185 Ind. 172 | Ind. | 1915
— On October 11, 1909, appellants,-Dora E. Rooker and William V. Rooker, as first parties, and the appellee, Fidelity Trust Com
“Witnesseth:
“Paragraph 1. That concurrently herewith and as a part of the contract evidenced by this memorandum, the said first parties have this day by their certain written instruments in the form of a general warranty deed conveyed to second party as trustee, ever upon the conditions and trust and upon .the powers and for the uses and purposes herein more particularly set forth, the following real estate in Marion County, in the State of Indiana, to-wit: — (Here follows description of same.)
“Also the following real estate in Hamilton County, in the State of Indiana, to-wit: — (Here follows description of same.)
“That reference is hereby made to the said warranty deeds and to the several descriptions therein for greater certainty.
“Paragraph 2. That said warranty deed is made ever upon the conditions and trust and upon the powers and for the uses and purposes herein more particularly set forth, that is to say:
“Whereas the said Dora E. Rooker, the grantor in said deed and first party herein is the owner in her own and separate right and estate of the said above described lands situate in said Hamilton County and the said Dora E. Rooker and William V. Rooker, her husband, grantors in said deed and parties of the first part are the owners as tenants by the entireties of said real estate situate in said Marion County; and
“Whereas the said Dora E. Rooker in and about the improvement of her said real estate in Hamilton County, Indiana, has heretofore undertaken to erect and construct a dwelling*174 house and out buildings appurtenant thereto and other necessary and proper structures and to equip the same 'with modern utilities and conveniences and in so doing has been obliged to lay out and expend large sums of money and has been obliged to incur obligations beyond her reasonable expectations and beyond her present means to pay, and
“Whereas, the said improvements have been carried so far toward completion as that they cannot now be abandoned or the work thereon stopped or delayed without great sacrifice and loss to the said Dora E. Rooker and without great injury to her estate, and
“Whereas, it requires Six Thousand ($6,000) Dollars to complete said improvements and to pay off indebtedness of said Dora E. Rooker incurred by her arising out of the making of the said improvements and in the completion and installation thereof, and said Dora E. Rooker represents that all such indebtedness was incurred by her for her own benefit arising out of the making of said improvements.
“Now, therefore, it is agreed that the said Fidelity Trust Company, second party herein, shall and it does hereby accept the title of, in and to said real estate ever upon the conditions and trust and upon the powers and for the uses and purposes following, that is to say:—
“Clause A. The Fidelity Trust Company shall pay and it does hereby agree to pay from time to time upon the written order and directions of said Dora E. Rooker not exceeding the sum of Six Thousand ($6,000.00) Dollars for and on account of the erection and construction of said dwelling house, out buildings and improvements and the equipment and installation thereof, it being expressly understood and agreed that if a part of said indebtedness is held or may hereafter be held by banks on account of advancements made and which may hereafter be made to said Dora E. Rooker, or to the said William V. Rooker, as the undis*175 closed principal of said Dora E. Rooker, it is ever understood and agreed that the written order and direction of the said Dora E. Rooker that an indebtedness be paid for her use and benefit, notwithstanding the form of said indebtedness, shall be forever binding and conclusive on all parties concerned that such debt or debts so ordered to be paid is and are in fact and in law the debts of the said Dora E. Rooker, any evidence to the contrary notwithstanding.
“Clause B. The said Fidelity Trust Company may let out and expend any such sum or sums of money other than those above specified in Clause A of this paragraph as said Trust Company may deem necessary to protect its interest in and to said real estate and to perform or better promote the performance of the trust herein and hereby created and every such advancement or payment so made shall be deemed and taken to be the debt of the said Dora E. Rooker as fully as if the same were made upon her express written direction.
“Clause C. That the said Fidelity Trust Company may obtain or cause to be obtained from any bank or banks upon the promissory note or notes of the said Dora E. Rooker any such sum or sums of money, whether within or in excess of the sum of Six Thousand ($6,000.00) Dollars as may be necessary to the true and better and complete performance of this contract and to the successful maintenance of and care for said real estate and the business thereon conducted.-
“Clause D. Said Fidelity Trust Company is hereby appointed, empowered and authorized as the true and lawful attorney in fact of the first parties and in their separate deed, joint name, place, right and stead to execute a deed of general warranty conveying said real estate or any part or parts thereof upon the limitations hereinafter stated and provided. ■
“Paragraph 3. Said Fidelity Trust Company shall have and receive for its compensa*176 tion, Trustee’s fee of one Hundred and Fifty ($150.00) Dollars and a commission of two per cent on all loans and advancements and on any and all moneys laid out and expended by it to protect its interest or to promote the true and better performance of this trust, together with the interest on all such moneys at the rate of six per cent per annum, to be credited semiannually to said Fidelity Trust Company as a debit and charge against said Dora E. Rooker, and said Fidelity Trust Company shall be entitled to have and receive the usual real estate commission on all or any part of said real estate sold by said Fidelity .Trust Company pursuant to this agreement and said Fidelity Trust company shall be entitled to have and receive a brokerage fee of one-eighth Q/Q of one (1) per cent of all notes for ninety (90) days or less for moneys obtained from any bank to the credit of said Dora E. Rooker on her paper originally made.
