78 Miss. 217 | Miss. | 1900
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an appeal from a final decree in chancery rendered against the Equitable Sureties Company and the executors of the will of J. L. Hurley, the appellants, on a bill filed by Ann T. Sheppard, answers, and evidence. As briefly as it may be perspicuously put by the writer, the case is this: The complainant, Mrs. Sheppard, is the only child and heir at law of T. W. Deason, who died January 14, 1878, intestate, the owner of the lands in dispute. Mrs. Sheppard’s mother, Josephine Deason, who was the widow of the deceased, became the administratrix, and while administratrix the widow, Josephine Deason, intermarried with C. T. Mason on August 11, 1879. Mrs. Sheppard charges in her bill that, immediately on his marriage to her mother, C. T. Mason took sole charge of all the estate of her father, Mr. Deason, and began to scheme to get the title to the lands in his own name; that he rendered only such accounts to the court as he saw fit, and never consulted the administratrix; that he collected all the rents and used them as he pleased, allowing no interference; that he fraudulently obtained a claim of a Mrs. Williams against the estate, and, by collusion with her, obtained a judgment against it in a federal court; that the purchase money of this claim was paid by Mason largely from the rents of the estate lands, and then he forced his wife, the administratrix, to apply for the sale of the lands to pay this debt, by threats and intimidation, and that, by fear of personal harm, she was
The bill further charges that the sale was made subject to-dower and homestead rights, but, as these are not controverted, they need not be dwelt on. The bill proceeds to charge that, on January 23, 1891, C. T. Mason and his wife, Josephine, mortgaged the lands to secure a loan of $7,100 from the Equitable Mortgage Company, which the bill says had actual and constructive notice of the facts averred, and that a pretended
There is no proof whatever of any fraud or collusion between C. T. Mason and Mrs. Williams, by which he bought her claim on Mr. Reason's estate. The contrary appears to be the fact, and that he bought to protect the estate, and gave time, and finally the sale was made to reimburse him. There is no proof whatever that he bought this claim with money of the Deason estate. On the contrary, what proof there is goes to show that he bought it with his own money, and that he was a man of large property in his own right, and that his widow, Josephine, formerly Mrs. Deason and afterwards Mrs. Reuter, was his-sole heir. It must be noted, also, that, in all the proceedings in the administration of Mr. Deason’s estate and of the sale of the lands, everything appears to be precisely regular on the face of the record. Every account and petition and power of attorney to sell, report of sale and petition to confirm sale were signed, and, when the law required, sworn to by Mrs. Deason as administratrix. It must be noted, also, that all and every of the charges in the bill of intimidation, duress, threats of personal violence, etc., as having been used towards Mrs. Mason are simple generalities; that they state merely the conclusions of the complainant, and do not specify anywhere any fact from which the court could judge of the correctness of such conclusions. It is also true that the testimony is silent as. to particulars and utterly fails to specify any act or word from.
There is no proof to raise, more than a mere suspicion from results, that Mr. Mason ivas scheming to get the title in his own name, or doing more than to collect his debt, except certain letters from his counsel, to be hereafter noticed. The only other thing squinting this way is that Mrs. Reuter, in answer to a question as to this, says : “ Well, his object was to get the title in his own name. I never heard him say this. This is a matter of inference. ” There is no proof whatever that W. B. Mason was not present and a bidder at the sale, or did not pay his bid, and absolutely none of any malversation or misappropriation by C. T. Mason of the funds of the estate. On the contrary, the administration appears in all respects regular, and with full accounting and proper vouchers. It is perfectly clear, also, that the Equitable Mortgage Company and its vendee, the Equitable Sureties Company, and its vendee, Mr. Hurley, were purchasers absolutely innocent of any actual knowledge or notice of any vice in the title dehors the record, and the record itself showing none. Therefore, in order to affect them with notice, or to put them on inquiry, as to matters in pais, proof is adduced as follows : That Mr. Scott, an attorney at law, was the legal adviser of Mrs. Josephine Deason while she was administratrix, before she married Mason, and of Mason after her marriage ; that he conducted the sale, preparing all the papers ; that he wrote certain letters to Mr. C. T. Mason, showing his knowledge of the purpose of Mr. Mason to get the title in himself, which letters will be hereafter adverted to ; and that he was the attorney of the Equitable Mortgage Company, and made the abstract of title on which that company made the mortgage loan, nearly seven years after the court sale, and likewise as to Hurley'when he bought, and that Scott was chargeable with notice of the defect
