Babcock v. Jordan

24 Ind. 14 | Ind. | 1865

Elliott, C. J.

Jordan, the appellee, sued the appellants and others to recover against Melville D. Babcock, one of the defendants, for fraud in the sale of real estate, and to make the amount recovered a specific lien on certain lots in the city of Indianapolis.

The complaint alleges that, on the 28th day of January, 1859, the plaintiff was the owner of lot 59, in the north half of lot 9, in McCarty's subdivision of out-lots numbered 118 and 119, in the city of Indianapolis. That the defendants, Melville D. Babcock and Thomas Springstead, represented to the plaintiff that said Springstead was the owner in fee, by a good and unincumbered title, of 875 acres of land, situated in Randolph county, in the state of Virginia, which said Springstead had bargained and sold to said Melville D. Babcock for a consideration then fully paid; and thereupon the said Babcock proposed to the plaintiff to have said land conveyed to him, to pay him $80 in cash, and *15deliver to him two horses of the value of §100 each, in consideration of the conveyance by the plaintiff of the lots in Indianapolis, and their appurtenances, subject to the payment of a balance due upon a mortgage to the estate of Nicholas McCarty, deceased, for §180. That the plaintiff, relying upon the representations of said Babcock and Spring-stead, and being ignorant of the truth or falsity thereof, and having no means of information upon the subject, accepted said proposition, and then received of said Melville D. Babcock the sum of §80, the two horses, and the conveyance, by Springstead, at the request of said Babcock, of 875 acres of land in Randolph county, Virginia, by a deed of war1ranty. That Melville D. Babcock has been, and still is, insolvent, and by reason thereof had, for a long time, been carrying on business in the name of his father, Henry Babcock, an old man without means. That the plaintiff', by the direction of Melville D. Babcock, conveyed said lots to Henry Babcock, sxxbject to the mortgage aforesaid to the estate of McCarty, “which said Babcock agreed to pay,” and has paid thereon the sum of sixty-three dollars and seventy-jive cents, leaving a balance of 116 dollars and 25 cents, with accnxing interest.

The complaint further avers, that the representations of Springstead and Melville D. Babcock, as to the title of Spring-stead to the Virginia lands, were wholly false; that he had no land in Randolph coxxnty, Virginia, whatever-, which they well knew. That after the execution of the deed by the plaintiff to Henry Babcock, he and his wife, Mnily Babcock, who are also made defendants, joined in executing a mortgage upon said lots to “Babcock § Co.” a firm composed of John D. Phoenix, Francis M. Babcock, John Babcock and Philip Phoenix, professing to be made to secure the payment of §1,689 and 89 cents, upon sundry, notes dated May 1, 1859; that said notes and mortgage were made and given upon the consideration of, and to secure, a debt existing prior to the making of said conveyance, and prior to any contract or engagement to make the same, and that Henry Babcock paid no *16consideration for the lots, other than as part thereof was paid by Melville D. Babcock. The complaint further alleges that by reason of the fraud of Melville JD. Babcock and Springstead, the plaintiff has not received the value of said lots by about $1,000, and prays that, on the final hearing, the balance due the plaintiff* may be decreed a charge on said lots, and that they be sold to pay the same, and for other and proper relief. The complaint was subsequently amended by averring that, after the commencement of the suit, John D. Phoenix, one of the defendants, had died, and his “unknown heirs” were made.defendants.

On the 30th of March, 1861, Philip Phoenix, Francis M. Babcock and John Babcock appeared and answered in three paragraphs, as follows :

1. By general denial.

2. That on the 10th day of May, 1859, the said Henry Babcock, being indebted to them, who are wholesale grocers in the city of New York, by notes amounting to the sum of $1,689, with his wife, Fmily Babcock, executed to them a mortgage on the lots to secure said indebtedness; that at the June term, 1860, of the Marion Common Pleas Court, the last of the notes secured by the mortgage having matured, said defendants caused suit to be brought in said court for the foreclosure of the mortgage, and that such proceedings were had therein that afterward they recovered judgment against said Henry Babcock for the amount due on the notes, and for the foreclosure of the mortgage and the sale of said lots, in default of the payment of the judgment by Henry Babcock.

