15 Tenn. App. 138 | Tenn. Ct. App. | 1932
This record presents a contest between a beneficiary and trustee under a trust deed to secure a debt, on the one hand, and the maker of the trust deed, on the other hand, with respect to the ownership of certain rents collected from the trust property by a receiver appointed by the Chancellor in this cause.
The Chancellor held that the defendant Morris Bart, the maker of the trust deed, is entitled to the rents in controversy, and from the decree so adjudging the complainants, Cumberland Trust Company and W.A. DeGroat, trustee, prayed an appeal to the Supreme Court which was granted by the Chancellor and perfected by the appellants, but the Supreme Court transferred the case to this court, where it has been heard and taken under advisement by the court.
The controversy involved in this appeal arose out of the facts which will now be stated.
Defendant Morris Bart filed a voluntary petition in bankruptcy in the United States District Court at Knoxville and was by that court duly adjudicated a bankrupt on November 22, 1928, and one Adolph A. Schmid was thereupon appointed trustee of said bankrupt's estate. Thereafter, viz: on May 25, 1929, the bankrupt, Morris Bart, was, in said bankruptcy proceeding, duly discharged from the payment of all his provable debts "as of the date of his adjudication, November 22, 1928."
At the time he filed his aforesaid petition in bankruptcy, Morris Bart was in possession of certain city lots fronting on the east side of Gay Street in Knoxville, Tennessee, to-wit: Street Numbers 402, 404, 406, 408, and 410, with a building thereon occupied by tenants for business purposes and known as the Newcomer Building and Annex, *140 which property passed into the possession of the aforesaid trustee, Adolph A. Schmid, and was in his possession, as a part of the estate of the bankrupt, Morris Bart, until February 28, 1929. On February 14, 1929, Schmid, the trustee, reported to the bankruptcy court that the property known as the Newcomer Building and Annex (which general description includes the lots on which the building stands) was encumbered with a vendor's lien and mortgage debts to an aggregate sum of about $300,000, and that, in the opinion of the trustee, said property would not sell for a sum in excess of $250,000, and that it was, therefore, advisable that he, as trustee, decline to administer said property, and abandon same. After notice to all the creditors of the bankrupt, the aforesaid report and recommendation of the trustee was adopted by the Referee in Bankruptcy on February 28, 1929, without objection on the part of complainants herein or any other creditors, and Adolph A. Schmid, the trustee, thereupon abandoned the possession of said Newcomer Building and Annex, and since that time he has disclaimed title thereto.
On the following day, viz: March 1, 1929, the Cumberland Trust Company, a Tennessee corporation, and W.A. DeGroat filed the present bill against Morris Bart and wife Sadie Bart, alleging that on May 9, 1928, defendants Morris Bart and wife executed to complainant W.A. DeGroat, trustee, a deed of trust upon certain real property described in the bill (and which is the same property to which we have referred as the "Newcomer Building and Annex") for the purpose of securing a note to complainant Cumberland Trust Company in the sum of $37,125, dated May 9, 1928, and due one year after its date; that said deed of trust provides that the defendants shall pay all the taxes which may be lawfully assessed against the said premises before the same become delinquent, and that a failure to pay said taxes and exhibit the tax receipts to the beneficiary shall, at the option of the beneficiary, render the entire indebtedness due and payable, and that said deed of trust further provides that in the event the defendants shall be in default for a period of thirty days in the payment of interest on the vendor's lien notes, then all the indebtedness therein described shall become due and payable.
Complainants further allege in the bill that the premises conveyed in said trust deed are encumbered by a vendor's lien in favor of Mrs. Harriott W. Ransom for a balance, as complainants understand, of $145,000, and that the defendants have failed to pay the interest thereon as it became due, and that the indebtedness to Mrs. Ransom is also long past due.
It is further alleged in the bill that complainants hold second liens or mortagages upon the above described property to the extent of approximately $150,000, which liens are inferior to the aforesaid *141 vendor's lien in favor of Mrs. Harriott W. Ransom for approximately $145,000; that recently the defendant Morris Bart entered into voluntary bankruptcy in the United States District Court at Knoxville, Tennessee, and has been so adjudged; that said Morris Bart is insolvent and unable to pay either the principal or the interest of the indebtedness resting upon the said property, and that he is unable to pay the taxes which have become long since delinquent.
