MILADIN v. ISTRATE, ADMINISTRATOR OF ESTATE OF ISTRATE, DECEASED, ETC.
No. 18,506
Appellate Court of Indiana
Filed April 29, 1954
Rehearing denied June 15, 1954
Transfer denied October 22, 1954. Reported in 118 N. E. 2d 381.
For the reasons given herein we are of the opinion that the court erred in its conclusions of law, and that the judgment rendered by it is contrary to law.
Judgment reversed, with instructions to sustain appellants’ motion for a new trial.
NOTE.—Reported in 118 N. E. 2d 381.
Henry Springer, of Butler, Hugh G. Sanders, of Auburn, and Edgar W. Atkinson, and James A. Angelone, of counsel, both of Auburn, for appellee.
CRUMPACKER, C. J.—This is a suit originally brought by the appellee‘s decedent, Tudor Istrate, to foreclose a mortgage on nine and one-half acres of land near the city of Garret, DeKalb County, Indiana, occupied by the appellant in whom the legal title now rests. The complaint proceeds upon the theory that on November 10, 1936, the involved land belonged to Albert and Nova Cole and was encumbered by a mortgage in the sum of $4500 belonging to the plaintiff Tudor Istrate. That on said November 10, 1936, when the plaintiff was in his native land of Roumania, the defendant Charles Miladin, with the purpose of defrauding and cheating the plaintiff out of said mortgage, procured some person unknown to the plaintiff to forge his name to a false and unauthorized assignment thereof to the plaintiff‘s son, Charles Istrate. After procuring such assignment the defendant Miladin, in furtherance of his fraudulent
The defendant Miladin answered this complaint agreeable to Rule 1-3 and by various special answers pleading the six and fifteen year statutes of limitation, laches, payment, unjust enrichment, the rights of an occupying claimant, the Trading with the Enemy Act, and finally a cross-complaint in which he seeks to quiet his title to the involved land against the plaintiff‘s said mortgage. Before these issues could be tried the plaintiff died and his son, Costin Istrate, as administrator of his estate, was substituted for him. Upon request the trial court found the facts specially and stated conclusions of law thereon favorable to the plaintiff, decreed the foreclosure of the mortgage in dispute and from such judgment the defendant Miladin appeals.
It appears that on January 4, 1952, the appellant procured an order of court requiring Tudor Istrate to appear before its official court reporter in the city of Auburn, Indiana on January 17, 1952, to be conditionally examined by appellant‘s counsel. Upon a showing that the said Tudor Istrate was in Roumania when said order was made and that it would
The appellant next contends that the record before us reveals a case that should not have been entertained by the trial court as a matter of public policy. The only reason advanced in support of this assertion is that the appellee‘s decedent, Tudor Istrate, was a citizen of Roumania and died there before this case was tried. That the proceeds of the judgment herein, if affirmed, must be sent to the decedent‘s administrator in Roumania, a communistic country whose ideology is basically and fundamentally incompatible with ours and thereby the communistic cause will be enriched contrary to the best interests of the State of Indiana. In this appeal however we are not concerned with the distribution of the proceeds of the judgment involved. That matter rests exclusively in the jurisdiction of the DeKalb Circuit Court and should the appellee, in discharge of his trust as administrator of Tudor Istrate‘s estate, seek to send money into communistic Roumania it may be that the dictates of public policy will intervene.
“That the purported assignment of said mortgage was made without the knowledge, consent or direction of the said Tudor Istrate, and that the signature to such assignment is not the signature of the said Tudor Istrate, nor made with any authority, knowledge or consent of the said Tudor Istrate, but that the signature of the said Tudor Istrate on said assignment of mortgage was placed thereon by some person or persons with intent to defraud the said Tudor Istrate and deprive him of the ownership of said note and mortgage.”
There seems to us to be ample evidence to support this finding. Three witnesses, each of whom is familiar with Tudor Istrate‘s signature, testified that the signature appearing on said assignment is not his. On November 10, 1936, Tudor Istrate was in Roumania and could not have appeared before a notary public in DeKalb County on that day for the purpose of executing said assignment and the notary, who ostensibly took his acknowledgment to the document, refused to identify the signature as genuine. Charles Istrate had no correspondence with his father in reference to an
The finding above quoted, being supported by evidence, compels the conclusion that the estate of Tudor Istrate still owns the note and mortgage in suit and, as the debt so evidenced fell due January 27, 1938, said mortgage constituted a valid lien on the real estate involved when this action was commenced unless paid in the meantime or barred by the statute of limitations.
The facts pertinent to the question of payment may be summarized as follows: The note and mortgage were left in the possession of Charles Istrate when his father, who owned them, went to Roumania. The note is endorsed with the signature “Tudor Istrate” which the undisputed evidence shows to be a forgery and the court so found. The records of DeKalb County show a marginal release of the mortgage involved signed by Charles Istrate, the false assignee thereof. The undisputed evidence further shows that the signature of Charles Istrate to said release was also forged and the court so found. Said note and mortgage were placed in Charles Istrate‘s hands for the sole purpose of collecting the money due thereon and, although Tudor Istrate then owed his son Charles $5,000, the mortgage was not given to him in payment of or to apply on said debt or to secure the same. Charles made no effort to collect the debt evidenced by said note and mortgage but in
The appellant contends that when Tudor Istrate turned said note over to his son there was a pre-existing debt owing by the father to the son which was automatically discharged, pro tanto, thereby constituting a valuable consideration for a transfer of ownership of said note which carried with it ownership of the mortgage security and therefore anything that happened subsequently is of no concern to the appellee. It seems to us that the fallacy of this argument lies in the fact that the court, supported by evidence, found that Tudor Istrate‘s endorsement on the note is a forgery and, as said note is payable to his order, the mere tradition of the instrument did not constitute a negotiation thereof whereby Charles Istrate became its owner.
