Walters v. Baer

50 F.2d 995, 60 App. D.C. 230, 1931 U.S. App. LEXIS 4624
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedJune 1, 1931
DocketNo. 5133
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 50 F.2d 995 (Walters v. Baer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Walters v. Baer, 50 F.2d 995, 60 App. D.C. 230, 1931 U.S. App. LEXIS 4624 (D.C. Cir. 1931).

Opinion

GRONER, Associate Justice.

Appellees Baer and Scholz owned certain real estate in Washington City subject to a first deed of trust not here involved. They executed a second deed of trust to secure the payment of four notes aggregating $50,000. The bill alleges that, at the time of the execution of this trust, 'they became the holders of the notes secured therein, and continued as such holders until after the events out of which this suit grows. Subsequently they sold and conveyed the property, to one Bur[996]*996roughs by deed with special warranty and assurances of title, but without reference to the subsisting deed of • trust,' and this deed was recorded. Simultaneously they entered into a written sealed agreement with Burroughs which also was recorded, and in which the deed of trust was referred to and its terms so changed as to make the payments thereunder amount to $1,200 per month, rather than $520 per month as provided therein, and conditioned that “in the event of failure to comply with the terms' of this contract, which contract, for the purpose of this agreement shall be considered as supplementary to the second trust previously referred to, then, and in that event, the failure so to comply shall be considered a breach of the second trust agreement above referred to, and the trustees under the said second deed of trust shall upon notice” etc., be authorized to sell, foreclose, etc. Shortly thereafter, Burroughs conveyed the property to appellant by deed with special warranty and assurances of title, without mention of the' deed of trust and agreement. But appellant, at the time of the conveyance to her from Burroughs, had notice of the deed of trust, and thereafter complied for a time with its terms as changed and supplemented by the recorded agreement referred to. Subsequently, upon her default in the stipulated payments, Baer and Scholz, as holders of the notes, called on the trustees under the deed of trust to foreclose in accordance with its terms, and appellant, thereupon filed her bill for an injunction to restrain this action. Appellees appeared and moved to dismiss, and, after hearing, the lower court entered an order refusing an injunction pendente lite and dismissing' the bill, and it is from this decree that this appeal is taken.

Appellant’s contentions are twofold. First, she says that because of the ownership by Baer and Scholz.of the notes secured by the second deed of trust, their deed to Burroughs and the deed of Burroughs to herself, with warranties and without reservation of incumbrances, extinguished the trust deed and vested in Burroughs, and afterwards in herself, the fee in the property subject only to the first trust, which, as has already been stated, is not here involved; in other words, that the deed of Baer and Scholz, in the circumstances mentioned, passed all their interest in the property, and operated to extinguish the deed of trust, and to vest in her -their entire interest. And,- secondly, that Baer and Scholz, as owners of the notes secured in the deed of trust, are estopped to claim under the deed of trust because of the warranty in their deed to Burroughs, who conveyed to appellant with like warranty, which is to say that appellant had a right to rely on the warranty to Burroughs without regard to the fact that she had both actual and constructive notice of the deed of trust. From what has already been said, it will be seen that Baer and Scholz conveyed the property involved in trust to secure the promissory notes of a third party, aggregating $50,-000, which notes they then and there acquired. Thereafter they sold the property to Burroughs with special warranty deed and without mention of the mortgage in the deed to Burroughs, and simultaneously entered into an agreement with Burroughs in which, although not binding himself to pay the mortgage notes, he agreed that the terms of the mortgage should be changed by increasing the payments provided therein, and he in turn sold the property to appellant by deed with warranty and without’reference to the mortgage. Both the agreement and the mortgage were duly recorded, and both Burroughs and appellant had actual notice of the terms of the mortgage and of the supplemental agreement in relation thereto; notwithstanding which, appellant now contends that, when Baer and Scholz sold to Burroughs, they being then the beneficiaries under the deed of trust, the effect of their deed to Burroughs was to merge the trust in the fee, and that Burroughs’s subsequent conveyance to appellant transferred the fee to her discharged of the mortgage. We think the correctness of this contention depends wholly upon the intent and purpose of the parties when the transaction occurred. The rule for which appellant contends, that where an equitable and legal estate are outstanding in the same person, the former becomes merged in the latter, is, we think, subject to the qualification that, where the intention of the holder is otherwise, no merger occurs, and this is true because the reason of the rule is that when the entire equitable and legal estates are united in the same person, there is ordinarily no- reason or occasion to keep them distinct; but where it is the intention of the party in whom they unite, or in his interests, or in the protection of his rights, that they should be kept separate, the rule is no longer applicable. 21 C. J. 1037. And the qualification is stronger in the ease of an owner of real estate who is also the holder of a note or bond secured by a mortgage on the land. In such a ease, upon transfer of the legal title, the showing that it was the intention of the parties, when they [997]*997dealt with relation to the lands, that the mortgage should be kept alive is sufficient to justify a court of equity in preserving it, and evidence of the circumstances in which the parties dealt is admissible in equity for the puipose of discovering the true intention. “The settled rule of Equity is, that the intention of the one acquiring the two interests then controls. If this intention has been expressed by taking the transfer to a trustee, or by language inserted in the instrument, it will, of course, be followed. If the intention has not been thus expressed, it will be sought for and ascertained in all the circumstances of the transaction. If it appears from all these circumstances to be for the benefit of the party acquiring both interests that a merger shall not take place, but that the equitable or lesser estate shall be kept alive, then his intention that such a result should follow will be presumed and equity will carry it into execution by preventing a merger.” Pom-eroy (3d Ed.) vol. 2, § 788.

In appellant’s bill, she states that the property acquired by her from Burroughs was of the value of $160,000, and that there was then outstanding a first mortgage of $95,-000. She paid and promised to pay altogether $13,000 for the property, which, added to the $95,000, would make $108,000, and, if this were the basis ,on which the parties dealt, there was an apparent profit to her in the transaction of $52,000, or, in other words, the sale from Burroughs to her of an equity of $65,000 for $13,000.

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Bluebook (online)
50 F.2d 995, 60 App. D.C. 230, 1931 U.S. App. LEXIS 4624, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walters-v-baer-cadc-1931.