Cheney v. Nathan
Cheney v. Nathan
Opinion of the Court
The bill avers that on August 9th, 1888, said Emily T. Nathan and her husband, Lewis W. Nathan, executed to Lena Wolff a mortgage on the land described in the bill to secure the payment of a note for $4,000 then executed by said Emily to said Lena Wolff, with the necessary written consent of her husband. The note was payable two years after date, with interest payable semi-annually. The mortgage recited that the note was given for money borrowed by said Emily from the payee. That in July, 1891, said Emily executed a conveyance of said property to H. A. Sayre, S. M. Levin, and B. B. Snodgrass, assignees under a certain deed of trust executed by Moses Bros, for the benefit of
Afterwards said assignees were removed from said trust, and the complainant and one Janney became their successors, and thereupon said original assigness assigned said note to such successors by endorsement thereon. Janney afterwards died, and complainant, Cheney, has since been administering the trust, as surviving trustee. In 1895 (the date not given), said deed of conveyance executed by said Emily to said assignees was by decree of the chancery court declared void by reason of the failure of said Lewis W. Nathan to properly join in the execution of the same, and the complainant, under said decree, surrendered possession of said property to said Emily.
While in the possession of said property, said original assignees and their successors, in administering their trust, paid large sums of money for State, county and city taxes and charges upon said property, and other sums for insurance and repairs, receiving a small amount of rent which was greatly insufficient to reimburse them for said sums so paid. The said mortgage provided, among other things, -that in case it was foreclosed by judicial proceedings a reasonable attorney’s fee for the same would be paid out of the proceeds of the sale. Indebtedness secured by said mortgage has never been paid.
The original bill, which was filed by said Cheney, as surviving trustee of said Moses Bros, as aforesaid, against the said Emily T. Nathan, alleging the foregoing facts, prayed for an order of reference to ascertain the amount due complainant on account of said indebtedness and the said sums paid for taxes, repairs and insurance and a reasonable solicitor’s fee for the foreclosure ; that the mortgage be foreclosed and the said prop
The respondent answered the bill admitting the execution of the note and mortgage, but setting up that no part of the money was borrowed for her use or benefit, that she received no part thereof but that the same, and the whole of it, was borrowed for, paid to, and used by, the said Moses Bros, of whose estate the complainant is trustee. She admitted the signing of the said deed of conveyance to said original trustees, as alleged in the bill, and that said assignees went into possession of the property, and she admits and avers, that said conveyance so executed by her, and purporting to be executed by her husband, was thereafter, on May 30th, 1895, in a certain cause in which the complainant was a party, declared null and void by the chancery court, and the property restored to her possession. She admits the payment of said mortgage debt and interest, and the transfer by said Lena Wolff to said assignees, as alleged in the bill, but she insists that said assignees, in making said payment and taking said transfer, simply paid the debt of said Moses Bros., and not her debt, and that the transfer did not and could not have the effect of keeping the note and mortgage alive as a debt against her, or as a lien upon her said property, but that the effect of said payment was to cancel and discharge the mortgage debt. She neither admits nor denies the allegations in reference to expenses paid; attorney’s fees, etc.
The answer sets up, circumstantially, the facts touching the borrowing of the money from Mrs. Wolff, and the execution of said note and mortgage by the respondent oh her property, to secure the loan, and shows that respondent had nothing to do with the negotiation for the loan, had no personal interest in it, but that the whole transaction was one of Moses Bros, to obtain the loan for their own use and benefit; that it was obtained by them, the money received by them and used by them, and that respondent executed her said note and mortgage for the said loan, entirely as a surety for said Moses Bros., and that the debt was wholly the debt of Moses Bros. The respondent avers, on information and belief, that the said Moses Bros., with their own money, paid interest on said mortgage debt up to the time of
These facts the respondent sets up by way of plea, as well as answer.
The answer then proceeds to set up the said judicial proceedings wherein the said conveyance by the respondent to the said original assignees was set aside and respondent restored to the possession of the property, pleading, by virtue thereof, res judicata; but, as the case comes before us, it is unnecessary to notice this defense.
The answer is prayed to be taken as a cross-bill, to be heard at the same time with the original bill. It prays that the complainant be required to deliver up the said note and mortgage to be cancelled, and that he be perpetually enjoined from asserting any further claim to said property. A reference is prayed, to ascertain what amounts, if any, the complainant, or his predecessors, have paid out for taxes, insurance and repairs, and what rents, if any, they have received, and respondent offers to pay to complainant the excess, if any, of taxes, insurance and repairs over the amount of rents received. She prays also for general relief.
On October 5, 1896, after the coming in of said answer, the complainant amended his bill, alleging that said assignment of Moses Bros, conveyed and transferred to said assignee all of the property of every character and description owned by said Moses Bros., either as partners or as individuals, for the benefit of their creditors, respectively, to be held by said assignees under the trusts therein declared, and tobe sold and distributed among the several creditors of the firm and the individuals, respectively, according to their respective liens and priorities, as created and declared by law, and said assignees entered into possession of all of said property so assigned ; that said conveyance of respondent to said original assignees had upon the same a certificate of acknowledgement wherein it was certified by a notary public of the county of Montgomery, State of Alabama, where the deed was signed, that respondent and her
. The respondent, in answer to the bill as amended, interposed her original answer and cross-bill, and set up nothing further not already in issue between the parties .
There were demurrers to the cross-bill raising the questions whether or not the facts stated showed that the mortgage debt was paid and discharged by the assignees, by reason of their payment to Mrs. Wolff of the amount thereof, with the accrued interest, and the execution of the transfer by Mrs. Wolff to them; and whether or not the said adjudication, in the other cause, was a bar to the relief sought by the complainant. The same defenses were made by, pleas, the first setting up the alleged payment and the second the alleged adjudi
In the discussion of the'case by the counsel for appellee, the assignees of Moses Bros., in paying the money to Mrs. Wolff and taking the transfer from her, are placed exactly in the shoes of Moses Bros., if that firm had, itself, in recognition that.the debt was theirs, paid the money to Mrs. Wolff and taken the transfer to themselves ; and as, m that instance, the debt would have been unquestionably discharged, and the mortgage incumbrance removed from the laud, it is argued that the payment by the assignees had the same effect. We are unable to assent to this view. The argument proceeds upon the idea that the assignees were debtors charged with the same duties and obligations, in regard to the payment of the debt, as rested upon Moses Bros.; and herein lies its fault. The assignees did not, by accepting the trust, become debtors to any creditor of Moses Bros. Their duties were of a trust character, and were defined by the terms of the instrument creating them. It was their duty to receive and administer all of the assets assigned to them for the equal benefit, respectively, of the several classes of creditors provided for, paying to each creditor his proportionate interest in the fund which, upon administration of the trust, would be found tobe in their hands for distribution to creditors. Their liability, until a dividend should be declared, was alone in a court of equity, where they might be held to account for the manner of their administration of the trust. No action could have been maintained against them, in any court, as a debtor by reason of the obligations of a debtor which rested upon their assignors. They were not to pay debts but divide assets.
It is true that if these assignees had, with a knowledge of all the facts, undertaken to assume the obligations of Moses Bros., and paid the debt, with the view of discharging the same, it would have operated as a discharge to the same extent as if the payment had been made by Moses Bros, themselves ; but such was not the case. In the first place, at the time the payment was made, they held a deed which appeared to be a completo, valid conveyance of the land in fee .simple to them by Mrs.Nathan and her husband; they believed that they were the owners of the absolute estate by virtue of this
Reversed and remanded,
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Cheney, Trustee, &c. v. Nathan
- Status
- Published