35 W. Va. 287 | W. Va. | 1891
On tbe 24th day of May, 1890, 'William M. Dunlap, trustee, by leave of the court, filed in the Circuit Court of Ohio county, in open court, his bill of complaint, verified by affidavit, against Burton Hedges and Ellen Hedges, his wife, C. B. Hedges, the McCormick Harvesting Machine Company, and Robert B. Wayt, together with certain exhibits, accompanied with proof of service of the notices upon the defendants Burton Hedges and C. B. Hedges as to the time of filing said bill, and that the appointment of a special receiver would be applied for as soon as the application could be heard for the purposes prayed for in the bill. The defendants upon whom said notice was served appeared by counsel, and the hearing of said application was fixed for Monday, May 26, 1890.
The plaintiff in said bill alleged, among other things, that on the 4th day of December, 1883, said Robert B. Wayt sold, and he and his wife conveyed, to said Burton Hedges, a farm in Ohio county, containing one hundred and seventy 39-100 acres; that on the same day said Burton Hedges and wife executed a deed of trust on said premises to secure the purchase-money thereof, evidenced by nine promissory notes of the said Burton Hedges, all bearing date on the 4th day of December, 1883, and payable to the order of the defendant Robert B. Wayt, the first eight of which notes were for the sum of eight hundred dollars each, and were payable, respectively, with interest from date, in one, two, three, four, five, six, seven and eight years from date thereof. The ninth note was for the sum of eight hundred and twenty three dollars, and forty cents, payable, with interest, nine years from the said date, which deed of trust was duly admitted to record; that some time after making said deed of trust it was discovered that the same was defective, by reason of the omission of an attesting clause at the conclusion thereof, and to remedy said defect a new deed of trust was executed by the same grantors to J. S. Cochran, trustee, upon the same property, dated April 13,1885, to secure
The plaintiff charges that the said claim of Robert B. "Wayt for the amount of said last four notes constitutes the first lien on said property; the said judgment of the McCormick Harvesting Machine Company for fifty three dollars and seventy five cents, with interest and costs, constitutes the second lien on said property; and the said judgment of C. B. Hedges for eight thousand three hundred and thirty seven dollars and eighty six cents, with interest and costs, if it be a valid lien at all, is the third and last lien thereon ; and he prayed that a special receiver might be appointed to take charge of the said property, to care for, rent out, and protect the same, and to collect, receive, and preserve the rents and profits thereof until said property should be sold b.y order of the court; — that the claim and pretension of the said C. B. Hedges, in regard to the superiority of the lien of hisjsaid judgment, might be considered and determined; and that the said C. B. Hedges, his agents and attorneys, might be perpetually enjoined from setting up the said claim in any way to the injury of the plaintiff as trustee, or of his cestui que trust, the said Robert B. Wayt; and that if the said property should, at any sale which might thereafter be made by order of the court, not bring enough money to pay in full the claim of R. B. Wayt, with the interest thereon, a decree might be entered requiring the said C. B. Hedges to pay the deficiency.
This bill was verified by affidavit, and neither of the defendants ever tendered or filed an answer denying its allegations.
Tire first en-or assigned and relied upon by the appellant, C. B. Hedges, is that the plaintiff’s bill, and the affidavits of appellant and Burton Hedges, filed in said cause, show that the plaintiff sold the real estate mentioned and described in the bill and exhibits in' said cause to appellant on the 8th day of April, 1890, and that at or shortly after said date appellant took possession of said real estate, and leased the same to said Burton Hedges, who was occupying the same under said lease when said receiver was appointed, thus leaving nothing for said plaintiff to do but to collect the purchase-money for the real estate.
It is true the plaintiff, as trustee, on the 8th day of April, 1890, sold said land at public auction to the appellant; but it is also true that, but for the failure and refusal of the appellant to comply with the terms of the sale by paying the purchase-money, and by the assertion on his part of a claim that his judgment-lien was entitled to priority over the trust lien under which said sale was made and under which he purchased, the intervention of a receiver would not have been necessary, and his appointment would not have been assigned as error by the appellant.
