Tighe, Trustee v. Walton

103 So. 2d 8, 233 Miss. 781, 1958 Miss. LEXIS 440
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJune 2, 1958
Docket40814
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 103 So. 2d 8 (Tighe, Trustee v. Walton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tighe, Trustee v. Walton, 103 So. 2d 8, 233 Miss. 781, 1958 Miss. LEXIS 440 (Mich. 1958).

Opinion

Lee, J.

Lee Roy Walton filed his bill of complaint against Mrs. Gladys C. Whittaker and B. Stirling Tighe, Trustee, to cancel, as a cloud, their claim against the property, described in a certain deed of trust to the Deposit Guaranty Bank & Trust Company, which deed of trust had been assigned to Mrs. Whittaker, and to enjoin a foreclosure sale thereof by the trustee. In substance the bill alleged that the deed of trust was void and unenforceable because Mrs. Whittaker was one of the original grantors; that the payment, by means of which she obtained her *787 assignment, was the result of her own wrong doing, and should not inure to her benefit; and that the complainant was entitled to benefit from the policy of insurance which was involved. A temporary injunction was granted.

The defendants interposed demurrers; and their answer denied in detail the material allegations of the bill. By way of cross bill, they sought full payment of the indebedness claimed, together with interest, damages, and attorneys’ fees.

At the final hearing on the motion to dissolve, the court cancelled the assignment to Mrs'. Whittaker, together with her claim thereunder, and perpetually enjoined the defendants from foreclosing the deed of trust. Prom the decree entered, the defendants appealed.

The evidence, oral and documentary, disclosed the following facts:

Ray C. Whittaker and wife, Mrs. Gladys C. Whittaker, were the owners of Lot. 3, Block “0”, Club Park Subdivision, Part 3, in the First Judicial District of Hinds County, Mississippi, on which they had executed a first deed of trust to Kimbrough Investment Company.

Whittaker applied to the Deposit Guaranty Bank & Trust Company for a Title I, P. H. A. loan on this property in the net amount of $2,400, to run 36 months, for the purpose of adding a porch and a fireplace. The loan was approved; and, on August 16, 1955, he and his wife executed the application and the note and the deed of trust to effect the consummation of the loan. Credit life insurance was not required on such a loan; but Whittaker, following the execution of the papers, stated to the closing agent of the bank that he desired to purchase such insurance. He was thereupon directed to another officer of the bank, who was also an agent of Old Republic Credit Life Insurance Company, and such agent arranged for the insurance, with the bank as creditor, beneficiary and Whittaker’s estate as second beneficiary. Whittaker’s *788 account of $11.62 in the hank was credited with $2,400, the proceeds of the loan, and on the same day, checks in the amount of $10 and $82.80, the latter being the same amount as the premium for the insurance, were charged against his account. He built neither the porch nor the fireplace.

Subsequently, the payments on both deeds of trust were in arrears. The bank reported the delinquency to the F. H. A. authorities and the trustee in the first deed of trust began foreclosure. In the meantime, the Whit-takers had moved to Florida. Clarence R. Scales, an attorney, negotiated with Earl Keyes about the purchase of the property. On the day appointed for the sale, Keyes paid $262 to take care of the delinquent payments, without knowing, as he said, anything about the Title I, F. H. A. loan, and the sale was called off. Thereafter on March 15,1956, he accepted from the Whittakers a deed in which he assumed the payment of the deed of trust to Kimbrough Investment Company, “and subject to that certain Title One (I) loan executed by the grantors herein in favor of Deposit Guaranty Bank & Trust Company of Jackson, Mississippi.” Although he talked to some of the F. H. A. officials, he was unable to get rid of the Title I loan. When Whittaker sold the property, he did not cancel his insurance. Keyes, however, did not even know that such insurance was in existence.

On June 4, 1956, Whittaker met his death. That occurrence, however, was unknown either to Keyes or Lee Roy Walton when, on June 8, 1956, Keyes executed and delivered to Walton a warranty deed to the property in question, in which the grantee assumed the obligation of the deed of trust to Kimbrough Investment Company “and subject to that certain Title One (I) Loan executed in favor of Deposit Guaranty Bank & Trust Company of Jackson, Mississippi, which the grantee is now obligated to pay.”

The bank made proof of Whittaker’s death, collected $2,606.20 from the insurance company, and, after pay *789 ment of the amount due it, remitted the balance of $184.05 to Mrs. Whittaker and assigned to her its note and deed of trust. Thereafter Mrs. Whittaker, as the holder of the deed of trust, directed the substituted trustee to foreclose the same. Pursuant thereto, the trustee, on May 3, 1957, initiated such proceedings, and Walton applied for, and obtained, the injunction against the sale. Later, on July 12, 1957, Walton, by warranty deed, conveyed this property to Choctaw Investment Company “subject to that certain deed of trust dated December 9, 1954, in favor of Kimbrough Investment Company”, giving the book and page number where recorded. Choctaw Investment Corporation was then permitted to intervene as a complainant on August 9, 1957.

Although the deed from Keyes to Walton clearly provided that Walton was obligated to pay the Title I loan to the bank, the court, over objection, permitted the complainants to introduce Clarence R. Scales, the scrivener, as a witness for the alleged purpose of clarifying the deed. While saying that, if he had had the chance to correct it, he would have said “which the grantor is now not obligated to pay”, the witness could not say whether the parties told him to put “grantor” or “ grantee”. But he said, “Mr. Walton was told about the Title One mortgage on the property. It was explained to him that he would have to pay the Title One to clear the title on the property * * * he knew that he had to pay it to clear the title * * *.” And he “was told in the presence of Mr. Keyes that he would have to pay the deed of trust to clear the property.” Again, “We (Scales ánd Keyes) sat down with Mr. Walton and told Mr. Walton that there was a second mortgage against the property, that he would have to pay the second mortgage to clear the title on the land, and it was twenty-five or twenty-six hundred dollars. He well knew that.” In answer to the question, * ‘ Then the language of this deed, which is Exhibit C, to Lee Roy Walton, though there may have been *790 some error in it, it conveyed the wishes of Mr. Earl Keyes, even in spite of any errors, didn’t it?” The witness replied, “Well, I assume it does.” And to the question, “I mean, you stated a while ago that Mr. Earl Keyes wanted to be sure that he didn’t have to pay the-A. That’s right. Q. — Title One Loan?” As indicating Keyes purpose to have the deed just as it was written, the following question by the trial judge and the answer of the witness thereto, are significant: “By the Court: Well, I still don’t know whether it — it was your impression that, when Mr. Keyes was taking over, that he understood that in addition to assuming the first mortgage to Kimbrough, that he was also obligated to pay the second mortgage to the Deposit Guaranty Bank? A. Yes, sir, Your Honor, he was told that he had to pay.” “By the Court: As a part of the consideration? A. No, sir, not as a part of the consideration.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
103 So. 2d 8, 233 Miss. 781, 1958 Miss. LEXIS 440, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tighe-trustee-v-walton-miss-1958.