156 S.E. 513 | N.C. | 1931
The question involved in this appeal is whether or not John Mitchell, Chief State Bank Examiner for the Corporation Commission, as liquidating agent of Central Bank and Trust Company of Asheville, an insolvent bank in the hands of said agent of said commission, can exercise the power of sale contained in a deed of trust to said bank as trustee, and make a deed to the purchaser at the sale under the power when such bank did not suspend operations and such examiner for said corporation did not take possession of said bank until after default, whereby the power of sale in such deed of trust became operative and after such bank had given notice of sale as required by the deed of trust and by law; and can exercise the power of sale contained in a deed of trust to said bank as trustee and make a deed to the purchaser at a sale held under the powers contained in said deed of trust? We think not.
From a careful examination of the statutes, we can find no authority, express or implied, for the Chief State Bank Examiner to perform the trust that the owner of the property placed in the Central Bank and Trust Company of Asheville to secure the indebtedness. It is not necessary to set forth the statutes and discuss them. Plaintiff nowhere cites any direct statutory authority and the inferential authority we do not think sufficiently persuasive to change a contract made between the owner of the property, the Central Bank and Trust Company, trustee, and the cestui que trust, the owner of the indebtedness. In the present controversy the property was conveyed to the Central Bank and Trust Company, trustee, on certain trusts and conditions and in said deed of trust is fully set out and contained a power of sale in words as follows: "But if the said parties of the first part shall make default in the payment of the said weekly interest as aforesaid, or shall fail or refuse to keep the building on said premises insured as aforesaid, or shall make default in any of the aforesaid stipulations for the space of thirty days, or shall cease to be a member of said association, then, and in such event the debt secured by this instrument shall become instantly due and payable, and the said party of the second part shall have the right, and it shall be its duty when requested by the party of the third part, to immediately enter upon and take possession of the said premises hereby conveyed, and sell the same at public auction for cash or credit, as in its judgment may best subserve the purpose of this deed, first giving notice of sale once a week for four successive weeks in some newspaper published in said city of Asheville, and shall make and deliver to the purchaser thereof a title thereto." *323
It is settled by numerous authorities that the power of sale contained in a deed of trust is contractual. Eubanks v. Becton,
In Stevens v. Turlington,
Speaking of trusts in general, we find in Perry on Trusts and Trustees, Vol. 1 (7 ed.), p. 32, part sec. 43: "It must be understood, however, that corporations are the creatures of the law, and that as a general rule they cannot exercise powers not given to them by their charters or acts of incorporation. . . . If the trusts are within the general scope of the purposes of the institution of the corporation, or if they are collateral to its general purposes, but germane to them, as if the trusts relate to matters which will promote and aid the general purposes of the corporation, it may take and hold, and be compelled to execute them, if it accepts them. . . . (p. 497, part sec. 279). Generally the insolvency or bankruptcy of a trustee does not disqualify him for the trust, nor does his bankruptcy affect the trust estate in his hands; and his certificate does not discharge him from fiduciary obligations."
In the present case, the Central Bank and Trust Company, is a mere naked trustee, the legal title passes to it primarily by way of security for the debt. We see no good reason why it could not sell under the power given it and carry out its contract. If an individual became insolvent or went into bankruptcy we see no good reason why the power of sale in a deed of trust made to him could not be executed by him, and we think the same principle applies to an insolvent bank where there is no valid statute to the contrary.
In Sullivan v. Kuolt,
The cestui que trusts, those who hold the notes, can foreclose in a civil action in which the mortgagors and the bank trustee are parties, or the bank, trustee, can sell under the power of sale in the deed of trust, or all can agree upon a substituted trustee. Raleigh Real Est. Trust Co.v. Padgett,
Reversed.