The complainants further allege in their bill that the bankrupt court, realizing that the recognized liens upon said property exceeded the value thereof, declined to administer upon said property, and has thereby left the holders of the liens to their legal remedies; that the report of the trustee in bankruptcy showed that the recognized liens against the said property amount to at least $300,000 and that the property is not worth exceeding $250,000, and in view of this fact and of the insolvency of the defendant Morris Bart, and in view of the fact that the bankrupt court has declined to take over the said property and administer the same, there is now no one to rent the said property and collect the rents, and in view of the fact that it will be necessary to apply all the rents that may be due and collectible upon the secured indebtedness in order to secure full payment thereof, that it is necessary to appoint a receiver to collect and hold the said rents pending the foreclosure proceedings which are now or will very shortly be instituted for the sale of the said property.
After the usual prayer for process and waiver of answer under oath, the prayer of the bill is as follows:
"That pending the foreclosure of the liens upon the said property (and complainants allege that they have the right to either foreclose by advertising for 30 days and selling under their trust deed, or by foreclosure sale in the courts, either of which methods will necessarily take anywhere from 30 to 60 days leaving the property in the meantime without any one to look after it and collect the rents), it is necessary to immediately appoint a receiver for the purpose of looking after and preserving the property and collecting the rents therefrom. They, therefore, pray for the immediate appointment of a receiver and that he may be instructed to collect the rents and hold the same pending the foreclosure of the property under the liens thereon."
Complainants also "pray for general relief," and they state that "this is the first application for the appointment of a receiver in this case."
On the day the complainants filed their foregoing bill (March 1, 1929) an order was entered in the cause as follows:
"In this cause, the complainants having this day presented to the court a bill, which is sworn to, praying for the appointment *142 of a receiver to take care of the rent and collect the rents arising from the property described in the bill:
"And it appearing to the court from the allegation of the bill that this is a proper case for the appointment of a receiver, the court is pleased to appoint H.T. Kern receiver, under a bond of $5000; who, upon the execution of said bond, will at once take charge of the property described in the bill and collect the rents arising therefrom and hold the same pending the further orders of the court."
The receiver thus appointed made bond as directed, took possession of the Newcomer Building and Annex and operated same and collected rents therefrom until the confirmation of a sale of said property, made pursuant to decrees of the Chancery Court of Knox County in a suit brought by Harriott W. Ransom for the enforcement of the aforementioned vendor's lien on said property. The record is indefinite as to the total amount of rents the receiver collected from said building. The record shows that up to May 24, 1929, the receiver, H.T. Kern, had collected rents amounting to $4,827.90, and, after deducting the expenses of operating the building, had on hand $3342.07, with all bills paid to that date, but on the day last named the receiver was allowed $200 on account of compensation for his services, thus leaving a fund of $3142.07 in his hands.
It appears by stipulation of record that the receiver appointed in this case remained in possession of the Newcomer Building and Annex from March 1, 1929, to July 1, 1929, but the state of his accounts after May 24, 1929, is not disclosed by the record before us, further than the necessary inference from the recitals of the final decree that there is a fund in the hands of the receiver which had accrued from rents, and which is the subject-matter of this litigagation, but the amount of which is not mentioned.
On September 26, 1929, defendant Morris Bart filed an answer to complainant's bill, in which answer he admitted the execution by him of a deed of trust to complainant W.A. DeGroat upon the property described in the bill to secure a note to complainant Cumberland Trust Company for "certain indebtedness," which deed of trust was inferior to the vendor's lien mentioned in the bill. Defendant did not admit that the provisions of the deed of trust were correctly stated in the bill, but on this point defendant said that "the deed of trust itself is the best evidence of the recitations, conditions and terms thereof, and this defendant expressly refers to it as to its provisions."
Defendant alleged in his answer that the property described in said trust deed had been sold pursuant to decrees of the Chancery Court of Knox County in proceedings for the foreclosure of the aforesaid ven- *143 *144 *145
*146 *147
bankruptcy did not affect complainant's lien;"
(2) "Complainant's trust deed creates an express lien on the rents as well as on the land;"
(3) "The mortgage securing complainant's debt in any event created an equitable lien on the rents;"
(4) "Complainants are not estopped and res adjudicate does not apply" as claimed by defendant Morris Bart in the amendment to his answer.
Our views with respect to the questions thus raised on behalf of the appellants will now be stated.
Rents and profits are as much property as the estate out of which they arise, and as such they are equally the subject of assignment, or encumbrance by way of mortgage or conveyance in trust to secure debt. 41 C.J., p. 375; Annotation, 4 A.L.R., 1405; Annotation, 55 A.L.R., 1020.
If complainant Cumberland Trust Company had a valid fixed lien upon the rents of the Newcomer Building and Annex at the time Morris Bart was adjudicated a bankrupt, such lien was not destroyed or defeated by Bart's discharge in bankruptcy. See Bankruptcy Act of 1898, sec. 67d; Sullivan v. Myer,
But, as we have seen, it is contended on behalf of defendant, and presumably was held by the Chancellor, that complainant Trust Company had no lien upon the rents in controversy.