This brings us to consideration of appellant‘s contention that both the six and fifteen year statutes of limitation have run against the maintenance of this suit. The six year statute pertains to relief against fraud while the fifteen year statute concerns only those actions not limited by any other statute.
The appellant further contends that this suit is barred by the doctrine of laches because the questioned
The appellant insists however that the record is totally devoid of evidence tending to connect him with fraud or wrongdoing in any particular pertinent to the appellee‘s case and the court made no finding so involving him. It is true the evidence is silent as to whether the appellant actually procured the execution of the forged assignment of November 10, 1936, or the spurious marginal release of May 9, 1939. Even so
In this connection the court found that the appellant, who is now in possession of said real estate, does not hold the same in good faith against the appellee‘s mortgage. In other words, when the appellant purchased the property he was not innocent of the fraud that apparently vested title in Charles Istrate, his grantor. The evidence discloses that on November 10, 1936, when the forged assignment was executed and recorded, Tudor Istrate was in Roumania and his two sons, Charles and Costin, were in California. The only interested persons who were in DeKalb County on that date were Tudor‘s daughter and her husband, the appellant. There is also evidence justifying an inference that Charles Istrate, with whom his father had placed the note and mortgage for collection, left them with the appellant when he went to California about two years prior to the date of the forged assignment. At any rate it conclusively appears that the appellant was in possession of said mortgage after the date of its purported assignment and before its alleged release and, as such assignment is endorsed upon the back of the mortgage, he knew that his father-in-law was in Roumania and could not have appeared before a notary public in DeKalb County and acknowledged the same on November 10, 1936, as the notary‘s jurat purports. This was suf-
Assuming, as we must, that the appellant bought the land involved with the knowledge that there was a likelihood it was encumbered by a valid mortgage, we come to a consideration of his rights as an occupying claimant who has made valuable improvements thereon which the court subjected to its decree of foreclosure. The rights of an occupying claimant are purely statutory,
The sixth paragraph of the appellant‘s answer tendered the doctrine of unjust enrichment as an issue. He says he bought the property relying upon the record title of his immediate grantor and made lasting and valuable improvements thereon in excess of $12,000 for which he is equitably entitled to be reimbursed in the event the mortgage is foreclosed. It is true the decree herein subjects any im-
The appellant undertook to testify in his own behalf at the trial of this cause and objections to a series of questions propounded to him by his counsel were sustained on the theory that this being a suit by an administrator “involving matters which occurred during the lifetime of the decedent, where a judgment or an allowance may be made or rendered for or against the estate represented by such executor or administrator, any person who is a necessary party to the issue or record, whose interest is adverse to such estate, shall not be a competent witness as to such matters against such estate.”
Finally the appellant argues that when it was shown
This contention is based on a long standing national policy that an alien enemy, resident in the enemy‘s country, cannot during the war prosecute an action in our courts. This policy has frequently been announced by our courts and is specifically recognized by the Trading with the Enemy Act.
In view of the conclusions above expressed all questions on the cross-complaint are necessarily resolved against the appellant.
Judgment affirmed.
ON PETITION FOR REHEARING.
CRUMPACKER, J.—From appellant‘s brief in support of his petition for a rehearing of this appeal we quote the following: “Furthermore, this court says that Charles Istrate had no knowledge of the assignment until 1939. This is not a correct statement of the record.” From the condensed recital of the evidence, as the appellant prepared and placed it in his original brief, we quote the following from the direct examination of Charles Istrate: “I was not present when plaintiff‘s Exhibit 3, the assignment of the mortgage to me, was executed. I did not have any knowledge of this assignment until 1939 when I acquired knowledge of it from my sister, who was the wife of Charles Miladin.”
Quoting further from the appellant‘s brief in support of his petition for a rehearing: “Thereafter, in discussing the evidence, the court suggests that Miladin ‘forced’ the Coles to make the deed to Charles Istrate. . . . Nowhere is there any evidence that Miladin ‘forced’ anything on anybody.” In the cross-examination of Albert Cole we find the following: “We were forced to make the deed and we were forced to pay $800 or thereabouts.” It is clear that by those words, in context, Cole meant he was forced by Miladin and his attorney to make the deed mentioned.
The remainder of appellant‘s petition and supporting brief is largely a restatement of arguments already made and which we considered and decided in our initial opinion. We are not convinced that we are wrong and this comment is primarily for the purpose of refuting the charge that we misstated the record in expressing our views originally.
Petition denied.
NOTE.—Reported in 119 N. E. 2d 12.
Rehearing denied 119 N. E. 2d 901.