That afterward a proper order of sale was issued on the judgment and decree to the sheriff of Marion county, who afterward, on the 28th day of July, 1860, sold said lots to one John Ketcham, and that the said Ketcham, after receiving the sheriff’s deed therefor, sold and conveyed the same to John D. Phoenix. They also deny all knowledge of the fraud charged in the complaint.

3. That one William H. H. Johnson purchased said lots *17of one Margaret McCarty, and executed to her his note for $520, being a part of the purchase money therefor; and on the same day the said Johnson, for the purpose of securing-the payment of said sum, executed to said Margaret McCarty a mortgage on the lots; and the said sum of $520 remaining unpaid, the said Margaret caused suit to be-brought on said note and mortgage at the June term, I860,, of the Manon Court of Common Pleas, and such proceedings were had therein, in said court, that, on the 27th day-of June, 1860, said Margaret recovered against the said. Johnson the sum of 113 dollars and 63 cents, without relief from appraisement laws, and also a decree of foreclosure on the mortgage and for the sale of the lots. That said Johnson failing to pay said judgment, the clerk of said court-issued to the sheriff of the county a copy of the decree,, with an order for the sale of the lots to satisfy said judgment, interest and costs; and that the sheriff, having first legally advertised the same, did, on the 25th day of August, 1860, at public sale, sell the north half of said lots 118 and 119: to the defendant, Francis M. Babcock, for the sum of seventy-five dollars and fifty-four cents. That said sheriff thereupon executed to said Francis M. Babcock a deed of conveyance for the north half of said lots, &c.

The plaintiff replied:

First, by a general denial.

Second. “Eor further reply to the second paragraph of the' answer the plaintiff’ says that the mortgage therein mentioned, was executed by said Henry Babcock for a debt existing long prior to the making and delivery of said mortgage, to-wit: before the said Henry Babcock acquired any title to-said premises; and that before, and at the time of the purchase of said premises by said Ketcham, at sheriff’s sale, this-suit was pending, and the said Ketcham, and all of said' defendants, had due notice thereof,” &c.

Third. That “at the time the complaint of said Phoenix and others was filed in said Court of Common Pleas, and at the time the judgment of foreclosure thereon was rendered,, *18and at the time the writ to execute the same was issued, and at the time the sale of said lots thereunder was made to said Ketcham, the complaint of said plaintiff herein was pending in the said Marion Circuit Court, of which said defendants and said Ketcham had notice, and the plaintiff further avers that he was not a party to said suit of foreclosure, nor bound thereby.”

Fourth. “And for further reply to the third paragraph of said answer, the said plaintiff' says that at the time the complaint of said McCarty was filed in the Court of Common Pleas of said county, and at the time said judgment of foreclosure was rendered thereon, and at the time the writ to execute the same was issued, and at the time the sale thereunder was made to said defendants, the complaint of the plaintiff herein was pending in the Marion Circuit Court, of which the defendants had notice. And the plaintiff avers that he was not a party to said last named proceedings of foreclosure, and was not bound thereby. That said defendants, by virtue of their mortgage from said Babcock, represented him, and were bound to pay off and discharge the .said mortgage debt to said McCarty, and that then actings .and doings in permitting said premises to go to sale under the same, and thereby to acquire a title against the plaintiff, were, and are, a fraud upon the plaintiff.”

The defendants, Francis M. Babcock, John Babcock and Philip Phoenix filed a demurrer to said 2d, 3d and 4th paragraphs of the plaintiff’s replication, which was overruled by the court and the ruling thereon excepted to.

Publication having been made and proved, as to the unknown heirs of John D. Phoenix, they were defaulted, and B. B. Duncan was, by the court, appointed guardian ad litem for them, and, thereupon, filed his answer in denial of the complaint.