The facts set forth by the plaintiff in his bill, and which are not controverted by any answer,- seem to me to present a case which peculiarly calls for the appointment of a receiver. In the case of Beverley v. Brooke, 4 Gratt. 208, Judge Baldwin, in delivering the opinion of the court, discusses
Barton, in his Chancery Practice (volume 1, p. 480) says: “ The object of the appointment of a receiver is to preserve the status of the property until there can be an adjudication of conflicting claims to or interest in itaiul on page 482 he says : “ The immediate moving cause for the appointment of a receiver is that the subject of litigation may be preseiwed from waste, loss or destruction, so that there maybe some harvest, some fruits to gather, after the labors of the controversy are over.”
In the case under consideration, the appellant, by claiming to be entitled to the entire proceeds of said sale by reason of his judgment, created the controversy in reference to the priorities of the lienholders, and necessitated the action of the court of which he complains. In the case of Fleming v. Holt, 12 W. Va. 143, point 4 of the syllabus, the Court held that such a suit (meaning a suit in equity for specific performance) may be brought agaiustthe purchaser of land sold at public auction by the trustee, on the refusal of the purchasér to comply with the terms of sale, without the trustee selling the land again at auction,
The object of the bill filed in this case by said trustee was the appointment of a receiver to take charge of said property, and to rent and receive the rents, and preserve thé same until the property could be properly sold by the order of. the court, and until the claim of said C. B. Hedges in regard to the superiority of the lien of his said judgment could be heard and determined. By asserting that claim, the said C. B. Hedges proclaimed to those present at the sale the existence of a controversy between the owners of said respective liens; and as men, as a general rule, are averse to purchasing litigation, said claim had a tendency to deter others from bidding, and thereby to prevent the property from bringing what it would under different circumstances; and, although it may be said that those wishing to. purchase had the opportunity of resorting to the records and making the examination for themselves as to the validity and priority of said trusts and judgment-liens, yet, if the time had been allowed for such an examition in this instance, the records would have disclosed that the trust-lien was the oldest in point of time, and apparently entitled to the priority, and the party would have been left to conjecture and uneertainity as to the grounds upon which the claim of priority was asserted by said C. B. Hedges — all of which would have a tendency to depress the price, and deter bidders.
In the disposition of property at public auction, equity always discountenances anything that has a tendency to prevent a fair sale, and will not, as a general rule, allow a purchaser to obtain the title to property for less than its value by resorting to unfair means' or representations; but, as the property at this sale appears to have brought a sufficient amount to pay off and discharge said trust-lien which said trustee claims is entited to priority, he does not formally ask in his bill that said sale may be treated as a nullity, or that the same may be rescinded, but, without praying a specific execution of a contract between himself and C. B. Hedges as purchaser at said sale, he merely asks that a special receiver be appointed to care for the property
Said trustee was proceeding, in pursuance of the request of his cestui que trust, to make sale of the said real estate under said trust-deed as the property of Burton Hedges, and, when it was knocked off to C. B. Hedges at a sum sufficient to pay off’ and discharge said trust debt, the said purchaser claimed that he was entited to the entire purchase-money, and refused for that reason to comply with the terms of the sale.
Under these circumstances, it is manifest that the trustee still retained the legal title to the land described in said trust, and has not in any manner released said trust-lien, but still had the right to look to the land of said Burton Hedges for satisfaction of the debt secured in said deed of trust. This being the case, and it having been alleged that said Burton Hedges is the owner of no property that can be reached and subjected by execution, which allegation is not contradicted either by answer or affidavit filed in the cause, and it being further shown by the allegations of the bill, supported by affidavits, that said Burton Hedges was suffering said real estate to deteriorate in value by allowing the fences to go down, and that his manner of cultivating the same was wasteful and destructive, a case is presented which would authorize the appointment of a receiver to take charge of the property, and to rent the same, and receive the rents, until such time as the priorities of the liens asserted could be ascertained and determined.
The duty of the trustee, under these circumstances, is plainly defined in 2 Minor, Inst. p. 286, as follows : “It is the trustee’s duty to forbear to sell, and to ask the aid and instructions of a court of equity, in all cases where the amount of the debt is unliquidated or in good faith disputed, where any cloud rests upon the title, where a reasonable price can not be obtained, or where, for any i’eason, a sale is likely to be accompanied by a sacrifice of the property, which, at the cost of some delay, may be obviated.” Bryan v. Stump, 8 Gratt. 247.
It may be true that the defendant C. B. Hedges is worth
For these reasons we are of opinion that the court below committed no error in the appointment of the receiver with the powers and authority conferred upon him by the decree complained of; and said decree must be affirmed, with costs.
Aeeirmei).