| Ark. | Dec 19, 1903

Hughes, J.

This is an appeal from a decree in the Prairie chancery court foreclosing a mortgage given by Anton Sulek and his wife, Anna Sulek, to Geo. C. Lewis, on the 16th of January, 1899, upon lands therein described, to-wit, the west half of section 29, and the east half of section 30, all in township 1 south, range 5 west, in Prairie county, Arkansas, which mortgage was made to secure to said Lewis the payment of six notes for $800 each and interest thereon, in the aggregate $4,800, and which said mortgage and notes had been transferred and assigned by the said Geo. C. Lewis on the 19th of January, 1899, to the appellee Jno. McWilliams for the purpose of securing the payment of the sum of $3,000, which said Lewis owed to the said McWilliams.

The said notes and mortgage were delivered by the said Lewis to the said appellee McWilliams. After stating these facts substantially in his complaint, and that said debt of $3,000 and interest remained unpaid, the appellee McWilliams prayed for a decree of foreclosure against Anton Sulek and wife Anna, and for judgment against Geo. C. Lewis for $3,000 and interest, and for the sale of the lands, if judgment should not be paid in a certain time. Geo. C. Lewis was made a defendant.

The defendants, Anton and Anna Sulek, answered separately, admitting the execution of the notes for $4,800 as alleged, and the mortgage to secure their payment, but alleged that the notes were given to Lewis to secure the payment of a usurious claim. He states in his answer that in the year 1898, they owed the Farmers’ Savings, Building and Loan Association the sum of $-, and that said association had obtained a decree against their land, and had advertised the land for sale to satisfy the same; that at the same time there was another mortgage against the land for the sum of $1,050 to M. F. Lentz; that, desiring" to pay off these claims, and having no money to pay the same, they applied to Geo. C. Lewis for a loan of money to pay said judgment and mortgage, and that Lewis agreed to let them have the money, provided they would execute a mortgage on the same property to secure him; that they signed and executed the mortgage to secure him; that, instead of drawing up the notes and mortgage for the sum of $4,212.60, the sum of said decree and mortgage, they were made out for the sum of $4,800, so that Lewis might receive more than ten per cent, on the money so advanced to or for the said defendants as aforesaid, and that said sum of $4,800 was to draw interest at the rate of ten per cent, per annum.

George C. Lewis answered and admitted each allegation of the complaint as true, and prayed to he made a party plaintiff against defendant Sulek and wife; adopted the complaint of McWilliams, and made it part of his complaint against Sulek and wife, and stated that the consideration for which said notes and mortgage were given was the amount of the Lentz mortgage for $1,162.52, which he had bought and paid for, and which had been assigned to him, and the sum of $3,162.60, the amount of a decree against the Sulek lands, which he controlled, and under which the lands had been sold and purchased by the Farmers’ Savings & Building Association, which sale had not been confirmed; that at the instance of Sulek he bought the Lentz mortgage for $1,050, through Sulek, which amounted on the 5th of September, 1898, to $1,864.19, and that there was due on the association’s debt $3,429.77, and due him $25 fee for procuring divorce for Sulek’s daughter, all oí which amounted to $5,318.96; that he bought the Lentz mortgage at a discount, paying therefor $1,050, and, as a matter of favor merely to Sulek, allowed Sulek one-half the discount, or $407.09, when they settled on the amount for which Sulek gave the mortgage to him.

Sulek in answer to Lewis says that Lewis was to lend him the money to buy the mortgage of Lentz, and that he bought for himself at $1,050, and that Lewis charged him the $407.09 in addition to ten per cent, interest on the amount in the mortgage.

The evidence in the case was conflicting, as to whether the money advanced by the plaintiff Lewis was a loan to Sulek, or whether Lewis bought the Lentz mortgage through Sulek on his own account. There was some evidence leading to support the contention of each as to this, which was an important and material question in the case.

The chancellor decided in favor of the plaintiffs, and we cannot say that the reasonably clear preponderance of the testimony is against that finding. We think it well supported by the evidence, lie found for plaintiffs, and ordered a sale of the lands in controversy, and they were sold accordingly, and purchased by plaintiff'McWilliams.

After the sale, and before its confirmation, the defendants, Sulek and wife, by leave of the court, filed in court a writing, which they called a supplemental answer and cross-complaint, which seems rather a proposition to further continue the controversy already determined. At the same time McClintock and Lankford, who as attorneys had conducted the defense in the cause for Sulek and wife, also asked leave, and were allowed, to file a writing, alleging that they had bought one-half of the lands in controversy sometime prior to the institution of this suit, and that one Reinch had deceived Sulek, and had bought his interest in the lands, and received a deed from him and wife for the same, and asking that Reinch be made a party, and required to answer, and that the deed to him be set aside, and that the decree in the case be set aside, and the notes and mortgage to Lewis be can-celled and held for naught. This they called a supplemental complaint, but it seems to be a request to be allowed to intervene in the case after it was decided.

A demurrer was sustained to this offer of Sulek and wife, and also to that of McClintock and Lankford, and on motion their papers were stricken from the files of the court, to which they excepted. Sulek and wife having excepted also to the main decree in the case, it is brought up here for review.

We are of the opinion that the evidence in the case sufficiently supports the decree of the chancellor, and that there is not a reasonably clear preponderance .of the evidence against the decree, without which this court will not reverse it.

The offer of Sulek and wife to contest the decree after its rendition was too late. The decree had been partly executed and needed only to have the sale made in accordance with it confirmed.

The offer of McClintock and Lankford to be allowed to intervene was made after the decree had been executed, and the facts they relied on were in existence and known to them before the suit was brought. They were not parties to the suit, and if they have rights in the subject-matter of it, they are not concluded by the decree. Sulek and wife had sold all the interest they had, if any, in the lands involved to Reinch, and had no longer any interest in the case. The demurrer in this behalf was properly sustained; also the motion to strike.

Rinding no reversible errors in the case, the decree of the chancellor is in all things affirmed.

© 2024 Midpage AI does not provide legal advice. By using midpage, you consent to our Terms and Conditions.