A default was taken against Melville D., Henry and Emily Babcock.

The suit was dismissed as to Springstead.

The jury, to whom the cause was submitted, found for *19the plaintiff the sum of $984.80. Motion for a new trial by the appellants overruled, and a judgment against Henry Babcock on the finding of the jury, and that unless the same should be paid within twenty days, the lots described in the complaint should be sold, &c., to satisfy the same. ~We are not favored with a brief in the case by the counsel of the appellee.

The first question urged by the appellants for a reversal of the decree of the Circuit Court, arises upon the ruling of that court in overruling the demurrer to the 2d, 3d and 4th paragraphs of the plaintiff’s reply to the second and third paragraphs of the appellants’ answer. The second and third paragraphs of the reply are directed to the second paragraph of the answer, which sets up the mortgage by Henry Babcock to the appellants, the foreclosure thereof, and the sale of the mortgaged premises by the sheriff to Ketcham.

The second reply simply alleges that the mortgage to the appellants was given to secure a pre-existing debt, and that Ketcham had notice of the pendency of this suit before his purchase under the mortgage at sheriff’s sale.

The question raised by the reply is this, viz: Is the mortgagee of a mortgage taken in good faith to secure a pre-existing debt, regarded as a purchaser for a valuable consideration, and protected as such? The replication under consideration assumes the negative; but the same question has been ruled affirmatively by this court, in the case of Work v. Brayton et al., 5 Ind., 396. Perkins, J., in delivering the opinion of the court in that case, says: “ The question whether a mortgagee, in a mortgage given for the security of a pre-existing debt, is to be regarded as a purchaser for a valuable consideration, has been decided differ- • ently by different courts; and there has been a like diversity of opinion upon the analogous question-, whether the holder of commercial paper assigned as collateral security for a pre-existing debt, is to be treated as a holder for a valuable consideration. The latter of these questions this court decided in the affhmative in Valette v. Mason, 1 Ind., *20288; and it would seem that the principle of that case applied to a mortgagee of real estate to secure a like indebtedness, would require that he be regarded as a purchaser for a valuable consideration. * * * If it is not to be so regarded, the titles of purchasers and mortgagees for such a consideration, must be of comparatively little value, as they may, at any time, be unexpectedly overrode by secret invisible liens for unpaid purchase money to some former grantors, or by some other, till then unknown, alleged equitable claims, which might, in their origin, have been without trouble made secure by open, recorded instruments, that would have been notice to all the world. * * * * “ A pre-existing debt is held to be a valuable consideration by Story, in the second volume of his Equity Jurisprudence, pp. 657, 658, and he cites for the doctrine Mitford v. Mitford, 9 Ves., 100, and Bayley v. Greenleaf, 7 Wheaton, 46. In vol. 2, pt. 1, p. 73, of White and Tudor’s Leading Cases in Equity, they say: 'Similar decisions were made in Richeson v. Richeson, 2 Grattan, 497, and in Dey v. Dunham, 2 Johnson’s Chancery R., 182;’ though this latter case has not been followed in New York. Kent, in the 4th vol. of his Commentaries, p. 154, approves the doctrine, and expresses the conviction that it rests on grounds that will command general assent. He cites in support of it Roberts v. Salisbury, 3 Gill and J., 425, and Gann v. Chester, 5 Yerger’s Tenn. R., 205.”

The argument of the court for the justice of the rule, in the case of Work v. Brayton et al., supra, would seem to be peculiarly applicable to the case at bar. Here it is not pretended that the mortgagees had any notice of the alleged fraudulent representations of Melville D. Babcock and Spring stead to Jordan, anj. Henry Babcock, the mortgagor, derived his title directly from Jordan, and not through Melville D. Babcock or Springstead. The same - principle was again recognized and confirmed in the case of Wright v Bundy, 11 Ind., 398. W"e think, thei’efore, that the 2d paragraph of the replication was bad, and the demurrer to it *21should have been sustained. Indeed, the complaint is bad, so far as it seeks a lien on the lots as against the appellants’ mortgage. The answer, however, goes farther, and shows a foreclosure of the mortgage, and the sale of the lots under it by the sheriff to Ketcham. He derives title through the mortgage, and notice to him of the alleged fraud, before his purchase, cannot affect his title. The second paragraph of the answer was, therefore, a valid bar to the suit, as against the appellees, and to the claim of the plaintiff' for a lien on the lots for the amount he might recover for the alleged fraud.

