delivered the opinion of the court.
The first deed, dated March 2, 1931, conveyed the property to Central Trust Company, trustee, to secure the payment of the principal sum of $6,500 evidenced by the notes of the owner, of even date with the said deed of trust, payable one year after datе.
The second deed, also dated March 2, 1931, conveyed said property to J. D. Carneal, Jr., trustee, the defendant herein, to secure the payment of the principal sum of $1,000, evidenced by the notes of the owner, of even date with said deed of trust, payable one year after date. This deed of trust specifically provides that the lien thereby created is subordinаte and inferior in dignity to the lien created by the deed of trust from said owner to Central Trust Company, trustee, to secure $6,500 as aforesaid. It also provided that in the event of sale thereunder the terms should be for only so much cash as would be necessary to defray the expenses of executing the trust, including a commission of five per centum to the trustee, and to discharge the amount due on the notes thereby secured.
The third deed of trust, dated June 5, 1931, conveyed said property to E. F. Schmidt, trustee, to secure the payment of certain other notes made by thе said owner, held by the plaintiff herein.
Default having been made in the payment of the debt secured by the second deed of trust, the trustee therein, J. D. Carneal, Jr., after advertising said property, withоut the consent of the owner or the beneficiary under the third deed of trust, sold the whole property for the price of $8,900 cash. At the time of the sale the debt secured by the first deed of trust was also past due and unpaid, and the holder thereof was demanding payment. Out of the proceeds derived from the sale said trustee paid the costs and expenses attending the sаme, and retained out of said proceeds as his commissions five per centum of the said sum of $8,900, amounting to $445; then paid the full amount of
The sole question in the case is whether оr not the defendant, trustee in the second deed of trust, had the right to sell and convey the legal title to the property conveyed to him and charge a trustee’s commission on the gross proceeds of such sale.
It is well settled that a trustee in a deed of trust can only do with the trust property what the deed either in express terms or by necessary implication authorizes him to do. In other words, the powers of the person foreclosing under a mortgage or deed of trust are limited and defined by the instrument under which he acts, and he has only such authority as is thus expressly сonferred upon him, together with incidental and implied powers that are necessarily included therein. Accordingly, the trustee or mortgagee must see that in all material matters he keeps within his powers, and must execute the trust in strict compliance therewith. Wilson v. Wall,
In Jones on Mortgages (7th Ed.) section 1853, it is said that the mortgagee or trustee cannot sell a greater interest than his mortgage or deed of trust gives him au
In Perry on Trusts and Trustees (7th Ed.) section 602bb, it is said: “ * * * A sale under such prior power cuts off all subsequent mortgages, attachments, judgments, and liens, even although the sale should be made to thе mortgagor. But a sale under a junior power of sale mortgage conveys only the equity of redemption. It cuts off all liens, attachments and judgments subsequent to the power under which it was madе but does not affect prior ones. * * *”
And in section 602ff, it is said: “ * * * If the sale is made under a second deed of trust or mortgage, nothing is to be paid to the prior mortgagee, as such sale does not affect such prior lien, but it cuts off all subsequent mortgages, liens, judgments, or assignments; therefore, they are to be paid as before stated. * * *”
As already observed, the deed of trust under which the dеfendant was acting expressly provided that the same was subordinate to the first deed of trust of the same date to the Central Trust Company, trustee. Said deed of trust, therefore, conveyеd only the grantor’s equity of redemption in the property, and the trustee had no power or authority to sell any greater estate, nor, without the consent of the grantor and the third deed оf trust creditor, to use the proceeds derived therefrom to pay off the first deed of trust notes.
In Seward v. New York Life Ins. Co.,
Having no authority to sell anything more than the grantor’s equity of redemption, it follows that the trustee is only entitled to commissions on the gross amount for which the equity of redemption sold, same being the difference between $8,900, the amount the wholе property sold for, and $6,725.18, the amount paid by the trustee in the discharge of the first deed of trust.
Counsel for defendant in error relies on the case of Guggenheimer & Co. v. Rogers,
It may be at once observed that the facts of that case bear no analogy to the case at bar, and it is in no sense an authority for the action of the trustee in this case. In that case there was a conflict between the provisions of the two deeds of trust, and circumstances had arisen which made it nеcessary for the trustee in the second deed of trust to act in order to preserve the trust property for the benefit of the first lien creditors, which circumstances presented a сase which would have justified the trustee in seeking the aid and direction of a court of equity. Here, no such questions are involved, and the record discloses no ground upon which a court of equity could have intervened, nor that any necessity had arisen for seeking its direction.
Upon the whole case, we think the plaintiff is entitled to recover the sum of $336.25, same being five per centum of the sum of $6,725.13 paid by the trustee to the note-holder under the first deed of trust, and being the amount which he retained in excess of the commissions to which he was entitled under the deed of trust under which he acted.
Reversed.
