Beckett v. Bledsoe

4 Ind. 256 | Ind. | 1853

Perkins, J.

Bledsoe filed a bill in the Hendricks Circuit Court, stating that in 1837 he received a conveyance of a tract of land of one David Smith, twenty-five acres of which was encumbered by a mortgage previously given by said Smith to the commissioner of the school fund for 55 dollars, due the 16th of November, 1838, with 6 per cent, interest, payable annually in advance; that he took and retained possession of said land till the spring of 1838, when he removed to Arkansas, where he has since resided; that previous to leaving, he paid the interest on said mortgage up to the 16th of November, 1837, and appointed Beckett, who resided near the land, his agent to lease said land for him, attend to paying the interest on the mortgage out of the rents, and to renew said mortgage on the expiration of the time it had to run; that Beckett leased the land, received the rents, but did not pay the interest on said mortgage nor renew it, but permitted the school commissioner to sell the land, which he did in August, 1839, Beckett himself becoming the purchaser, at 100 dollars, and receiving the deed from the commissioner in his own right; that he, Beckett, kept and enjoyed the use of said land till September, 1849, when he sold it to one Bunion for 325 dollars, and left the state for parts unknown. Prayer that the land be conveyed to the plaintiff in the bill, and for general relief.

*258Notice of the pendency of the bill was given by publication.

Bunion answered, denying notice of Beckett's agency, and asserting his purchase to have been made in good faith.

Beckett answered, admitting his agency, his reception of rents to the amount of 40 dollars, his agreement to re-mortgage the land, &c., and says in excuse for not doing it, that he found it required an affidavit which he could not make, but which it was necessary that Bledsoe, his principal, should make, and further ^says that after he purchased and received a deed for the land of the school commissioner, he wrote and deposited in the post-office a letter to Bledsoe, informing him that he could have the land by paying the 100 dollars. The reception of this letter by Bledsoe, and the writing of it, even, by Beckett, are denied by the replication to the bill, and there is no proof of either of the allegations. Beckett, in his answer, further admits the sale to Bunion, and his removal from the state, which, he says, was to Iowa.

The cause was submitted to the Court on the bill, answers, and replication, and the Court decreed that the bill should be dismissed as to Bunion, that Beckett should pay to Bledsoe the 40 dollars, without interest, admitted to have been received for rent, and the 200 dollars received from Bunion, over and above the 100 dollars paid for the land, with interest for two years thereon, making in all, says the decree, the “ sum of 263 dollars, to be levied as a judgment at common law, and also his costs,” &c.

There is plainly a clerical error in stating the aggregregate amount of this decree.

Beckett brings the case to this Court, and contends that said decree is erroneous—

1. Because no demand for an accounting was made upon him before the filing of the bill.

But his non-residence excused the making of a demand. West v. Chase, 3 Ind. R. 301.

2. Because he had a right to make the purchase and *259sale of the land as he did, and retain the profit for his own benefit.

C. C. Nave, for the plaintiff. J. S. Harvey, for the defendant.

In this we think he is in error. The agent, in this case, was guilty of negligence amounting to a breach of duty, in failing, when he discovered that he could not re-mortgage the property, immediately to notify Bledsoe of the fact, that he might devise ways and means to save it from sale. More than nine months elapsed after the agent, Beckett, knew that he could not re-mortgage, before the sale. By withholding information of the fact from his principal, the agent was enabled to obtain the property at a sacrifice; and to hold, as a general rule, that such a transaction could be supported, would furnish the strongest inducement to the practice of bad faith on the part of agents. Beckett must be regarded, after his purchase, as a trustee, holding the land for the benefit of Bledsoe; and as Bunion purchased without notice of the trust, it was right to abstain from disturbing his title, and to decree that the profits made by Beckett in the transaction, should be paid to Bledsoe.

The only circumstance in the case against the latter is his delay in asserting his title to the land; but his residence in a distant state, and his entire ignorance of the fraud, excuse that.

We have said that there is an error in the statement of the amount of the decree. The Court below intended to give, as is stated in the finding, to Bledsoe, the amount of rent admitted, 40 dollars; the amount for which Beckett sold the land over what he paid for it, 225 dollars; interest for two years on this latter sum, 27 dollars; making, in all, 292 dollars.

The decree will be corrected accordingly, and affirmed for that amount, with interest from its rendition below.

Per Curiam.

The decree, as above corrected, is affirmed with costs.