If the title had remained in Henry Babcock, perhaps, under the averments in the complaint, the plaintiff might have asserted a lien as against him, but that question is not properly before us, and we do not, therefore, decide it.

The third paragraph of the replication avers that this suit was commenced before the suit to foreclose the mortgage to “Babcock § Co.” and was still pending at the time of the sale to Ketcham, who had notice thereof. It also avers that the plaintiff here was not a party to the suit of foreclosure, nor bound thereby. It was not necessary that Jordan should be a party to the suit of foreclosure, and he was, nevertheless, bound thereby, because the mortgagees stood in the relation of purchasers for a valuable consideration, and their equity, thereby, had priority to the plaintiff’s. The paragraph was clearly bad.

The third paragraph of the answer sets up a sale of the lots under a foreclosure of the mortgage to Margaret McCarty, and the 4th paragraph of the reply is directed to that paragraph of the answer, and alleges the pendency of this suit at the time of the commencement of that, and at the time of the judgment, foreclosure and sale under that mortgage, and notice to the purchaser; and further avers that the plaintiff in this suit was not a party to said suit of foreclosure, nor bound thereby; and that said appellants, by virtue of their mortgage from said Henry Babcock, represented him, and were, therefore, bound to pay off and *22discharge the said mortgage debt. In reference to the latter averment, it may be sufficient to remark that it is not averred in the complaint that Henry Babcock, to whom Jordan conveyed, agreed to pay the McCarty mortgage, but that the alleged promise was made by Melville D. Babcock; nor is it averred that any notice of such promise was contained in the deed to Henry Babcock, or otherwise given to said appellants before their mortgage was executed. As the McCarty mortgage was recorded, they wore bound to take notice of its existence. Without an express promise by them, however, to pay it off, they were not bound to do so; but as it was a prior lien on the lots, they were at liberty either to pay it or suffer the consequences of a defeat of their subsequent lien. The mortgage to Margaret McCarty was made before Jordan acquired his title, by Johnson, under whom Jordan held. It was prior in time and in right to any claim that Jordan could set up against his subsequent vendee, and if Jordan wished to protect his subsequent equity against a sale under that mortgage, ho should have discharged it. Ho had the same interest in doing so as the appellants. Jordan was not a necessary party to the suit to foreclose that mortgage, as he had conveyed the equity of redemption to Henry Babcock before that suit was instituted.

We think that the 2d, 3d and 4th paragraphs of the reply were all bad, and the court, therefore, erred in overruling the demurrer to them.

Several other errors are assigned and discussed in the appellants’ brief, relating to the admission and rejection of evidence on the trial, and to the instructions given by the court to the jury, and to instructions asked by the appellants and refused by the court, many of which are well taken; but as they refer to, and involve the same questions discussecj. on the demurrer to the replies, we deem it unnecessaiy to notice them further here.

The court below rendered a judgment for the amount found by the jury against Henry Babcock. It is not readily *23perceived upon what principle this was done, as the promises and alleged fraudulent representations are claimed to have been made by Melville D. Babcock, and not by Henry. But as ho did not join in the appeal, no question m reference to it is before us, and we, therefore, decide nothing on that subject.

TF Henderson, T. A. Hendricks and O.. B. Hard, for appellants.

The judgment of the court below is reversed, with costs, as to the appellants, and so far as it makes the judgment against Henry Babcock a lien on the lots, and directs their salo, &c. The cause is remanded for further proceedings in the court below in accordance with this opinion.