Warren v. . Susman

84 S.E. 760, 168 N.C. 457, 1915 N.C. LEXIS 83
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedMarch 24, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 84 S.E. 760 (Warren v. . Susman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Warren v. . Susman, 84 S.E. 760, 168 N.C. 457, 1915 N.C. LEXIS 83 (N.C. 1915).

Opinions

This action was brought to recover the value of certain mules and land sold by defendant, the Washington Horse Exchange Company, under a mortgage given by the defendant to it. There is a power of sale in the mortgage, but it is restricted to the land. It was (459) executed to secure $500, the price of the two mules, for which two notes of $250 each were given on 9 March, 1910, one payable 1 November, 1910, and the other on 1 November, 1911. The transaction took place in Pamlico County where the land is situated and where the mortgage was registered. Plaintiff changed his residence to Carteret County and carried the mules with him. They were seized by the defendant, the mortgagee, carried to Washington, Beaufort County, N.C. and *Page 540 there sold at public outcry for $225. The land was afterwards sold in Pamlico in like manner and bought by the defendant, the mortgagee, through an agent, for $325.

The jury returned the following verdict:

1. What was the value of the mules described in the complaint at the time the said mules were taken into the possession of the defendant Susman and the Washington Horse Exchange Company? Answer: "$500."

2. What is the highest fair hiring or rental value of said mules? Answer: "$50 per year."

3. What was the value of the lands described in the complaint at the time the same was taken into the possession of the defendants? Answer: "$800."

4. What is the highest rental value of said lands since the defendants took the same into their possession? Answer: "$25 per year."

5. Did E. L. Stewart buy in said lands for the Washington Horse Exchange Company? Answer: "Yes."

6. Did said Stewart pay any money for said lands? Answer: "No."

Judgment was entered on the verdict, and defendant appealed. after stating the case: The mortgagee had no power of sale as to the mules, and when the defendant seized and sold them to a third party, it amounted to a conversion and rendered them liable to the plaintiff for their real value. Otherwise if the defendant had sold them regularly under a decree of court or under some authority given to that end. Bird v. Davis,14 N.J. Eq., 467. The jury have found that the mules did not bring a fair price at the sale made by the defendant, but, on the contrary, were worth more than twice the amount they brought at the sale. The defendant is also liable for the value of any use of the mules by it.

As to the land, defendant bought it for itself, though it acted indirectly by an agent. It is the same in equity as if it had bought in its own name. Whitehead v. Hellen, 76 N.C. 99. The plaintiff (460) could elect to have the sale set aside and the property returned to the trust fund, or recover of the defendant, who had sold and bought at the same time, in breach of his trust, the value of the land where the trustee insists on the validity of the sale and his right to retain the property, and has conveyed it to a third person, whose title he also insists is unassailable; otherwise the trustee would be allowed to speculate upon his trust and make an unfair profit out of it, which will *Page 541 not be tolerated by a court of equity. This is held to be the rule inFroneberger v. Lewis, 79 N.C. 426, where the subject is fully discussed.Huston v. Cassidy, 1 McCarter (N. J. Eq.), 320; Smith v. Drake, 23 N.J. Eq. (2 Beasley), 302. The cestui que trust, in making his election, is not required, in such circumstances, to take the property upon his trustee's terms, or at a price fixed by him; but equity requires that if the trustee elects to stand upon his right as purchaser, instead of surrendering the property to the beneficiary, he must pay the reasonable value of the land or a fair compensation for the breach of his trust; and this, with greater reason, is true where the trustee has himself subsequently conveyed the land to a bona fide purchaser for value and without notice. Sprinkle v. Wellborn, 140 N.C. 163;Froneberger v. Lewis, supra. When Froneberger v.Lewis was before this Court the first time, 70 N.C. 456, the Court said: "It is against the policy of the law to allow an administrator to buy at his own sale; and when he does so, those interested have their election to treat the sale as a nullity — in this case, to have the sale set aside and a new sale ordered — or to let the sale stand and demand a full price," citing Ryden v. Jones, 8 N.C. 497; and the trustee was charged accordingly in that case, even though the cestui que trust was present at the sale and assented to it.

This suit was heard in the court below upon the theory that the plaintiff had elected to take the value of the land as compensation for the breach of trust by the trustee in buying the land for himself at the sale, and afterwards disposing of it, and it was so submitted to the jury without apparent objection to the issues. The trustee, according to the record, is now insisting that the sale was valid and that he has conveyed to an innocent purchaser, Felix Lee, as he excepted to the court's intimation that he was not such, and also moved to nonsuit the plaintiff. The court expressly states that the plaintiff has elected to take the value of the land. Although Felix Lee was made a party, he filed no answer and no issue was submitted concerning his rights as a bona fide purchaser for value and without notice. His Honor told the jury, it is true, that he would submit an issue and to answer it "No," but it was not, in fact, submitted and answered. Besides, as plaintiff takes the value of the land in the place of the land itself, Felix Lee cannot be prejudiced by the judgment, as he has a deed for the land from the defendant, who purchased it at the sale.

We observe that no issue was tendered and no request for (461) instructions made upon the theory that defendants were entitled to have the same set aside and return the land to the plaintiff. Their whole defense proceeds upon quite a contrary basis, namely, that they have a right to hold the land against the plaintiff, having acquired it *Page 542 under a valid sale, and for this reason they moved for a nonsuit, which could not be based upon any other notion.

Another exception taken by defendant was that the proceeds from the sale of the mules were not sufficient to pay the mortgage debt, and therefore it had the right to sell the land and to purchase at the sale. This proved not to be true; but even if it had been, it did not justify the defendant in buying the land at its own sale and afterwards resisting the claim of the plaintiff by denying that he had any right in or to the land, or any equity to have the sale set aside. The case of Tayloe v. Tayloe, 108 N.C. 69, where the trustee bought property at his own sale, seems to be directly in point. The court there said that the trustee had dealt with the property unlawfully and sold it for a sum of money greatly less than its value, to appellee's injury, and having failed to dispose of it as the law directed, he was clearly liable for its value.

We do not mean to intimate that a mortgagee may not, sometimes, buy in property at his own sale to prevent a sacrifice of it by a sale to a third party below its value, as such a course may be necessary in order to prevent a loss to himself and the mortgagor. But he must do so in good faith, and in recognition of the mortgagor's right to avoid the sale if he elects so to do.

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Bluebook (online)
84 S.E. 760, 168 N.C. 457, 1915 N.C. LEXIS 83, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/warren-v-susman-nc-1915.