54 P. 216 | Or. | 1898
after making the foregoing statement of facts, delivered the opinion of the court.
Upon the facts, the case is clearly and unmistakably with the defendant Lewis McArthur La Dow. There is no pretense that the proceedings in the county court were instituted or conducted for the purpose of actually selling his interest in the premises described in the mortgage, or that Isaac, the pretended purchaser, ever paid a dollar therefor. It is undisputed that their sole purpose was to facilitate the mortgaging of the minor’s interest, and to evade the rule prevailing in this state that a guardian cannot execute a mortgage on the real estate of his ward : Trutch v. Bunnell, 11 Or. 58, 61 (4 Pac. 588 ). The attorney who conducted the proceedings says that their purpose was ‘ ‘ to remove any question as to the right to mortgage the minor’s interest. It was not a de
In brief, the facts of the transaction are that Frank E. La Dow and the guardian of Lewis McArthur La Dow, being of the opinion that it would be for the interest of the owners of the property, including the minor, to mortgage the same for money with which to construct a brick block thereon, applied through their agent, Dr. La Dow, to, and obtained from, the Jarvis-Conklin Mortgage Trust Company, a loan for that purpose; but as the interest of the minor could not be mortgaged either by himself or his guardian, and as it was desirable to begin work on the building immediately, it was arranged
It was suggested at the argument that there was no evidence that the trust company had knowledge of the character of the proceedings, or of the purpose to be accomplished thereby ; but this contention is so much at variance with the entire circumstances of the case, as well as with the positive testimony of the witnesses, that it is scarcely entitled to serious consideration. The evidence is undisputed that the company made a loan to the defendant’s guardian, and, as security therefor, received and accepted a mortgage on his property given by a party who had no right or title thereto, under an agreement that he should subsequently acquire the title by means of a proceeding in the county court. This is of itself sufficient to indicate quite conclusively that the company had knowledge, through its agents, of the char
Nor is there any merit in the contention that the plaintiff in this suit is entitled to any special consideration on the ground that he is a bona fide purchaser of the note and mortgage for value. The evidence shows that he was an officer of the trust company at the time the note and mortgage in question were executed; that it was past due when assigned and transferred to him; and there is no evidence that he ever paid anything therefor.
Indeed, it is practically admitted by plaintiff’s counsel
In support of the first point, counsel rely upon the familiar rule that a title adverse or paramount to that of the mortgagor cannot be litigated in a foreclosure suit. That doctrine has no application to this case. No question of paramount title is involved in the defense of Lewis McArthur La Dow. His defense is that, at the time of the execution of the mortgage, he was, and is now, the owner of the undivided half of the property described therein, and that the whole proceedings leading up to its execution, including those in the county court, were simply a scheme to incumber his property. His claim is not adverse to that of the mortgagor, for Isaac did not in fact pretend to have any title to the mortgaged premises. He was simply claiming to act as the representative of the defendant, and as an instrument for effecting a mortgage upon his property. When he executed the mortgage he did not design to incumber his
It is next claimed that this is a collateral attack upon the judgment and proceedings of the county court, for fraud, and for that reason must fail. But, as between the plaintiff and the defendant Lewis McArthur La Dow, these proceedings are not entitled to the force and effect
The case before us falls within the principle thus stated by Mr. Wedderburn and Lord Brougham-. The proceedings in the county court were purely fictitious, gotten up, not for the purpose of obtaining any real decree or order of such court for the sale of the property belonging to the contesting defendant, but to facilitate the accomplishment of an entirely distinct and separate purpose. It was not intended that any questions should be submitted to the court for adjudication, or that it should perform any office in the matter except to approve in a formal way what the parties had already agreed upon. The whole scheme was a pure fiction, by which the court was led to believe that it was adjudicating and determining real questions, properly within its jurisdiction, when in fact the parties had themselves settled and agreed upon just what should be done, and had no intention whatever to abide by or be governed by its decree or order. The machinery of the court was simply used by them to cover up the real truth, and to accomplish something entirely different from what the proceedings on their face purported to be. It would be an anomalous doctrine if, in a suit to foreclose a mortgage upon the property of a minor, he could not question its validity, because, in order to facilitate its execution, resort had been had to a pretended sale of his interest to the ostensible mortgagor, under some fictitious proceedings of the county court.
We conclude, therefore, that as between the plaintiff and the contesting defendant, Lewis McArthur La Dow, the proceedings of the county court are an absolute nullity, and the mortgage in question is void. In coming to this conclusion we do not desire to be understood as intimating that there was any actual fraud intended. It is no doubt true, and the evidence shows, that all the parties acted in the utmost, good faith, believing that it would be for the best interests of the minor to mortgage his property to secure funds with which to improve the same. But that fact does not help the matter, or tend in any way to give validity to the proceedings of the county court or the mortgage sought to be foreclosed : Batts v. Winstead, 77 N. C. 238. Under the laws of this state, a guardian cannot mortgage the real estate of his ward ; and what he is prohibited from doing directly he certainly cannot do indirectly, by means of a sham sale to some third person : Ferry v. Laible, 31 N. J. Eq. 566.
The defendant Lombard claims to have purchased in good faith a portion of the mortgaged premises from the successor in interest of Isaac, after the execution and recording of the mortgage in question, and after the termination of the proceedings in the county court; and
Affirmed .