Seeley v. Cornell

90 F.2d 562, 1937 U.S. App. LEXIS 3881
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJune 8, 1937
DocketNo. 8336
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 90 F.2d 562 (Seeley v. Cornell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Seeley v. Cornell, 90 F.2d 562, 1937 U.S. App. LEXIS 3881 (5th Cir. 1937).

Opinion

HUTCHESON, Circuit Judge.

When complainants were here before as appellants,1 it was to complain of a decree dismissing their bill for want of indispensable parties. On that appeal the sole question for decision was whether complainants could, without joining the other heirs of their mother, maintain this suit, the purpose of which was to have Cornell, their agent and attorney, and the other defendants named in the bill, adjudged to be their trustees, and compelled to account to plaintiffs, as to their individual undivided interests in the lands and funds the bill described.

Answering that question in complainants’ favor, we ordered the cause remanded for trial on the merits. This time complainants’ appeal is from a decree on the merits, denying them all relief and dismissing their bill, as to all defendants except Cornell and Colquitt. As to these defendants the decree denied their prayer to have their deeds to Cornell set aside, and Cornell and the Douglas Oil Company adjudged trustees as to the properties described in it. It, however, adjudged that Cornell had not made an adequate settlement and accounting, and gave judgment for complainants against Cornell and Colquitt jointly for $5,830, and for $27,819.13 against Cornell individually. It further awarded the master $16,000 as compensation and taxed all costs one-half against complainants, one-half against Cornell. Complainants alone appeal.

The decree complained of is based upon findings of a master made, after extended hearings in which the master heard and saw the witnesses, upon a record of around eight thousand pages, containing a vast amount of conflicting and contradictory testimony, and upon findings of the District Judge approving the findings of the master. These findings comprehensively disposed against complainants of all charges of conspiracy, fraud, and overreaching.

In effect acquitting each of the defendants, singly and collectively, of any purpose to defraud, overreach, or deal unjustly by complainants, they rejected altogeth[564]*564er the catch-all charge of conspiracy by which complainants sought to involve the defendants in a common fraudulent purpose to despoil. As to the Douglas Oil Company, they in effect determined that in the acquisition of its interests it had used no fraud nor covin. Finding that the company had, throughout, dealt fairly and openly with complainants’ mother, with Cornell, their agent and attorney, and with them, both in respect of the original acquisition of the title from complainants’ mother, and in the steps it took with complainants’ attorney and with them to obtain confirmation and ratification, they rejected as unfounded the claim of fraud and collusion complainants had laid against it.

The claims against Sutton, the judge of of the court, Colquitt, the receiver, Montague, the receiver’s attorney, and the American Surety Company, as surety on the receiver’s bond, that the receivership proceedings had been conducted fraudulently for the purpose and with the effect of defrauding complainants as heirs of their mother, were rejected too, it being found as a fact that no such purpose or result attended these proceedings, but that, on the contrary, they inured to complainants’ benefit.

As to the defendant Elliott, employed by Cornell as attorney and agent, it was found as a fact that his services were fairly, faithfully, and efficiently rendered and his compensation was reasonable. As to defendant Cornell, it was found as a fact that in connection with his purchase from complainants he had made adequate disclosures of the nature, condition, and value of their interests, and had paid them full value therefor, but that prior to his purchase he had made expenditures which he ought to be charged with, because, though not fraudulent, they were made unreasonably and improvidently. Unless, therefore, it is made clearly to appear that the fact findings are without support, or that the legal conclusions are in some parts unsupported by them, the decree must stand. Cf. Colquitt v. Roxana Petroleum Corporation (C.C.A.) 49 F.(2d) 1025.

Our opinion on the former appeal sets out the background and the gravamen of complainants’ case as their bill states them. Only the briefest summary will be attempted here. This is that Cornell, ostensibly acting as agent and attorney for complainants and other children of Mrs. Smith, but really acting for himself and the defendants, his coconspirators, had dissipated their mother’s estate by selling off and disposing of a large part of her property; had, through pretended settlements, obtained and converted to his and their use large sums of money; and finally, had overreached complainants in buying out their interests for an insufficient value. All this, they say, was accomplished through the instrumentality of the receivership of their mother’s property instituted because of her mental incompetency, but converted by Cornell and his confederates into a cat’s-paw to procure large sums of money from persons to whom their mother had invalidly attempted to sell portions of her property, only to divert them into the custody and convert them to the use of the conspirators. These sums, they say, were procured by having the receiver to institute cancellation suits, and then, when Cornell had extracted sums of money in settlement of them, all payable to him or his agents, allowing them to be disposed of by judgments against the Receiver, the sums obtained being dissipated by Cornell and the conspirators in reckless and extravagant expenditures. Not content with that spoliation, Cornell, they say after their mother’s death, made a fraudulent sale to the Douglas Oil Company of the inheritance of complainants and their brothers and sisters, and brought the whole matter to a conclusion by fraudulently and for a wholly inadequate consideration, inducing complainants to sell to him.

Cornell and the Douglas Oil Company, and each of the other defendants, specifically denied these charges. Douglas Oil Company fully pleaded that all that it had done was in a fair and honest effort to protect and perfect the title it had bought from Mrs.. Smith; that it had paid full and fair value for the property it purchased, and had dealt with Cornell under powers of attorney from complainants and others without any knowledge or belief that he was in any respect unfaithful to his trust.

It will serve no purpose for us to review here the long record made before and heard by the master. It is sufficient to say that it amply supports his findings as to the good faith of the Douglas Oil Company, and the entire absence from its activities of any fraud or overreaching, and that it supports too, the findings that there was no conspiracy between Cornell and any [565]*565oí the other defendants to defraud complainants. Indeed, the evidence would not reasonably admit of a contrary finding.

As to the settlements Cornell made with the vendees of Mrs. Smith, no complaint is made of these as to amounts, and, except to let complainants in to an undivided interest in the lands conveyed to the Douglas Oil Company, no effort was made to undo them.

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Related

Mitchell v. Land
355 P.2d 682 (Alaska Supreme Court, 1960)
Calcote v. Texas Pac. Coal & Oil Co.
157 F.2d 216 (Fifth Circuit, 1946)
Seeley v. Hunt
109 F.2d 595 (Fifth Circuit, 1940)
Aiken v. Cornell
90 F.2d 567 (Fifth Circuit, 1937)

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Bluebook (online)
90 F.2d 562, 1937 U.S. App. LEXIS 3881, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/seeley-v-cornell-ca5-1937.