Walker v. President, Directors & Co. of the Farmers' Bank

6 Del. Ch. 81
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedMay 15, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 6 Del. Ch. 81 (Walker v. President, Directors & Co. of the Farmers' Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Chancery of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Walker v. President, Directors & Co. of the Farmers' Bank, 6 Del. Ch. 81 (Del. Ct. App. 1887).

Opinion

The Chancellor.

On the 8th day of Movember,. 1873, WilliampValker executed a bond and mortgage in favor of the President, Directors, and Company of the-Farmers’ Bank of the State of Delaware, for the sum of $22,406.37. Mrs. Walker joined in the mortgage.

Fifteen different parcels of land were conveyed by this-mortgage. An amicable scire facias was docketed, between the bank and Walker and wife, on this mortgage the 23d day of March, 1876, and judgment thereon was. recovered by^t-lie bank against them, for the said sum of $22,406.37, with interest from April 18, 1875.

The interest due by Walker and wife to the bank on this judgment being in arrear, a levari facias was issued on said judgment on the 26th day of January, 1881, proceedings on which were subsequently abandoned, Walken having made arrangements for the payment of his arrears of interest. The interest being again in arrear, a second levari facias on said judgment was issued on the 8th [89]*89day of February, 1882. Walker again making provision for the payment of his arrears of interest, proceedings, under the second writ of levari facias were abandoned..

On the 11th day of February, a third writ of levari - facias was issued on said judgment; Walker being again in arrear with his interest, and the principal of said judgment being wholly due and unpaid.

On the 22d day of February, 1883, Walker and his-wife executed a deed of conveyance to the bank for nine different parcels of the above-named lands; five of said parcels having been sold at public sale by Walker in the month of December previous, and one of said pieces,, called the dry-house lot, being omitted from said deed for reasons clearly stated by witnesses who have been examined in the cause.

The consideration stated in the deed seems to have been nominal, being the sum of $26,000, the real consideration (as proved by the witnesses) being the release by the bank to Walker of his entire indebtedness to the bank, which then amounted to the sum of $25,277.36 also the payment by the bank of a mortgage, in favor of one Bespham, on which there appears to have been due about $6,988.67; and the payment of a judgment of one Pearson against the said Walker, on which was then due about $85.

The Dupont mortgage had been theretofore assigned to the bank. It and the Bespham mortgage and the Pearson judgment were liens upon the lands of Walker. The entire indebtedness of Walker to the bank, and on account of prior liens which the bank assumed to pay and did pay on the 22d day of February, 1883,—the date of the deed from Walker and wife to the bank,— was the sum of $32,351.32.

The bank subsequently, at private sale, disposed of all these nine parcels of land conveyed to it by Walker and. [90]*90wife. The prices for which the bank sold these parcels aggregated the sum of §34,870. Of these six sold for §3,370, leaving for three parcels, $31,500.

The bank, in its answer, says that by far the greater part in value of these lands were sold by it on credit, and the consideration price for most of them has not yet been received by it, but remains unpaid; but it admits that the aggregate price for which it sold them exceeds the consideration price for which Walker sold them to the bank, to the amount of between §2,200 and $2,300.

The bill was filed by Walker in his lifetime, against the bank, to compel the payment by it of this amount, which he claims was equitably due him from the bank.

The question in the case is whether the deed of the 22d day of February, 1883, absolute in its terms, is to be allowed to have force and effect, according to its import, ■or be declared as between the parties to have the effect of a mortgage for the security of the subsisting debt. The determination of this question depends upon the manner in which the deed was procured, and the objects and purposes contemplated by the parties, and upon the intention of the parties at the time it was executed as shown by all the surrounding facts and circumstances.

The relation of mortgagor and mortgagee existing between the parties at the time of the execution of the absolute deed in question should cause the court, as has been often said in other cases, to view with distrust, and to scrutinize with closeness, the negotiation that led to the making of the deed whereby it is now claimed that the right of redemption has been extinguished and the previous mortgage converted into an absolute sale; or, in other words, whereby the complainant is debarred the right of recovering from the defendant the excess of amount of sales of the mortgaged property over the amount of the indebtedness of the complainant to the ■defendant at the time of the execution of the mortgage.

[91]*91To sustain such a transaction as the sale, without the right of redemption, it requires that all the circumstances attending it should be perfectly fair and free from the least taint of advantage and imposition. While it is everywhere, now recognized as true, whatever heretofore may have been the difference of opinion on that subject, that a mortgagee may become the purchaser of the equity of redemption, if he does not use his power over the •estate, where he has such power, to induce the mortgagor to part with his interest in it, it is, nevertheless, the policy of.the law to prohibit the conversion of a real mortgage into a sale. Conway v. Alexander, 11 U. S. 7 Cranch, 218, 3 L. ed. 321.

Although the equity of redemption may be sold or disposed of to the mortgagee, yet, unless the transaction appears to be fair and unmixed with any advantage taken by the mortgagee of the necessitous circumstances of the mortgagor, equity will hold the parties to their original relation of debtor and creditor. Dougherty v. McColgan, 6 Gill & J. 275.

In the case of Baugher v. Merryman, 32 Md. 185, the ■court says: “As the debt was not the appellee’s and for which she was not personally bound, if the property was really worth more than the mortgage debt at the time, the appellant paid nothing for the right of redemption.” Again : “That the proposal to convert the mortgage into ■a sale was made and urged by the appellant, is fully admitted in his answer; the alternative proposed being •either an absolute sale of the property or an immediate foreclosure and sale. That the appellee was distressed and perplexed with such an alternative persistently pressed upon her, it is not difficult to conceive, and as a fact is fully shown by the proof in the cause. She had in fact no power of escape, having agreed to a decree for -a foreclosure; the only chance of avoiding being turned •out of house and home summarily was by yielding to the [92]*92appellant’s demand for an absolute deed. This was an improper use of the mortgagee’s power over the estate, to influence the mortgagor to part with the right of redemption, and such as a court of equity will not sanction.”

In this case the mortgagee sold the mortgaged premises for more than twice the amount of the mortgage debt; and this is at least some evidence of that inadequacy of price against which a court of equity will relieve.

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Related

Ciconte v. Barba
161 A. 925 (Court of Chancery of Delaware, 1932)
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97 F. 696 (Ninth Circuit, 1899)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
6 Del. Ch. 81, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walker-v-president-directors-co-of-the-farmers-bank-delch-1887.