Yazoo-Delta Mortgage Co. v. Dickinson Trust Co.

22 F.2d 886, 1927 U.S. App. LEXIS 3490
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedDecember 22, 1927
DocketNo. 3904
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 22 F.2d 886 (Yazoo-Delta Mortgage Co. v. Dickinson Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Yazoo-Delta Mortgage Co. v. Dickinson Trust Co., 22 F.2d 886, 1927 U.S. App. LEXIS 3490 (7th Cir. 1927).

Opinion

PAGE, Circuit Judge.

This is a bill in equity brought by appellee Dickinson Trust Company, an Indiana corporation, as trustee for Reeveston Realty Company, to quiet title in it to certain Indiana real estate. Appellant, and Corinne Smith MeLemore and Guy B. MeLemore, who did not appeal, were defendants. There was a decree quieting title in appellee.

The complaint, filed February 11,. 1924, avers that on September 27, 1921, plaintiff, as trustee (appellee), was the owner in fee simple of the real estate described, arid sets out the manner in which that title was acquired; that on that date it, by Hiatt, its president, conveyed the real estate to defendant Corinne Smith MeLemore; that pri- or to October 23, 1922, Corinne Smith Me¡Lemore and Guy B. MeLemore, her husband, conveyed the real estate to Edgar F. Hiatt, who did not record the deed, but lost it; that Hiatt and wife, on February 26, 1923, conveyed to appellee; that Hiatt had no personal interest in said-real estate and no right to sell it, except for the use and benefit of the trust; that on October 23, 1922, after the said conveyance by the McLemores to Hiatt, the McLemores made a mortgage to appellant, which was duly recorded. Ignorance of the circumstances under which the mortgage vas made, and of the consideration therefor, is averred; but it is averred that appellant had knowledge (a) of the said prior conveyance of the McLemores to Hiatt; (b) that neither Hiatt nor the Mc-Lemores owned, or ever had owned, any beneficial interest in said lands and lots at the time the mortgage was executed; (c) of facts and circumstances sufficient to charge it with notice, and put it on inquiry, as to whether the McLemores had any actual interest in the property. The prayer is that the mortgage be decreed null and void, and that the title be quieted as against all defendants.

The McLemores answered, averring ownership of the real estate in question in Mrs. ■ MeLemore, and denying all the material allegations of the bill.

Appellant, in its answer, averred ownership in Mrs. MeLemore and knowledge of the sale to her by Walter S. Johnson, and denied all of the rhaterial allegations of the bill. By way of counterclaim, it was averred that the McLemores, for a'good and valuable consideration, executed and delivered to appellant a note for $10,000, secured by a mortgage upon the real estate in question, and a part of the prayer is that it may have judgment for the amount of said note, and that the mortgage may .be foreclosed.

Hiatt was president of the Dickinson Trust Company until the latter part of February, 1922, when it failed by reason of his defalcations. Prior to August 3, 1911, one Gardner and Walter S. Johnson acquired title to the real estate in question, and on August 15, 1911, Gardner .deeded his interest to Johnson. September 5th, following, Johnson conveyed the property to appellee, as trustee, for the purposes therein expressed, viz.:

“To have and to hold the same in trust unto the said Dickinson Trust Company, trustee, forever, in trust and upon the uses, trusts, and purposes hereinafter mentioned, to wit:
“First. To lay off said real estate into lots, and to plat and to acknowledge the same, and to record the same according to law, and leaving and dedicating streets, alleys, and public ways therein.
“Second. To sell said lots and convey by [887]*887trustee’s special warranty deed in fee simple to purchasers the lots so laid out and platted as above provided.”

The deed was made subject to a mortgage which was fully paid in 1918 and is not here in question. On the date of that deed, September 5, 1911, Johnson and appellee entered into an unrecorded agreement which provided (a) that appellee was to plat the property into lots; and (b) sell and convey the lots by special warranty deed on order of Walter S. Johnson.

October 29, 1915, Johnson and Gardner made a written agreement with Hiatt, providing for the sale of the entire interest of said Johnson and Gardner in the property in question and the assignment of all moneys due on sales of any lots to a corporation known as Reeveston Realty Company. December 8, 1915, articles of incorporation of the Reeveston Realty Company were filed with the secretary of state of the state of Indiana.

December 15, 1915, an agreement was entered into between the Reeveston Realty Company, Walter S. Johnson, Fred C. Gardner, and appellee, which recited the conveyance of September 5, 1911, the agreement of October 29,1915, and provided:

“That the parties agree, in consideration of one dollar and mutual benefits that Dickinson Trust Company, trustee, shall continue to hold title to said real estate under said trust agreement of September 5, 1911, and that all balances in the hands of said trustee shall be the property of said Reeveston Realty Company.”

December 18, 1915, Johnson assigned to the Reeveston Realty Company all interest in the unrecorded contract of September 5, 1911. August 16, 1921, Guy B. McLemore, C. R. Smith, his father-in-law, and the Somerset Plantation Company, entered into an agreement with Hiatt, whereby they agreed to convey to Hiatt the Napanee plantation, containing 2,500 acres, in Washington county, Mississippi, together with the crops and personal property of every kind used thereon, subject to an incumbrance of $336,663.-56, due the Planters’ Bank of Clarksdale, Miss.; also to convey in like manner the Somerset plantation of 14,750 acres, with the crops and all personal property, the same subject to a mortgage of $285,000. The personal property, crops, and credits on both properties were free and clear of incumbrances. Hiatt was to convey to Guy B. McLemore, or his assigns, a considerable list of properties, ineluding the property in question, situated in Indiana. That agreement was apparently carried out by the parties and as a part thereof, and on September 27, 1921, Dickinson Trust Company, trustee, conveyed by warranty deed the real estate in question to defendant Corinne Smith Mc-Lemore. On the same day defendant Guy B. McLemore, as agent and attorney in fact for his wife, executed a note for $4,027.79 to the Dickinson Trust Company, which was secured by mortgage to it, as trustee, upon five of the lots in question. The note and mortgage were delivered to, and ever since have been in the possession of, appellee.

About January 1, 1922, Corinne B. Mc-Lemore conveyed the real estate in question to Hiatt, who gave as consideration therefor his note for $25,000, payable to C. R. Smith. That note was taken by appellant from Smith as security for an indebtedness. It was never paid, and its further history is not material here. Guy B. McLemore did not join with his wife in the deed to Hiatt.

March 6, 1922, the Dickinson Trust Company closed its doors because of Hiatt’s defalcations. March 15, 1922, its board of directors, by resolution, appointed one Henry C. Starr, its general counsel, as trustee:

“For the purposes of acquiring title of the property in the name of Edgar F. Hiatt or others belonging to the Trust Company, and whieh said property is the same which the bank commissioner of Indiana requires to be removed from the assets of the company, and in the event of reorganization the said trastee is authorized, ordered, and directed to prorate the same and the proceeds of the same when turned by him into cash prorate among those contributing stockholders who assist in reorganizing this trust company.”

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Bluebook (online)
22 F.2d 886, 1927 U.S. App. LEXIS 3490, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yazoo-delta-mortgage-co-v-dickinson-trust-co-ca7-1927.