“Paragraph 4. It is further ever understood and agreed that at any time within one year after the date of these presents said second party may execute and perform so much of the power_ to sell and convey as is hereinbefore granted as pertains to said Marion County real estate provided always that the sum received in consideration therefor shall be net to the credit of said Dora E. Rooker Eighteen Thousand ($18,000.00) Dollars after the payment of the commission hereinbefore mentioned. Should it so happen that said Marion County real estate be not sold within said period of one year for said sum of Eighteen Thousand ($18,-000.00) Dollars plus commission, then after ninety (90) days notice in writing to be given to first parties by second party, the said second party may publicly advertise said Marion County real estate and sell the same at whatever sum it may bring and if said Marion County real estate does not sell for lack of a bid, then second party may upon ninety (90)*177 days notice in writing to be given to the first parties by the second party sell and convey said Hamilton County real estate for whatever it will bring over and above the upset price of Sixty-five Thousand ($65,000.00) Dollars. If said Hamilton County real estate does not sell for said sum of Sixty-five Thousand ($65,000) Dollars for lack of a bid of that sum, then the said second party hereto may publicly advertise and sell said Marion County real estate after ninety (90) days notice given in writing to first parties by second party at public auction for whatever sum and price said real estate may bring. And if said Marion County real estate upon such sale do not fetch enough to pay the moneys and perform the obligations herein charged upon and against said real estate then said second party may proceed to sell and sell said Hamilton County real estate in the manner and form prescribed as to said Marion County real estate, after thirty (30) days notice given in writing to first parties by second party.
“It is ever understood and agreed that said Fidelity Trust Company shall apply the proceeds of any sale or sales of said real estate made pursuant to this agreement, as follows:—
“(1).- To the payment of any mortgage or other valid liens, charge, adverse interest or incumbrance upon and against said real estate or any part of any%of the real estate herein described, which may be prior and superior and adverse to the interest of said Fidelity Trust Company.
“(2). -To the payment of moneys advanced by second party to first parties or paid to the use and benefit of first parties as herein author- ' ized and provided.
“(3). To the payment of moneys obtained by said second party from any bank or banks to the use and benefit of said Dora E. Rooker upon her paper as hereinbefore authorized and provided.
*178 “(4). The rest and residue of any money shall be paid to the said Dora E. Rooker, her heirs, executors, administrators and assigns.
“Paragraph 5. It is further understood and agreed that any and every deed of conveyance executed by second party pursuant to the provisions of this contract shall convey to the grantee therein named an absolute and unqualified estate as fully and completely as if such deed were made by the said first parties in their own proper persons, names and rights. And the said first parties do now hereby ratify, approve and confirm any and every such deed made by second party pursuant to this memorandum and in execution of the powers and upon the trust and confidence herein and hereby imposed.
“Paragraph 6. In execution whereof the several parties hereto do hereby forever bind themselves, their heirs, executors- and assigns.”
Contemporaneously with the execution of the above memorandum and as a part of the same transaction, appellants executed to the Fidelity Trust Company, as trustee, two indentures in the form of warranty deeds, in which the real estate referred to in the above memorandum was conveyed to said trustee on certain terms and conditions. The deed to the Hamilton county lands provided that the Trust Company should hold said real estate—
“in trust for the use and benefit of said Dora E. Rooker and to protect and discharge the obligations arising out of claims and liens or the right to liens by reason of improvements made on the above described real estate.-
“Said Fidelity Trust Company of Indianapolis, Indiana, as aforesaid, to sell and convey said lands or any part of them at such prices and upon such terms as may be from time to time dictated in writing by said Dora E. Rooker; to execute the proper Trustee’s deed or deeds eon*179 veying the title thereto in fee simple to the purchaser; it being hereby understood and agreed that any’ deed so executed by said Fidelity Trust Company of Indianapolis, shall convey a good and indefeasible title in fee simple to such purchaser or purchasers as fully as this grantor could herself do, and any such purchaser or purchasers shall in no wise be responsible for the application of the proceeds arising from such sale in the hands of said Fidelity Trust Company of Indianapolis, Indiana.
“And said Fidelity Trust Company of Indianapolis, as such Trustee, shall have full power and authority to make contracts in writing for the sale of the foregoing real estate, or any part or all of said real estate and convey same free and clear of any incumbrance or convey the same subject to any existing incumbrances, and to do any and all acts and to execute any and all papers which may be necessary to protect the interests x>f this grantor, the mortgagee and other lien holders in and to said real estate and to conserve the trust hereby created.
“And in the event any such liens .or charges against said real estate be paid by the Fidelity' Trust Company, Trustee, the said Fidelity Trust Company, Trustee, shall be subrogated to all the rights of such original lien holders and the same shall be enforceable by it,and collectible with interest at the rate of 6% per annum, to be credited semiannually as a debt and charge against said real estate.”
