note payable to plaintiffs under the same date, in the sum of $10,000 of which the sum of $9,546.63 is still due and owing on the principal thereof and that said mortgage was duly recorded in said Klamath County on August 5, 1948; that at and prior to the time of execution of the said note and mortgage plaintiffs (appellees) had filed suit against said corporation to recover the sum of $15,134.97 and had secured an attachment against the lumber produced by its sawmill and awaiting sale, and their prelim- . inary injunction secured in that suit had restrained all sales of lumber by said corporation; that as a result thereof the said sawmill was forced to' cease operations and only resumed operations when the mortgage was executed and the attachment released and the injunction dismissed; that plaintiffs (appellees) declined to release said attachment and/or dismiss said injunction unless provided with security for said obligation 'by way of a mortgage; that to call a meeting of directors in Idaho to consider said matter would have required a delay of several days and it was not practicable to call'such a meeting under the circumstances; that Camozzi had substantial reason to believe that such an emergency existed as to seriously threaten the affairs of said corporation unless said mortgage was executed immediately and without such delay; that its execution was reasonably necessary to prevent substantial loss and that the execution thereof enabled said corporation to secure the release and dismissal of the said attachment and injunction in order to resume sales of lumber and escape the danger of closing its sawmill operations all of which was of substantial benefit to said corporation, its directors and stockholders.

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Bluebook (online)
196 F.2d 300, 1952 U.S. App. LEXIS 2469, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rudeen-v-lilly-ca9-1952.