128 S.E. 104 | W. Va. | 1925
The purpose of the bill is to require defendant Citizens National Bank of Connellsville, Pennsylvania (hereinafter called "the Bank") to account for certain securities pledged to it as collateral by J. V. Thompson to secure the payment to it of a debt of $50,000.00 represented by three notes executed by him and others to it, and to require it to credit on said debt of $50,000.00 the value or proceeds of such collateral; and pending the accounting, to restrain the Bank from executing a decree of sale in its favor against coal interests now owned by the Harrison-Doddridge Coal Coke Company (hereinafter called the "Coal Company") rendered by the Circuit Court of Harrison County, upon liens thereon also pledged to the Bank by Jasper Augustine as collateral security for payment of the same debt of $50,000.00; the plaintiff, Commonwealth Trust Company of Pittsburgh, Trustee, (hereinafter called the "Trust Co.") also having a trust deed or mortgage lien upon said coal interests secondary in dignity to the Bank's lien. The Bank has a debt of $50,000.00, with interest, against J. V. Thompson and others for the payment of which it is alleged it has two different classes of collateral securities, one class being certain corporate stocks or bonds pledged to it by J. V. Thompson, amounting to $90,000.00 (face value), and a deed of trust on coal lands in Green *168 County, Pa., of the value of about $129,000.00; and the other class being liens upon the coal interests of the Coal Company pledged to it by Augustine, now reduced to decretal judgment, on which lands of the Coal Company the plaintiff Trust Company also has a mortgage or deed of trust lien second in dignity and priority to the Bank's lien. The Trust Company by this bill seeks to enjoin the sale under the decree, of the Coal Company's Pittsburgh Coal on which it has its mortgage, until the Bank accounts for and credits on the $50,000.00 J. V. Thompson debt the value of the collateral pledged by him to secure payment of that debt. The Bank demurred to the bill, which demurrer was overruled, and then moved the dissolution of the injunction which had been awarded. The court refused to dissolve the injunction, and from that order refusing to dissolve, the Bank appealed. The question presented is whether the bill states a case warranting suspension of the decree of sale pending the assertion of the equities set up in the bill.
The facts alleged:
About the year 1907 Joseph E. Barnes owned a one-sixth interest in about 30,000 acres of Pittsburg Coal in Harrison and Doddridge Counties, in West Virginia; and a J. C. Cochran owned a one-half undivided interest in the same coal. Barnes mortgaged his interest to Jasper Augustine, a citizen and resident of Pennsylvania, to secure payment to him of $150,000.00; and Cochran executed a deed of trust on his one-half undivided interest to John Bassel, trustee, to secure payment of $200,000.00 to Jasper Augustine, represented by twenty notes for $10,000.00 each. At that time the Bank made the loan of the $50,000.00 (which is the primary cause of this litigation) represented by four $12,500.00 notes on which Augustine was endorser or in some way obligated. To secure payment of the $50,000.00 he assigned in writing to F. E. Markell four-fifteenths (or $40,000.00) of the Barnes mortgage, which writing was duly recorded in Harrison and Doddridge Counties; and he also pledged four of the Cochran notes secured by trust deed on the coal as above set out. Markell was the president of the Bank and was acting for it. Afterwards in 1909 Johns. V. Thompson acquired all of the interests in the coal including the undivided *169
interests of Barnes and Cochran, subject, of course, to the mortgage and trust to Augustine. In 1910 Thompson procured from Augustine releases of the mortgage and trust deed held by him on the coal, and the releases were duly recorded in the two counties. In 1912 Thompson and wife conveyed the coal to the Harrison-Doddridge Coal and Coke Company (the "Coal Company") in fee with covenants of general warranty and free from incumbrances; and a few days afterwards, on July 1st of that year the Coal Company by mortgage or deed of trust conveyed the coal, with like warranty and free from encumbrances, to the Trust Co. (plaintiff) to secure payment of bonds issued by the Coal Company aggregating the principal sum of $4,000,000.00, and it appears that $3,000,000.00 of the bonds so secured were actually issued and ultimately went into the hands of various purchasers. It does not appear by whom they are now held. The loan of $50,000.00 to the Bank was renewed from time to time, and in February, 1909, was again renewed by the execution of three notes, two for $16,000.00 each and one for $18,000.00 on which Thompson, Barnes and Cochran were either makers or endorsers. These notes were renewed, the interest, and "bonuses" in the amount of $2,000.00 being paid by Thompson until 1917. About that time or soon thereafter Thompson's financial affairs became involved, and the notes not being paid, were duly protested. In December, 1915, the Bank resorted to its collateral pledged by Augustine when the loan was originally made, and instituted its suit in Harrison County to assert its assignment of four-fifteenths of the Barnes' mortgage on the coal and its notes aggregating $40,000.00 executed by Cochran and secured by deed of trust, charging that the releases executed by Augustine were fraudulent, and that the liens on the coal so assigned to it were superior to the deed of trust of the Trust Company. The Trust Company answered and the parties went to proof. The parties defendant in that litigation were the Coal Company, Augustine, Thompson, Barnes, Cochran, the Trust Company and the executrix of the will of John Bassel (the trustee in the Cochran deed of trust). The circuit court upheld the contention of the Bank in that suit, and on appeal to this court was affirmed. *170 Citizens National Bank v. Harrison-Doddridge Coal Coke Co. etal.,
The proposition is that Thompson is the common debtor of both the Bank and the Trust Company; that when Thompson deeded the coal to the Coal Company with general warranty and free from encumbrances, he became the principal for the payment in full of the Barnes mortgage and the Cochran deed of trust and the Coal Company and the coal itself became his surety for that purpose; and when the Coal Company mortgaged the coal or executed the trust deed to the Trust Company to secure its bond issue of $4,000,000.00 Thompson also stood in the relation of principal to the Trust Company for payment of the Barnes and Cochran liens and it, the Coal Company and the coal subject to these liens became security to him as principal. Therefore Thompson being the principal debtor, the surety is entitled to the benefit of all collateral pledged by him for the payment of a debt to the creditor. Colebrooke on Collateral Securities 2nd Ed. Sec. 239; Humphreys v. Hitt, 6 Gratt. 509; Coffman v.Moore, 29 Gratt. 244; Klapworth v. Dressler,
It not being clear from the pleadings and record that plaintiff will suffer irreparable injury by enforcement of the decree, or indeed any injury, we are of the opinion that it was error to refuse to dissolve the injunction. The extraordinary writ of injunction is only warranted in clear cases of irreparable injury. It should be cautiously used. On this appeal we can consider error only in that portion of the decree which refuses to dissolve the injunction. The demurrer to the bill can only be considered as it may affect the plaintiff's right to injunctive relief. We do not say that there are no equities in the bill or that it may not be amended, for that question does not arise on this appeal.
The bill charges that the debt of the Bank is tainted with usury. The makers of the debt are the only persons who could complain of that fact.
It is charged that the decree in the former suit, affirmed on appeal by this court, was erroneous because John Bassel, the trustee in the Cochran deed of trust, had died prior to the institution of that suit and that his heirs should have been made parties or another trustee should have been appointed. His death was averred in the bill, and his executrix made party defendant. The statute, sec. 6, chap. 132, Code, requires that the personal representative of a deceased trustee shall execute the trust. Even if the decree were erroneous in that respect, it would not be subject to collateral attack.
The decree will be reversed insofar as it denies dissolution of the injunction; the injunction will be dissolved and the cause remanded.
*176Decree reversed; injunction dissolved; remanded.