The deed to the. Marion county lands provided that the trust company should hold said real estate “in trust for the use and benefit of said grantors, William V. Rooker and Dora E. Rooker, and to protect and discharge the obligations of the trust herein with the powers and limitations as follows:
“Said Fidelity Trust Company of Indianapolis, Trustee as aforesaid, to sell and convey*180 said real estate according to the. terms of a certain contract of even date herewith within one (1) year after the date of these presents for a consideration fixed in said contract, and should it so happen that said real estate be not sold within said period of one (1) year, for the sum nominated in said contract, then after ninety days notice in writing, to be given to the grantors by the Trustee herein, the Trustee may publicly advertise said real estate and sell same at public or private sale at such price as it may bring and upon the consummation of such sale as may be made by said Fidelity Trust Company of Indianapolis as such Trustee, to execute the proper Trustee’s deed conveying the title thereto in fee simple to its said purchasers. It being hereby understood and agreed that any deed so executed by said Fidelity Trust Company of Indianapolis, Trustee, shall convey a good and indefeasible title in fee simple to such purchaser or purchasers as fully as these grantors could themselves do, and any such purchaser or purchasers shall in nowise be responsible for the applications of the proceeds arising from such sale in the hands of the said Fidelity Trust Company of Indianapolis, Trustee, but said Fidelity Trust Company is directed to apply the proceeds arising from such sale in the manner and for the purposes set out in the contract entered into between said grantors and said Fidelity Trust Company, Trustee, on this date.
“The said Fidelity Trust Company of Indianapolis as such Trustee shall have full power and authority to make contracts in writing for the sale of the foregoing real estate or any part or all of said real estate and convey the same free and clear of any incumbrance or subject to any existing incumbrances, and to do any and all acts and to execute any and- all papers which may be necessary to protect the interest of the grantors in and to said real estate and to conserve the trust hereby created and it is here*181 by further understood and agreed that if the said Fidelity Trust Company of Indianapolis, as Trustee, shall elect to pay any lien, charge or incumbrance existing against said real estate, the said Fidelity Trust Company of Indianapolis, Trustee, shall be subrogated to all the rights, title and interest held by the original parties thus paid and the same shall be collectible and enforceable in its hands, together with interest thereon at the rate of 6 % per annum, to be credited semiannually to said Fidelity Trust Company as a debit and charge against the grantors and the real estate above described. ’ ’
Each conveyance was- made subject to unpaid taxes and to certain described mortgages.
On October 30,1912, appellants brought an action in the Marion Circuit Court against appellee, in which they charged a- violation of the trust agreement, and asked for an accounting and for the appointment of a receiver to carry out the trust embodied in said contract. Later the cause was venued to the Hamilton Circuit Court, where appellants filed an amended complaint in which the firm of Lilly & Stalnaker, the Illinois Surety Company, the Balke & Krause Company, and one Daniel I. Neher were joined’ as party defendants to answer as to their respective interests in the premises, if any. Of these. defendants, Lilly & Stalnaker and the Illinois Surety Company filed disclaimers, and Neher was subsequently defaulted, while the .interest of the Balke & Krause Company, - represented by a judgment against the Hamilton county real estate, was found on final hearing to have been assigned to appellee, and said judgment was merged in the judgment in this cause.
Appellee entered a general denial to the amended complaint and also filed an amended counter
The principal question to be determined here is the proper construction to be given to the instruments which are made the basis of this action. In support of its contention that the deeds in question in fact constitute a mortgage, appellee relies on the following propositions of law:
(1) That different instruments, executed at the same time, relating to the same matter, constitute one transaction and must be read and construed together. Knepper v. Eggiman (1911), 177 Ind. 56, 62, 97 N. E. 161; Schmueckle v. Waters (1890), 125 Ind. 265, 267, 25 N. E. 281.
(2) That any conveyance of real estate, whatever its form, which is in fact executed for the purpose of securing a,debt, is a mortgage. Sinclair v. Gunzenhauser (1912), 179 Ind. 78, 121, 98 N. E. 37, 100 N. E. 376; Brown v. Follette (1900), 155 Ind. 317, 321, 58 N. E. 197; Lowe v. Turpie, supra.
(3) That the power of sale contained in the in
Reference may here be made to the cases of Taylor v. Cornelius (1869), 60 Pa. St. 187 and Woodruff v. Robb (1850), 19 Ohio 212, to which our attention is called by appellee as decisive of the questions here presented. Without reviewing these decisions at length, it may be noted that in each ease the instrument in suit contained a condition of defeasance which provided, in substance, that on the payment
The distinction between an absolute deed of trust and a deed of trust in the nature of a mortgage is clearly stated in Hoffman, Burneston & Co. v. Mackall (1855), 5 Ohio St. 124, 64 Am. Dec. 637, and the decision reached in that case supports our construction of the instruments here in controversy. We quote from the opinion (p. 130) as follows:
The judgment of the trial court in the case at bar is contrary to law and must be set aside. Judgment reversed, with instructions to sustain appellants’ separate and several motions for a new
Note. — Reported in 109 N. E. 766. When a deed, absolute in form, will be construed as a mortgage, 129 Am. St. 1137. See under (3) 27 Cyc 974.