Sidener v. Pavey

77 Ind. 241
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1881
Docket8419
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 77 Ind. 241 (Sidener v. Pavey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sidener v. Pavey, 77 Ind. 241 (Ind. 1881).

Opinion

Newcomb, C.

The appellant filed in the court below a complaint in three paragraphs, against John J. Pavey and Nancy, his wife, W. Andrew Pavey, John E. Eobbins and Nancy Eobbins, his wife, and Nelson Mowry. Demurrers were sustained to the several paragraphs, and final judgment rendered thereon against the appellant. The following is a synopsis of the complaint:

The first.paragraph avers, that John J. Pavey and Nancy Pavey, his wife, on the 18th of February, 1870, made and executed to Nelson Mowry a mortgage on the lands therein described, to secure the payment of a note made by John J. Pavey for $1,560, due six months after date, with interest, and reasonable attorney fees. Said mortgage was duly recorded ; that the said Pavey was indebted to appellant in the sum of $650, which was due, and was largely indebted and embarrassed, and was unable to promptly meet his liabilities and pay said mortgage, and as he wanted time Pavey requested appellant to furnish and advance the money to meet the Mowry debt and mortgage, and offered and proposed to appellant to make and execute to appellant a mortgage on the lands embraced in the mortgage- to Mowry, to secure any amount appellant might furnish and advance for Pavey to meet the Mowry mortgage, and the $650 due by Pavey to appellant. To induce appellant to furnish the money to him with which to satisfy the Mowry mortgage and to have the same satisfied, instead of appellant taking an assignment thereof, said Pavey falsely and fraudulently represented to appellant that there was no judgment against him, and no liens against said lands except said Mowry mortgage. Appellant, having no knowledge of the facts, and relying on said Pavey’s representations and believing them to be true, accepted said Pavey’s proposition ; and the said Pavey on the [243]*2431st day of January, 1872, in pursuance of said arrangement, made and executed to the appellant a promissory note for $2,280.50, due in twelve months, for the sum of $1,703, the •amount of the principal and interest due on the Mowry debt and mortgage, and the debt which was then due and owing to appellant; and said Pavey on said 1st day of January, 1872, signed and acknowledged a mortgage wherein he conveyed said lands to appellant to secure the payment of said promissory note so executed by him ; and thereafter, on the 22d day of January, 1872, in pursuance of said agreement, his wife, Nancy Pavey, signed and acknowledged said mortgage, and said mortgage was duly delivered to him and duly recorded on the 23d of January, 1872.

After the execution of said note and the signing and acknowledgment of the said mortgage by said Pavey, the appellant, to wit, on the 4th day of January, 1872, furnished •and provided for said Pavey said sum of $1,703, and the. same, at the request of said Pavey, was paid by appellant to •said Mowry, on said mortgage debt; and said Mowry, at •appellant’s request, entered on the mortgage record satisfaction of said mortgage. The appellant made said request, •and satisfaction was entered by said Mowry, because the appellant then and there believed there were no liens on said property except said Mowry mortgage, and that said new mortgage would be the oldest and only lien thereon. Said Mowry was willing and offered to assign said note and mortgage to appellant, and appellant was induced to forego the assignment by the false and fraudulent representations •aforesaid.

On said 1st day of January, 1872, there was alien on said real estate attaching after said mortgage was made to said Mowry, as follows: John E. Robbins on the 21st of No-, vember, 1871, obtained a judgment in the Decatur Circuit Court against said John J. Pavey for $2,491.52, which was then and still is a lien on said.real estate, and is older than [244]*244said mortgage made by Pavey and wife to appellant as aforesaid ; that said Pavey, at the date of said mortgage, made by him to appellant, was and still is insolvent.

The second paragraph, in addition to the matters alleged, in the first, states that it was appellant’s intention to retain and keep alive for his own use and benefit all rights in law and equity in and to said mortgage, and to the premises-therein described, which the said Mowry then had and held, and so informed said Pavey and said Mowry at the time that, after Mowry received the amount of his claim from appellant, he understood the wishes, object and purpose of appellant, and the agreement between appellant and Pavey, that appellant was to hold and be subrogated to all the rights, and equities of said Mowry mortgage, and Pavey then falsely and fraudulently represented to appellant that there were no-liens of any kind on said land except the Mowry mortgage, and that he was the owner of property, in value, largely above his indebtedness of every kind, and was fully able to-meet and pay all of his debts, and appellant, relying thereon and believing all said representations to be true, and having, no opportunity to examine the records in Decatur county, whereat Pavey resided, he allowed Mowry to enter satisfaction of his mortgage ; that said Pavey was in fact insolvent and is now insolvent. The Robbins judgment was rendered, on the 21st of November, 1871, for $2,479.52 and $75 attorney fees, which was a valid lien on said property. It was-rendered subsequent to the Mowry mortgage and before the mortgage made to appellant; that thereafter John E. Robbins, with full knowledge of all the facts, became a purchaser at sheriff’s sale of said property; that W. Andrew Pavey is in possession of the premises under said Robbins, claiming some interest therein adverse to appellant, the particulars of which are unknown to him ; that he entered possession with full knowledge of all of said facts.

The third paragraph is similar to the second, with certain. [245]*245«charges of collusion between the sheriff and Robbins, at the «sale on which the latter purchased the land in question, after public notice had been given to bidders of the appellant’s rights.

Prayer that the entry of satisfaction made by said Mowry on said mortgage record be canceled, and said Mowry mortgage be kept alive, and that appellant be subrogated to the benefits of said mortgage to the extent of the said debt so paid by him, that his right be protected, and his lien declared to be superior and older than the judgment lien of said Robbins ; that appellant have judgment for said amount so paid by him and attorney fees, and for the foreclosure of said mortgage and the sale of said property, and all proper relief.

Do the facts alleged entitle the appellant to relief? He was a creditor of Pavey and desirous to obtain security for the payment of the debt due by the latter. The debtor proposed to give him mortgage security in case he would advance the amount due on the Mowry mortgage, and grant an extension of the time of payment on both debts ; and, to induce his creditors to do this, Pavey assured him that there was no lien on the land, other than the Mowry mortgage. On this assurance, Sidener accepted a new mortgage instead of taking an assignment of the old. It clearly appears from the allegations of the complaint, that the inducement to the appellant to furnish the money due on the Mowry mortgage was to thereby get security for his own «debt, and that he would have taken an assignment of that mortgage had he not been misled by the false statement of Pavey, that there was no other lien- on the land.

Robbins was a judgment creditor, having a lien junior to the mortgage of Mowry. If he can avail himself of the fraud charged to have been practiced by Pavey, he will be benefited to the value of the Mowry mortgage

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Bluebook (online)
77 Ind. 241, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sidener-v-pavey-ind-1881.