Thronateeska Pecan Co. v. Matthews

277 F. 361, 1921 U.S. App. LEXIS 2014
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedDecember 15, 1921
DocketNo. 3679
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 277 F. 361 (Thronateeska Pecan Co. v. Matthews) 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
Thronateeska Pecan Co. v. Matthews, 277 F. 361, 1921 U.S. App. LEXIS 2014 (5th Cir. 1921).

Opinion

KING, Circuit Judge.

On June 12, 1917, Thronateeska Pecan Company, a corporation created under the laws of Georgia, executed to C. M. Barnwell four notes, aggregating $121,540 principal, secured, by a mortgage of even date covering a tract of land of about 700 acres, known as the Barnwell pecan groves,.situated in Mitchell county, Ga. The first two of these notes were paid. The last two, to wit, one for $35,000, due June 12, 1920, and one for $75,000, due June 12, 1922, remain unpaid. Interest on these last two notes at the rate of 7 per cent, per annum is payable quarterly on the 1st days of July, October, January, and April of each year after date. On July 1, 1919, a default was made in the. payment of the quarterly installment of interest then due, amounting to $1,950. The mortgage contained a provision that the mortgagor, its successors and assigns should have the right at any time or times to anticipate the payment, before maturity of any or all of said notes, upon payment to the mortgagee of 60 days’ interest in advance, and also provided:

“Upon default of payment of said debt according to the terms hereof after said (debt) default has continued for 60 days, then the Thronateeska Pecan Company hereby authorizes and empowers said C. M. Barnwell to foreclose this mortgage, in his discretion, in the usual form, or to sell the same, or so much thereof as may be necessary to pay said debt and also expenses of sale at public outcry, for cash, on any lawful sale day for sheriff sales at the time and place of sheriff’s sales of like property under mortgage executions from the superior courts of the state of Georgia, first giving notice of such sale and the time, terms and place thereof, in the public gazette in which sheriff’s sales for the county where such sale is to be made are advertised, and as often and for such period as is required for such sheriff’s sales, and from the proceeds of such sale or sales to pay said debt, with interest due thereon and expenses of said sale or sales, including 10 per cent, attorney’s fees, and account to said Thronateeska Pecan Company for the surplus, if any.”

On said June. 12, 1917, the Thronateeska Pecan Company also executed a deed of trust, subject to said mortgage above described, to the Georgia Trust & Savings Company, now Georgia Bank & Trust Company, as trustee, to secure an issue of $240,000 second mortgage bonds. These bonds were issued and delivered to various persons as bondholders. The deed of trust provided that a default in the payment of interest on said bonds for 90 days would mature the entire debt du£ thereon.

On September 14, 1917, the Thronateeska Pecan Company conveyed said Barnwell pecan groves to the Barnwell Pecan Company, subject to said mortgage and deed of trust. Upon default in payment of interest on the notes secured by the Barnwell mortgage on July 1, 1919, they were placed in the hands of E. E. Cox, an attorney, for collection. Negotiations were.had between said Cox and the manager of the Barn-[363]*363well Pecan Company and others representing said companies by which it was understood and agreed that the said Barnwell should declare a default after the expiration of 60 days from July 1, 1919, and declare the entire indebtedness due.; it being made to clearly appear in the testimony in said case that the mortgagor and mortgagee understood such default of interest for 60 days in any payment of interest entitled the mortgagee to declare the principal of said debt due. It appears from the pleadings and evidence in the case that a large portion of the second mortgage bonds were held by the Bank of Columbia, a banking corporation in the state of South Carolina, to secure an indebtedness existing between said bank and said Tlironateeska Company, and that said company desired the foreclosure of said Barnwell mortgage as a means of procuring a litigation in the state of Georgia in which the Bank of Columbia, as largely interested in said second mortgage bonds and deed of trust, might become a party defendant, so that an accounting might be had between them in the courts in Georgia.

Said Cox thereupon, after the happening of said default for 60 days, as attorney for Barnwell, declared said entire debt, principal and interest, due on said notes and brought suit thereon on September 18, 1919, in the city court of Albany, Ga., the residence of said Thronateeska Company. The holders of said second mortgage bonds, becoming aware of said suit, requested otie J. P. Matthews to purchase the notes and mortgage owned by said Barnwell, and on October 7, 1919, Barnwell acting by and through his attorney in fact, Charles M. Barn-well, Jr., transferred, without recourse, the two notes above described, together with the mortgage securing the same, to said Matthews. Matthews does not appear to have become a party to said suit in said city court of Albany, but undertook to exercise the power of sale contained in said mortgage by advertising the property for sale before the courthouse door of Mitchell county, Ga.

Said sale was restrained by legal proceedings instituted by the two pecan companies, but on December 6, 1919, an agreement was entered into, between counsel for Matthews and for the pecan companies, in which it was expressly agreed that Matthews should proceed to advertise the property for sale under said power of sale for the first Tuesday in January, 1920.

Said sale was delayed, by litigation, which was removed into the United States District Court for the Southern District of Georgia, and on April 22, 1920, J. P. Matthews, as the owner of said mortgage and notes, transferred to him by said Barnwell, together with a large number of persons, the holders of said second mortgage bonds of said Throuateeska Company, filed a bill in said United States District Court, seeking to foreclose said first mortgage and said deed of trust, praying the appointment of a receiver to hold said property pendente lite, also seeking the removal of the Georgia Baqlc & Trust Company as trustee under said deed of trust, and for further relief.

On the hearing for injunction "and receiver, the court entertained jurisdiction for the purpose of foreclosing said first mortgage assigned to said Matthews and appointed a receiver. It held that the Georgia Bank & Trust Company should not be removed as trustee, and that [364]*364said bondholders were not, under the evidence then submitted, entitled to foreclose said deed of trust.

The said Georgia Bank & Trust Company thereafter was permitted to file an intervention in said cause, in which it prayed the foreclosure of said deed of trust. The defendant pecan companies defended said litigation on several grounds.

The court below, after hearing the evidence in said case, held that under the provisions of the first mortgage and notes secured thereby, and the conduct of the parties, the said principal could be accelerated for default in payment of interest for as much as. 60 days, and that the same had been accelerated by Barnwell by the filing of the suit in the city court of Albany, and that the same had been fully recognized and acted upon by both complainants and the defendant pecan companies. He ascertained the amount due on said first mortgage, and decreed a foreclosure and sale to satisfy the same. He also ascertained the amount due upon the bonds secured by said deed of trust, and directed that after payment of the first mortgage they should be satisfied, and that said deed of trust be foreclosed.

The questions raised on this appeal are:

First. That the pleadings and evidence did not show that C.

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Bluebook (online)
277 F. 361, 1921 U.S. App. LEXIS 2014, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thronateeska-pecan-co-v-matthews-ca5-1921.