Union Trust Co. v. Beach

227 F. 36, 141 C.C.A. 584, 1915 U.S. App. LEXIS 2283
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedOctober 29, 1915
DocketNo. 2806
StatusPublished

This text of 227 F. 36 (Union Trust Co. v. Beach) 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
Union Trust Co. v. Beach, 227 F. 36, 141 C.C.A. 584, 1915 U.S. App. LEXIS 2283 (5th Cir. 1915).

Opinion

WALKER, Circuit Judge.

[1] This is an appeal by the Union Trust Company and the Mallary Mill Supply Company from a decree in favor of Myrtis Beach, rendered on her intervening petition filed in a foreclosure suit brought by the Union Trust Company. The petition asserted a claim to or upon the sum of $18,000, which had been received by the Union Trust Company under circumstances hereinafter stated. No party to the case other than Myrtis Beach appears to have an interest in sustaining the decree rendered in her favor. It appears, from the order of the District Judge allowing the appeal, that all defendants to the intervening petition other tiran the appellants were duly notified in writing to join in the appeal if they desired to do so, and that they failed and refused to join therein. It sufficiently appears that all parties to the suit, other than the appellants, who could have been adversely affected by the decree appealed from, had notice of the appeal and declined to join in it. The appeal is not subject to be dismissed on the motion of the appellee because such other parties did not join in it and there was no summons and severance. A formal summons, followed by an order of severance, is not indispensable to the maintenance; of an appeal by one of the parties to a decree, if it fairly appears from the record that the parties who might have joined have been notified to do so and have refused. Johnson v. Trust Company of America, 104 Fed. 174, 43 C. C. A. 458. The motion to dismiss the appeal is denied.

In the year 1905 W. R. Beach bought certain lands in Calhoun county, Fla., and took title thereto' in his own name. In the year 1910 he conveyed these lands to the Beach Manufacturing Company, and thereafter, in the same year, that company, to secure $200,000 of bonds issued by it, executed to the Union Trust Company a deed of trust or mortgage, covering those lands, other lands in the state of Georgia, and sundry articles of personal property. In the year 1913, after $30,000 of the principal of the debt secured by that instrument had been paid, the Beach Manufacturing Company entered into a contract with the Florida Timber Products Company for the sale to the latter company of said Florida lands for the sum of $165,000, which was made payable in installments to the Union Trust Company, and the first installment, $18,000, was paid to that company shortly after the contract of sale was made. The Union Trust Company in writing assented [38]*38to and ratified that contract. Thereafter the Florida Timber Products Company was adjudged a bankrupt by the District Court of the United States for the Northern District of Florida, having made no payment on its contract to purchase other than the above-mentioned one of $18,'-000. After the Union Trust Company had brought its suit in the District Court of the United States for the Southern District of Georgia for the foreclosure of the mortgage or deed of trust to- it, the trustee in bankruptcy of the Florida Timber Products Company, pursuant to an order made by the court of bankruptcy, which order was consented to by the Beach Manufacturing Company, surrendered and renounced all rights of the bankrupt under its above-mentioned contract of purchase. That order contained the recital that:

“Tile rights of the Union Trust Company are preserved under their contract with the Beach Manufacturing Company.”

It is not made to appear that the Union Trust Company had any connection with the making of that order, except such as is evidenced by its written statement found at the bottom of it, as follows:

“Consented to, with ail rights of Union Trust Company, preserved against Beach Manufacturing Company under its contract and mortgage.”

After the above-mentioned Florida lands had, under a decree of foreclosure rendered in an ancillary suit brought by the Union Trust Company in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Florida, been sold for the sum of $25,000, and that sum, less the amount of costs and fees made payable therefrom, had been ordered by that court to be paid to the clerk of the United States District Court for the Southern District of Georgia, to be placed in the registry of that court, and to be distributed and paid out under the orders of that court, the appellee, Myrtis Beach, filed in tire original foreclosure suit her petition of intervention, which prayed that the above-mentioned sum of $18,000 deposited with the Union Trust Company be adjudged and decreed to the Beach Manufacturing Company as trustee for the petitioner, and be adjudged and decreed to be unincumbered and unaffected by the deed of trust or mortgage to the Union Trust Company. The asserted right of the intervening petitioner was based upon the claim that W. R. Beach had improperly used in his purchase of the Florida land more than $18,000 which belonged to the petitioner, and of which he had possession as petitioner’s guardian. The appeal is from a decree which sustained the claim set up by the intervening petition.

[2] It is not claimed, and there is no room for claiming, that, as to any land covered by the deed of trust to the Union Trust Company, the right of that company as trustee was subordinate to any claim which the petitioner, the appellee here, may have had. When the rights of the trustee attached, the public records did not disclose the existence of the appelleejs claim, and the trustee did not otherwise have notice of it. The secret equity which is the basis of the claim of the appellee cannot prevail, if the payment of the $18,000 by the Florida Timber Products Company subjected that money to the lien of the deed of trust to the Union Trust Company, and nothing has occur[39]*39red which is entitled to be given the effect of a release or discharge of that lien.

[3] The contract for the sale of the Florida lands to the Timber Products Company provided that that company should, upon its compliance with the terms of tlie contract, receive from the Beach Manufacturing Company “a good and sufficient warranty deed conveying said land in fee simple.” The existence of the incumbrance on the land put it beyond the power of the seller to carry out this provision of the contract, unless the mcumbi'ancer’s consent to a release of its lien was secured. For the conduct of the parties to the contract in making the stipulated purchase price payable to the Union Trust Company, and in obtaining that company’s assent to and ratification of the contract, no plausible explanation is suggested, other than the very obvious one disclosed by the fact that that company held an incumbrance on tlie land contracted about, and was entitled, so long as that incmubruiice was in existence, to hold the land subject to it, unless an arrangement satisfactory to the holder of the incumbrance was made for its release of the land from the lien upon it. From the facts that all of the purchase price was made payable to the Union Trust Company, the holder, of an incumbrance on the lauds which were the subject of the contract, and that the contract was in writing assented to and ratified by that company, obviously it is to be inferred that the understanding was that a compliance by the purchaser with the terms oí the contract was to have the effect of entitling it to a conveyance of the lands freed of the incumbrance, and of substituting the money paid to the holder of the incumbrance in lieu of the released land, with the result of transferring- to that money in the hands of the trustee the lieu to which theretofore the released land was subject.

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Related

Markey v. Langley
92 U.S. 142 (Supreme Court, 1876)
Camden v. Mayhew
129 U.S. 73 (Supreme Court, 1889)
Johnson v. Trust Co. of America
104 F. 174 (Eighth Circuit, 1900)
Lewis v. Dillard
76 F. 688 (Eighth Circuit, 1896)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
227 F. 36, 141 C.C.A. 584, 1915 U.S. App. LEXIS 2283, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/union-trust-co-v-beach-ca5-1915.