107 Ind. 291 | Ind. | 1886
The material facts contained in the special finding, stated in an abridged form, are these: The appellant was the guardian of Jennie B. and Fannie E. Hollo well, and while holding that trust lent twenty-one hundred dollars of the money of his. wards to Wilson T. Moore. To secure this; loan Moore executed to the appellant a promissory note and a mortgage conveying eighty acres of land, but in neither of these instruments was the appellant described as guardian,, nor was the mortgage signed by Moore’s wife. At the time-the loan was made Moore lived thirty miles distant from the-city of Attica, where the appellant resided; he was well' known in “ business circles, his financial standing and credit was excellent,” and he had property, real and personal, of the value of twelve to fifteen thousand dollars, but he was at that time greatly in debt; this fact was, however, not known to-the appellant, nor was it generally known. Ten days prior1 to the time the loan was made, the appellant examined the-title to the land which Moore proposed to mortgage, and which he did afterwards mortgage, and found that there were no encumbrances. After the title had been examined by the appellant, Moore borrowed four thousand dollars from an insurance company, and executed a mortgage to the company to secure the loan on the land described in the mortgage executed to the appellant. The mortgage for the four thousand dollars was executed on the 1st day of October, 1873, that to the appellant on the 8th day of that month, and the four thousand dollar mortgage was recorded on the 4th day of the same month. Moore informed the appellant at the time he executed the mortgage to him, that there was no encumbrance-on the land, and the former believed that the mortgage executed to him was the prior one. The land covered by the-mortgage was worth twenty-four hundred dollars, and two-hundred dollars of the mortgage debt was subsequently paid by Moore. On the 27th day of May, 1875, Moore became notoriously insolvent, and made an assignment for the benefit of creditors, and was openly and notoriously insolvent
“ 1st. That the defendant was guilty of negligence in loaning the twenty-one hundred dollars of his wards’ money to Wilson T. Moore, and in failing to properly secure said loan.
“ 2d. That the defendant was guilty of fraud in representing to the court that the note taken by him from Wilson T. Moore was secured by mortgage on real estate, and failing to state the facts of the insolvency of Moore, and that the mortgage was a second mortgage.”
The case as presented by the first conclusion of law is a hard one wherever the loss falls, whether upon the guardian or upon his wards, since the guardian was not guilty of any positive wrong, but acted in good faith, and his wards took no part, and, indeed, could take none, in the transaction which resulted in the loss of their money. Guardians must be held to exercise care and prudence in managing and investing the money of their wards, and lax rules upon this
The quotations we have made reflect the views of the courts, upon this subject, and among other courts that share these views is our own. Murquess v. La Baw, 82 Ind. 550, see p., 553; Sanders v. State, ex rel., 49 Ind. 228; Norwood v. Harness, 98 Ind. 134 (49 Am. R. 739).
Where a guardian accepts a mortgage as security for a loan-of his ward’s money, it should, in all ordinary eases, be a. first mortgage, for the guardian has no right to incur the-peril caused by the existence of a prior mortgage, for it might readily happen that the estate of the ward could not furnish money to pay off the first mortgage, and in that event the-security afforded by the second mortgage would be valueless.. Second mortgages are precarious securities and guardians-should not take them. Shuey v. Latta, 90 Ind. 136. But in this instance the guardian intended to take a first mortgage; it was for such a mortgage that he conti-acted, and such it was that he believed he was getting, nor did he actually know that it was not a first mortgage until after lie-had resigned his trust.
If the guardian acted in good faith and with reasonable-diligence in taking the mortgage, he can not be held liable solely on the ground that the mortgage which he believed to be the senior one was made the junior one by the fraud of Moore, the mortgagor. The utmost care and prudence will not always guard( against loss. In every loan that is negotiated there is some risk that no ordinary prudence or sagacity-can avoid; in almost every case something must be trusted to the borrower’s honesty. There are few cases, indeed, where-one who lends money upon real estate security is not compelled to rely, to some extent, upon the statements of the mortgagor that there are no unrecorded mortgages, and the question upon this particular phase of the case narrows to this, was the guardian negligent in relying upon the statements of the mortgagor that there wore no encumbrances on
Negotiations for loans are often in progress several days before they are concluded, and the lender is not always to be regarded as negligent unless he keeps watch upon the records to the last day or the last hour on which the negotiations are concluded. There may be cases where such great vigilance is required, Jmt there arc cases where it is not exacted, and this case belongs to the latter class. There, are adjudged cases going much further than we are required to do here, among them Ferguson v. Lowery, 54 Ala. 510 (25 Am. R. 718), Parsley v. Martin, 77 Va. 376 (46 Am. R. 733), Estate of Ada Worrell, 14 Phila. R. 311, Neff’s Appeal, 57 Pa. St. 91.
The safest and most prudent course for a guardian to pursue,, in making an investment of his ward’s money in real estate-security, is to require the wife of the mortgagor to join in executing the mortgage, and it is hazardous for him to pursue any other course; but there may be cases where it would not be negligence for the guardian to accept a mortgage executed by the-husband alone. It may often be that the interest of
The second conclusion of law presents a question not entirely free from difficulty, but our" opinion is that there is no error in it. A guardian is bound to make full disclosure to the court of his transactions, and the law requires of him the exercise of the utmost good faith. He must not conceal any material fact, nor untruthfully represent any matter to the court. 2 Pomeroy Eq. 902; Kelaher v. McCahill, 26 Hun, 148; Klemp v. Winter, 23 Kan. 699; Favorite v. Slauter, 79 Ind. 562; Asher v. State, ex rel., 88 Ind. 215.
In Jennings v. Kee, 5 Ind. 257, the court said: “ In all eases of delinquency and neglect, the courts will presume in favor of the ward and against the guardian, as strongly as the facts
There is another fact appearing in the special findings which -exerts an important influence upon the case; the guardian took the note payable to himself without any designation of his official character, and this fact, when considered in connection with the other facts, stated in the special finding, is sufficient to sustain the second conclusion of law stated by
The second conclusion of law is the controlling one, and upon it the judgment below securely rests, and there would be no cause for reversal even if the first conclusion of lav-should be considered erroneous. If the ultimate judgment deals justly with the parties, gives to each his legal rights and is sustained by the facts appearing in the special finding' an error in one of the conclusions of law will not justify a reversal. Our statute says that no judgment shall be reversed iC where it shall appear to the court that the merits of’ the cause have been fairly tried and determined in the court below.” Krug v. Davis, 101 Ind. 75; Platter v. Board, etc., 103 Ind. 360, see p. 385. The second conclusion of law is warranted by the facts and fully sustains the judgment setting aside the appellant’s final report. That judgment does not, of course, settle or adjust all questions between the parties, but does adjudge that the final report should not stand.
The special finding states facts and not evidence, and in this respect is free from fault. The absence of the epithets “ negligence ” and “ fraud ” does not impair the force of the facts stated by the court. The law will infer the proper conclusion from the facts stated. It is possible that there may be cases where it is necessary to expressly characterize an act as fraudulent or as negligent, but it is not necessary in such a case as this, for here the facts of themselves enable the court to pronounce the law and declare the legal consequences that result from the facts. Pittsburgh, etc., R. W. Co. v. Spencer,