8 S.E.2d 126 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1940
Lead Opinion
1. The court did not err in overruling the defendants' demurrer and the motion to dismiss the plaintiff's action. The Federal Farm Mortgage Corporation was a legal entity created by an act of Congress, and the Land Bank Commissioner, pursuant to an act of Congress, was authorized to make loans in his own name on behalf of the corporation, and the mortgages taken by him and the credit instruments secured thereby were transferred to the corporation by an act of Congress.
2. The court erred in sustaining the plaintiff's demurrer to the defendants' answer, and in directing the verdict for the plaintiff.
The defendants in their answer admitted the execution of the note sued on, and set up that the attorneys for the Land Bank Commissioner who acted in placing the loan and in the foreclosure proceedings, while advertising the property for sale in the foreclosure proceedings, informed the defendants that it was not the custom of their client to seek a deficiency judgment, and told the defendants that the Land Bank Commissioner, or the plaintiff in this case, would bid the full amount of the indebtedness secured by the loan deed, and that their client was willing to accept the property in full settlement of the debt evidenced by the note here sued on, but stated that the foreclosure proceedings were necessary in order to complete the transfer of title into the Land Bank Commissioner or plaintiff in this case; that the defendants believed and relied on these statements, and did not attend the sale of the property, which sold for the ridiculously low price of $300, which was entirely inadequate in so far as the value of the property was concerned. The defendant Mrs. C. W. Sullivan, administratrix, alleged, that she accepted the proposition of the bank, through said attorneys, to bid in the property for the amount of the debt and accept the property in full settlement thereof, despite the fact that the property was worth several times the amount of the debt, she being in a delicate state of health and unable to look after the affairs of the estate, and the property being in Walker County while she resided in DeKalb County; that the attorney for the bank also informed her that it would not be necessary for either her or her husband to attend the sale, assuring her that he would bid the full amount of the indebtedness, and assured them that if the property should bring more than the amount of the debt he would pay over to her the excess; that the sum of $300 bid by the plaintiff on the property and for which it sold in said foreclosure *404 proceedings was considerably less than ten per cent. of the value of the property; that had she not believed and relied upon these statements of the bank's attorneys, she would have attended the sale and solicited prospective purchasers to attend for the purpose of bidding on the property in order that it might bring a reasonable amount, or she would have had her husband, who looked after all the affairs of the estate for her, to attend the sale; that at the time of the foreclosure sale she was sick and confined in a hospital in Atlanta, and being thus unable to attend to her affairs she agreed with the bank's attorneys to sacrifice the property for the amount of the debt, despite the fact that the property had a fair market value of more than $4000 to $5000; that the bank's appraisers placed a minimum value on the property of $3500 before the bank made the loan in question; that the property would have brought considerably more than the amount of the debt, $1375.53, had the bank's attorneys and agents not circulated a report that the bank was going to bid the amount of the debt, with interest and all costs; that, further relying upon the statements of the bank's attorneys and their agreement to accept the property in extinguishment of the debt and of her acceptance of the offer, she considered the matter closed and made her final return to the ordinary of Walker County; that she still considers the matter closed, despite the loss she suffered in permitting the property to go for the amount only of the debt, and that she believes and has been reliably informed that the plaintiff bank has sold said property for an amount many times greater than the amount for which it bought it at the foreclosure proceedings.
The plaintiff demurred to certain paragraphs of the defendants' answer, on the ground that the matter pleaded was merely surplusage and constituted no defense to the plaintiff's claim. This demurrer was sustained, and the alleged defense as contained in the answer was stricken. The court then directed a verdict for the plaintiff, and the defendants excepted to the rulings stated above, and to the direction of the verdict.
1. The court did not err in overruling the defendants' demurrer and the motion to dismiss the action. The Federal Farm Mortgage Corporation was a legal entity, created by an act of Congress,
2. This case does not present the question of agreement by an attorney to receive in payment of a claim a sum less than its value. The attorney was the agent of the creditor bank for the purpose of foreclosing the loan and exposing the property for sale. In whatever he did and said in furtherance of this he was acting within the scope of his employment and as agent for the bank. The creditor bank, in undertaking to sell the property, was necessarily acting as attorney in fact for the debtor. The creditor bank agreed to conduct the sale in a manner that would benefit the debtor, and thereby lulled the debtor into a feeling of security, and caused the debtor to believe that the bank would look after her interests and would cause the property, which was worth more than the balance due on the debt, to realize enough at the sale to pay the debt. When the debtor was thus induced to rely upon the creditor bank a confidential relationship arose between them. The bank then owed the duty to the debtor to carry out these assurances or agreements as respects the sale. When the grantor bank failed to do this, but publicly circulated a report that the bank would bid at the sale the amount of the debt, and conducted a sale under which it had the property bid in for itself and bought in by it for a small sum, considerably less than the true value of the property and considerably less than the amount due on the debt, and failed to give the debtor credit for the balance due, the bank *406 broke faith with the debtor. The conduct of the bank in circulating the report that it would buy in the property at the sale, and the other alleged acts of the bank, rendered the sale invalid and fraudulent. The acts of the bank in causing the sale and in buying in the property as alleged constituted a fraud against the debtor, and the sale, as respects the debtor, was a nullity and void. Where the creditor bank elected to abide by the sale and treated it as valid, by giving the debtor credit only for the amount for which the creditor bank had bought the property at the sale, when the property was in fact worth more than enough to pay the balance due on the debt, and failed to take the property in payment of the debt, or to give the debtor credit for the amount due on the debt, but sued the debtor for the alleged balance due, the bank took advantage of its fraud. The debtor, therefore, in defense to the suit can set up the fraud of the bank, in the conduct of the sale, to the debtor's damage. Where the property is in fact worth more than the balance due on the debt, the debtor's damage is at least in the amount of the alleged balance due on the debt.
It has been held in many cases, where a mortgagee fraudulently conducts a foreclosure sale by which the property, which is worth more than the debt, is sold for a sum insufficient to pay the debt, the debtor need not elect to have the sale declared void and set aside for fraud, but can, in a suit by the creditor against him for the balance of the debt, where the mortgagee creditor bought the property in at the sale and took possession of it, plead the appropriation of the property by the creditor, in full payment of the balance due on the debt. As stated by Chief Justice Shaw in Howard v. Ames,
The court erred in sustaining the plaintiff's demurrer to the defendants' answer and in directing the verdict for the plaintiff.
Judgment reversed. Stephens, P. J., and Felton, J., concur.
Dissenting Opinion
The part of the answer stricken on demurrer consisted of allegations to the effect that the attorneys for the plaintiff, while advertising the property for sale, told the administratrix that it was not the custom of the plaintiff to seek a deficiency judgment, that their client would bid the amount of the indebtedness secured by the loan deed and was willing to accept the property for the debt, but that it was necessary *409
to foreclose in order to complete the transfer of the title into the Land Bank Commissioner or the plaintiff in this case; that she relied on these statements, etc. No special authority on the part of these attorneys was alleged. "Without special authority, attorneys can not receive anything in discharge of a client's claim but the full amount in cash." Code, § 9-606. "An attorney at law charged with the collection of a claim being a special agent for this purpose, and being expressly forbidden by law from receiving anything in discharge of a client's claim but the full amount in cash, one who undertakes to settle with an attorney an account in his hands for collection for a sum less than is due thereon must, at his peril, ascertain that the attorney is authorized to make such a compromise." Sonnebom v. Moore,