On the other hand, complainants insist that the aforesaid trust deed of May 9, 1928, to W.A. DeGroat, trustee, "not only pledges the land, but pledges the rents of the land as security for complainant's debt."
Said trust deed conveyed the land therein described, "together with all and singular the appurtenances and hereditaments thereto belonging," to secure a note for $37,125, due May 9, 1929 (but with provisions for acceleration of maturity upon failure of the debtor to pay taxes before delinquency or upon default for a period of thirty days in the payment of interest on the vendor's lien debt), and provided that, on default in the payment of said note, the trustee would, at the request of the beneficiary, and after advertising for a period of thirty days, sell the property described in the trust deed, for cash, to the highest bidder, for the satisfaction of (1) the expense of executing the trust, (2) taxes and insurance premiums due and unpaid, (3) the principal and interest of the debt secured, and (4) the balance, if any, to be paid to the grantors, their heirs, executors and administrators.
The said trust deed contained further provisions as follows:
"IT IS COVENANTED AND AGREED by and between the Grantors and the Trustee and the Beneficiary, that so long as *148 any part of the principal or interest indebtedness herein secured shall remain unpaid, the Grantors agree: —
1. The Grantors will execute or procure any further necessary assurance of the title of said premises as they may be reasonably required to do by the beneficiary.
2. The Beneficiary may, if it shall so elect, foreclose this instrument as a mortgage in any court of competent jurisdiction, thru the Trustee, and shall be entitled to the immediate appointment of a receiver for the collection of the rents arising from the premises herein conveyed during the pendency of such foreclosure action; that the right to foreclose this instrument as a mortgage shall be cumulative and shall not be deemed to be a waiver of the right to advertise and sell under the Trustee's advertisement of sale."
Said trust deed contains no pledge of the rents of the property therein described, unless such pledge may be implied from the provision last above quoted.
"A mortgage on real property will not ordinarily embrace the rents, issues, and profits arising from the property unless these are expressly made subject to it." 41 C.J., p. 484. See also Easley v. Tarkington, 5 Baxt., 592; Note, 27 Am. St. R., 793; Winans v. Smith,
And again: "A mortgage which does not expressly pledge the rents and profits of the mortgaged premises as security for the payment of the debt gives the mortgagee no lien or claim on them, and so long as the mortgagor remains in possession he is entitled to receive them to his own use or to assign them without liability to account to the mortgagee for them." 41 C.J., p. 627, citing a large number of cases from many jurisdictions. See also Easley v. Tarkington. supra; Chadbourn v. Henderson, 2 Baxt., 460.
Complainants insist that the last quoted provision of the aforesaid deed of trust created an express lien on the rents of the Newcomer Building and Annex. We do not think so. Under this provision, the right to a receiver to collect rents was conditioned upon the commencement of a suit, in a court of competent jurisdiction, to foreclose the trust deed as a mortgage — such suit to be brought "thru the trustee," pursuant to an election by the beneficiary to foreclose in this manner. The trust deed did not vest the complainants with the right to have a receiver for the collection of rents except "during the pendency of such foreclosure action." Construing a similar provision in a real estate mortgage, the Supreme Court of Iowa held (and we think correctly) that no lien on the rents was thereby created *149
until a foreclosure suit was commenced and such receiver appointed. Whitesides v. Morris,
Complainants have at no time sought to foreclose the trust deed in question. They were made defendants to the suit of Mrs. Harriott W. Ransom in which her vendor's lien was foreclosed, but they merely filed an answer in that case and sought no affirmative relief. The complainant in the bill in that case did not seek, and could not properly have obtained, a receiver to collect rents, for it has been held in this State that where a complainant seeks to enforce his vendor's lien a receiver will not be appointed; that it is no part of the contract of sale, either express or implied, that the vendor shall appropriate anything but the land itself by sale for satisfaction of his purchase money. Morford v. Hamner, 3 Baxt., 391.
