Wilson v. Hayes

193 S.W.2d 107, 29 Tenn. App. 49, 1945 Tenn. App. LEXIS 109
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedDecember 11, 1945
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 193 S.W.2d 107 (Wilson v. Hayes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wilson v. Hayes, 193 S.W.2d 107, 29 Tenn. App. 49, 1945 Tenn. App. LEXIS 109 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1945).

Opinion

ANDERSON, P. J.

The relief sought in these consolidated cases, so far as material, is to set aside the sale of a house and lot made by H. Wilson, Trustee under a certain deed of trust executed by Henry D. Hayes and wife, Mattie Belle Hayes, to secure the Bank of Dyer in the payment of a note, and to set aside the sale of 138 shares of stock made by the bank through its president, H. Wilson, under authority conferred by an agreement *51 whereby the' stock was pledged as collateral to secure the payment of a debt due the bank. Both the real property and the stock were purchased by H. Wilson at the respective sales. The chancellor set aside the sale of the house and lot but declined to set aside that of the stock. The respective parties appealed from so much of the decree as was adverse to them.

Mattie Belle Coulter Hayes died testate and her husband, Henry D. Hayes, qualified as executor of her will. He was also her sole devisee and legatee. Henry I). Hayes died without having completed the administration of the estate. In March, 1940, H. Wilson qualified as administrator de bonis non cum testamento annexo of Mrs. Mattie Belle Hayes, and administrator of the estate of Henry D. Hayes. On September 12, 1935, the deceased, Mrs. Mattie Belle Coulter Hayes, and her husband, Henry D. Hayes, had executed a trust deed conveying to H. Wilson, Trustee, a certain improved lot in the town of Dyer to secure the payment of a note payable to the Bank of Dyer in the principal sum of $800. The note, was past due and unpaid when Mrs. Hayes died and it was not paid by her executor. After H. Wilson had qualified as administrator de bonis non cum testamento annexo of the estate of Mrs. Hayes, he, in his capacity as trustee named in the trust deed, advertised the property thereby covered for sale and sold it at public outcry, ostensibly to W. E. Baird for the price of $300. Baird however was bidding for H. Wilson, who was the real purchaser. H. Wilson, as trustee, thereafter excuted a deed conveying the property to Baird, but this deed has never been placed of record. Contemporaneously with this transaction, Baird executed a deed conveying the property to Wilson. The chancellor found, and the proof abundantly sustains him, that the *52 price paid for the property by Baird acting for Wilson was inadequate.

In this transaction, Wilson was acting in at least three different capacities: (l)As trustee in the trust deed, in which position he occupied a fiduciary relation to both the debtor and the creditor-; (2) as executive officer of the creditor bank; and (3) as an individual. That a trustee cannot buy trust property from himself in the manner attempted in this case is too well settled to require discussion. 'Such a purchase is always voidable at the election of the beneficiary unless, being sui juris and having full knowledge of the facts, he has affirmed it. Pomeroy’s Eq. Jur., Yol. 2, Sec. 958; Gibson’s Suits in Chy., Sec. 46; Cannon v. Apperson, 82 Tenn. 553, 579; Cowan v. Hamilton Nat. Bank, 177 Tenn.94, 146 S. W. (2d) 359, 367; Glenn on Mortgages, Vol. 1, Sec. 213, 108, 108.1.

Learned counsel for H. Wilson undertakes to draw a distinction which we are unable to follow. In the brief he says, “I have not been cited to any case in Tennessee where that rule has been applied between grantors or grantors’ heirs and trustee.” The contention seems to be that an instrument conveying land to a trustee to secure the payment of a debt does not create a fiduciary relation between the trustee and the grantor in the trust deed. We think the law is otherwise. One occupying that position is an express trustee who owes a duty to the owner of the property conveyed in trust as well as to the owner of the debt secured thereby. Even if it be correct to say that in one sense his primary duty is to the latter, that is no ground for saying that he owes no duty at all to the former. Insofar as its being of a fiduciary nature is concerned, we perceive no sound basis for a distinction between his relation to all the parties having interest in the subject matter of the trust and that of any other trustee. Meath v. *53 Porter, 56 Term. 224, 228; Gibson’s Suits in Chancery, Sec. 46, 57; 36 Am. Jur. 700, 701.

The question presented by tbe other aspect of the case arises upon a different state of facts, but involves the same fundamental principle.

At the time of her death, Mrs. Mattie Belle Coulter Hayes owed another debt to the Bank of Dyer. This was evidenced by a note, the payment of which was secured by certain collateral including- 138 shares of the capital stock of the Dyer Fruit Box Mfg. Co. owned by her husband, Henry D. Hayes. A portion of this indebtedness was unpaid when H. Wilson qualified as administrator of the estates of Mrs. Mattie Belle Coulter and Henry D. Hayes. The note contained an agreement with reference to thé collateral which, among other things, authorized the holder to sell the collateral without advertisement or notice at public or private sale with the right on the part of the holder “to become the purchaser and absolute owner thereof free of all trusts and claims. ’ ’

There was also pledged as collateral to secure the payment of said obligation, a note payable to Henry D. Hayes executed by T. A. Callis and wife secured by a deed of trust on certain land. H. Wilson, as substitute trustee in this deed of trust, advertised the property thereby covered for sale on July 2,1940. Some fifteen or twenty citizens of the community were present at this sale, but not enough was realized to pay the amount due on the Hayes note. Thereupon, and before the crowd dispersed, the attorney for the bank who was crying the sale at the instance of H. Wilson, president of the bank, and substitute trustee in the trust deed under which the land was sold, offered for sale to the highest bidder the 138 shares of stock in the Dyer Fruit Box Mfg. Co. H. Wilson bid 50^ per share, *54 and there being, no other bid, the stock was sold to him at that price.

With respect to this sale the chancellor found that “it was made in good faith and was free of fraud and that no one else could be procured on said property, that prior to said sale 90/7 of said stock had been offered by the administrator of the estate of Henry 1). Hayes at public sale which was attended by a large crowd and no one could be procured to bid on the same even though the secretary of the Dyer Fruit Box Mfg. Company was present.” He further found “that at the time of said sale the said stock was of little or no value, * * * that H. Wilson became the bona- fide purchaser of said stock and that the complainants are not entitled to have said sale set aside for any reason. ’ ’

We think this conclusion was erroneous.

Under the law of pledge or deposit of property as collateral security for a debt, the pledgee acquires only a special property in the thing pledged with the right to sell upon default in the payment of the debt on reasonable notice to the pledgor to redeem the pledge. The absolute title to the thing pledged is not divested out of the pledgor until foreclosure or a sale on proper notice by the pledgee. Nashville Trust Co. v. First Nat. Bank, 123 Tenn. 617, 134 S. W. 311. Hence, at the time the sale in question took place, the absolute title to the stock in question was vested in H. Wilson as administrator of the estate of Henry D. Hayes.

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Bluebook (online)
193 S.W.2d 107, 29 Tenn. App. 49, 1945 Tenn. App. LEXIS 109, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilson-v-hayes-tennctapp-1945.