The only letters bearing in any degree on this case from Mr. Scott are these, all to Mr. C. T. Mason. One is of date July 25, 1882, as follows: “Has Mrs. Mason, as administratrix, sold all the personal property of the Tom Deason estate ? If anything whatever is now left unsold, send me a detailed list of such articles, with estimated value of each. Second, if there are any debts unpaid send me a list of them, with names of creditors and amounts due each. I have received the record from Oxford, and desire to get your claim against the estate in shape for collection. ’ ’ This letter was long before the petition for the sale of the land, and has no significance in fact to the question in hand. It was a very proper letter from counsel advising and conducting the administration of an estate and representing an undoubtedly valid claim against it. Another is of date October 26, 1882, about six months before the peti
Another letter, dated June 11, 1881, is this: “Inclosed find the deed from Mrs. Mason to your brother, which you can have her sign and acknowledge, and you can get your brother to deed the property back to you, after which I will write the deed for one-half of it at some future time to Ann Deason. The deed from your brother it would be well to get at once, as
Mr. Scott was not made a, witness by either party, nor were Mr. Mason’s letters to him on the subject of Mr. Scott’s letters to him produced or called for by either side, so Mr. Scott’s letters must be construed as best they may be by their own context.
His abstract, approved by Messrs. Miller, Smith & Hirsh, of course refers to the record of the court sale as a link in the chain of title, and this abstract, so approved, was the .basis of the loan from the Equitable Mortgage Company, and the trust deed to secure it, under which appellants claim.
On the case presented this court concludes that the decision must rest on the question as to how far, and under what circumstances, notice to an agent or attorne}'- is notice to the principal. In this inquiry the whole matter must turn on examination of the facts, in the light of the legal principles universally recognized, that the law favors innocent purchasers, and that even a mala fide purchaser from a bona fide purchaser gets a good
A treatment of all the phases of the doctrine of notice to agents will be found in 1 Am. & Eng. Enc. L., pp. 1144— 1161, and the citations are full, and, so far as we have verified them, quite accurate. In all of them, as in case of all principles, the courts are in separate droves, following the lead of certain original decisions on the various phases of the doctrine, and, as usual, it will be seen, as I think, that the departures from the main road are simply near cuts to avoid hard cases. Basic principles ordinarily ignore individual hardship, and are laid down for the general good of societj'- at large, and to secure the greatest good to the greatest number. They are fixed to promote confidence in the multiplied transactions of business life, and too often they are disturbed by modern courts to avoid particular hardship, and thus, to avoid harsh results to one individual, they not only inflict them on another equally innocent, but also on the body politic.
The foregoing propositions are stated here because, in one view or another, some, or all of them, may perhaps seem to be developed by this record, and we state them to exclude the conclusion that the opinion is based on any one of them. Without now committing ourselves to any of them, except, of course, the first, which is the bottom principle of all of them, and expressly negativing any idea of committal to the view that any knowledge of the agent obtained previous to the commencement of his agency may or may not affect his principal, we proceed to state the precise ground upon which we decide this case, and on which we all agree. We refer the bar to the notes of Mr. Freeman in Melms v. Brewing Co. (Wis.), 57 Am. St. Rep., 914-919, s.c. 66 N. W., 518, for an exhaustive analysis of authorities, and the writer refers to his conclusion on page 919. It is beyond dispute that the utmost limit to which the courts have gone in the line of present inquiry, in order to affect the principal by the antecedent knowledge of the agent, is to show, by “clear and satisfactory proof,’’ that the antecedent knowledge was present in his mind while negotiating the new transaction. In re Distilled Spirits, 11 Wall., 356; 20 L. Ed., 167; Constant v. University, 111 N. Y., 604; 19 N. E., 631; 2 L. R. A., 734; Bank v. Chase, 72 Me., 226; Melms v. Brewing Co., 93 Wis., 153; 66 N. W., 518; 2 Pom. Eq. Jur., C72. From these authorities it also appears that the courts will presume forgetfulness until overcome by evidence, unless the occurrence was so recent as to make it incredible. In the case from 72 Me., 228, 229, it is held that “ the knowledge must be present to the mind of the agent when acting for the principal; so fully in his mind that it could not have been at the time forgotten by him.” No court can say this of any lawyer in reference to any transaction or incident
Reversed and cause remanded.