DocketNumber: No. 5179
Citation Numbers: 25 F.2d 251
Judges: Walker
Filed Date: 4/3/1928
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 7/23/2022
In the months of December, 1924, and January, 1925, the appellant received and had recorded two mortgages to itself from the Jefferson St. Charles Transfer Company, herein called the transfer company, each covering a described motorbus which had been sold by appellant to the transfer company, and securing notes of the transfer company for the unpaid part of the purchase price of the mortgaged bus. In March, 1925, the transfer company executed to one Boggs a mortgage covering said two busses to secure notes described in that mortgage, whieh was recorded on the date of its execution. The notes secured by that mortgage were purchased by appellee before their maturity. In April, 1925, in a negotiation between appellant and the transfer company for the purchase by the latter of additional busses, appellant agreed to sell the additional busses desired, provided the additional busses and also the two above-mentioned busses be mortgaged to secure the unpaid purchase price of the new busses, and, in response to an inquiry by appellant’s representative as to whether there was any mortgage or other incumbrance on the two above-mentioned busses in favor of any one other than appellant, the transfer company’s representative, its president, stated that there was no mortgage or incumbrance on those busses in favor of any one else. Thereupon, in reliance on that representation, the additional busses desired were sold by appellant to the transfer company, the transfer company, without surrendering possession of the two above-mentioned busses, executed instruments purporting to transfer them to appellant, the appellant executed an instrument purporting to retransfer the two busses to the transfer company, and the transfer company executed a mortgage to appellant covering those two busses and the additional busses to secure notes for the then unpaid part of the purchase price of the two busses and the unpaid purchase price of the additional busses. In June, 1925, appellant brought suit for the
So far as the transaction between appellant and -the transfer company in April, 1925, was intended to affect the mortgages to appellant on the two above-mentioned busses or the debts secured by those mortgages, that transaction was voidable at the instance of the appellant because of the above-mentioned, fraudulent misrepresentation made by the transfer company’s president to induce appellant to enter into that transaction. The fact that the existence of the mortgage held by appellee could have been ascertained by examining the public records did not deprive appellant of the right to rely on the statement of the transfer company’s president to the effect that there was no such mortgage. Shappirio v. Goldberg, 192 U. S. 232, 241, 24 S. Ct. 259, 48 L. Ed. 419; Mead v. Bunn, 32 N. Y. 275; United States v. Detroit Lumber Co., 200 U. S. 321, 333, 26 S. Ct. 282, 50 L. Ed. 499; Wilson v. Higbee (C. C.) 62 F. 723; Revised Civil Code of Louisiana, art. 1819. The mortgage held by appellee having been acquired by it subject to the mortgages to appellant of the two busses, appellee was not entitled to complain of the annulling of the transaction between appellant and the transfer company in April, 1925, so far as that transaction was intended to affect appellant’s liens on the two busses, as the appellee had no right to require the fraud committed by the transfer company to be given the effeet of converting appellee’s subordinate mortgage, into one having priority over the appellant’s mortgages on the two busses. Duson v. Pacific Improvement Co. (C. C. A.) 18 F.(2d) 5. A result of avoiding the transaction in April, 1925, so far as it was intended to affect appellee’s mortgages on the two busses, was that those mortgages remained superior to the subsequently executed and recorded mortgage held by appellee. By no contract or transaction binding on the appellant has it consented to its first lien on the two busses being subordinated to a lien or claim in favor of any one else. The transaction in April, 1925, gave rise to no estoppel in favor of the appellee, as the appellee did not, in reliance on that transaction, change its position to its detriment. The attempt of the appellee to have that transaction, to which it was not a party, and which in no way harmed it, given the effeet of converting its subordinate mortgage on the two busses into one having priority over the previously executed and recorded mortgages to appellant, hardly is consistent with appellee’s position as a suitor for relief in a court of equity. We conclude that the appellee was not entitled to the relief it sought, and that the court erred in granting that relief.
The decree is reversed.