It is said in 41 C.J. at page 484, that "a clause authorizing the appointment of a receiver to collect rents and profits upon foreclosure has been held to be, in effect, a mortgage of the rents and profits accruing until the redemption period has expired." The sole authority in support of the text just quoted is Townsend v. Wilson,
But it is claimed for complainants that, in any event, the mortgage securing complainant's debt created an equitable lien on the rents. In the course of the argument for complainants in support of the provision just stated, counsel seek to invoke the common law rule that "a trust deed or mortgage conveys the legal title to the trustee or mortgagee and he is entitled to immediate possession unless the instrument contains a contrary provision" (Brier Hill Collieries v. Gernt,
However, it is a well-established principle of equity jurisprudence that where mortgaged premises are insufficient as security, the mortgagor is insolvent, and there is danger of wasting the income of the estate, the mortgage may operate as an equitable lien on the rents, which lien the mortgagee may enforce by securing the appointment of a receiver pending foreclosure. 41 C.J., p. 628; Bidwell v. Paul, 5 Baxt., 693; Schmid v. Baum's Home of Flowers,
But the rents can be impounded only in a suit to foreclose the mortgage, and as an incident to the foreclosure of the mortgage, and cannot properly be made the subject of an independent suit. Moore v. Knight, 6 Lea., 427, 438-9; Sage v. Memphis Little Rock Railroad Co.,
And in such case the lien of the mortgagee on the rents dates only from the appointment of the receiver, and the receiver's right to collect rents extends only to such as are unpaid at the time of his appointment. Wyckoff v. Scofield,
Moreover, an equitable lien on the rents of mortgaged premises (as distinguished from a lien created by express contract) pre-supposes an existing debt owing by the mortgagor to the mortgagee, and it is solely because of the insufficiency of the primary security, viz: the mortgaged land, to satisfy the debt that a court of equity will impound the rents at the suit of the mortgagee. Such so-called "equitable lien" comes into being at the time the court assumes jurisdiction of the collection of the rents, and not before. Wyckoff v. Scofield, supra.
All of the debts of the bankrupt defendant Morris Bart to complainant Cumberland Trust Company were discharged in the aforesaid bankruptcy proceeding, and at the time the present bill was filed by complainants on March 1, 1929, to impound the rents of the Newcomer Building and Annex, defendant Morris Bart owed complainant Cumberland Trust Company nothing, as his discharge in bankruptcy related to November 22, 1928. The bankruptcy law does not continue a dischargeable debt for the purpose of permitting a lien to be created after the adjudication, but merely preserves the liens in existence at the date of the adjudication. In re Lineberry, 183 Fed., 338; Bowen v. Keller,
Defendant Morris Bart had a right to the possession of the Newcomer Building and Annex when the trustee abandoned same on February 28, 1929. "It has long been a recognized principle of bankrupt law that a trustee is not bound to take property of an onerous or unprofitable character, or property which will be a burden instead of a benefit. . . . Where the trustee elects not to take the property or right of the bankrupt and charge the estate with it, the property and right, whatever it is, remains in the bankrupt." 1 Loveland on Bankruptcy (4 Ed.), sec. 375. See also 3 R.C.L., p. 230; Sessions v. Romadka,
In the last cited opinion, the court said:
"The assignee of a living bankrupt, however, may decline to take or interfere with such property as he deems onerous or worthless. The property so rejected by the assignee does not thereby become derelict, to vest in the first appropriator. The rights and obligations which the assignee declines to enforce or notice do not thereby vanish into nothingness.
"`Such items of estate, corporeal or incorporeal, as the assignee declines to appropriate or utilize, remain the property of the bankrupt, subject always to the superior right and title of the assignee. Notwithstanding the adjudication and assignment under the bankrupt act, there is left in the bankrupt a right which makes a title good against all the world except his assignee and creditors. These may appropriate the entire title and interest, and so divest the bankrupt completely; but what they decline to appropriate remains with the bankrupt. The title does not fall to the ground between the two. If the assignee or creditors will not take it, no one else can appropriate it. The bankrupt can defend or enforce it against all others.'"
Under the circumstances disclosed by the record, the complainants were not entitled to the appointment of a receiver in the instant case; and the mere fact that a receiver was appointed and collected rents pending the litigation could not create a lien on such rents. Bowen v. Keller, 124 Am. St. R., 164, 168, supra. The defendant Morris Bart "was entitled to retain possession and consequently to the rents." Chadburn v. Henderson, 2 Baxt., 460, 463, supra.
We are inclined to agree with the contention of appellants that the failure of complainants to file a cross-bill in the suit brought by Harriott W. Ransom to foreclose her vendor's lien did not work a technical estoppel upon appellants, or afford a predicate for a plea of res adjudicata on behalf of defendant Morris Bart; but in view of our holdings already stated with respect to the other questions *152 raised by the assignments of error, a discussion of this question would be purely academic.
It results that appellant's assignments of error are overruled and the decree of the Chancellor is affirmed, and a decree will be entered accordingly. The costs of the cause, including the costs of the appeal, will be adjudged against the Cumberland Trust Company and the surety on its appeal bond.
The cause will be remanded to the Chancery Court of Knox County in order that the receiver may there pass his accounts, the receivership be closed, and the funds paid out under proper orders and decrees of that Court.
Crownover and DeWitt, JJ., concur.