84 F. 513 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Tennessee | 1898
The complainant in this case filed a hill in the state court of Tennessee, alleging that he was the purchaser of one of these tracts of land, and that he had purchased without notice of any incumbrances upon the property, although, in fact, one of these very mortgages that the court has just been dealing with in another case had been executed by Ruohs’ grantor, and had been recorded in the proper hooks of registration. He claimed, as I gather from the pleadings, that that mortgage was invalid upon some or all of the grounds which have been taken in the other case. Trust Co. v. Willhoit, 84 Fed. 514. He set forth that á party by the name of Duffey, who professed to he acting in Ihe interests of the mortgagees as trustee in the deed of trust, had advertised the property for sale, and was about to sell, and that the consequence would be to create a cloud upon his title. How, in this case, the mortgagor, the party executing the deed of trust, the mortgagee, or rather the trastees named in the deed of trust, the beneficiaries, and Duffey. who was also assuming to act as trustee, were made defendants. The relation of Duffey to the transaction seems to have been this: The deed of trust made Conklin trustee, but authorized him, upon his own resignation, or becoming incompetent, to appoint another trustee, and, in the case of the disability of that second trustee, he (meaning Conklin, according to the proper construction of the deed of trust) should name another trustee to execute the trust. Conklin had, in fact, substituted in his own place, by appointment under that deed of trust, Mr. Jarvis, and Jarvis in turn, assuming that he, instead of Conklin, under the terms of the deed of trust, was authorized to appoint a substitute, appointed Duffey the substituted trustee. That was, no doubt, a mistake in the assumption in reference to the party who was competent to substitute the trustee; but, nevertheless, that was the course which the parties pursued, and Duffey, attempting to act as trustee, was advertising the property for sale, and the bill made him a defendant. After the bill was filed, and service was obtained, Duffey went into the county court:, and there resigned his trust, and the relinquishment was accepted by the court. That having been done, two days later the