Judges: Blodgett
Filed Date: 7/15/1875
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/6/2024
It is not disputed that Long, the assignee, did hold all the rights which the Equitable Insurance Company held by virtue of the Montgomery trust deed, which was the second one given. In regard to the first point, namely, that of fraudulent combination between Rogers, the mortgagor, and Smith, the purchaser, and Fisher, the holder of the note, I do not think the evidence sufficient to sustain the allegation or entitle the party to relief on that ground.
In regard to the second point, namely, that the sale was irregular because it was made at the ruins of the door of the old courthouse, I am inclined to think that would be a good point if made at the time the sale took place. It would be good ground for stopping the sale before rights intervene, but I doubt if a purchaser would be absolutely, obliged to take notice that the court-house was a ruin. Here is a trust deed with power to sell, and under its provisions a sale does take place, and a deed is given, in which it is recited that the sale was in due form and according to the terms of the deed. Under that, the person buying is clothed with a title, and thereupon he sells the property to another. Now, is it for a moment to be supposed that the other is obliged to look back to all the external facts connected with the sale, when his deed seems perfectly valid, and is in the regular form? I am inclined to think not, and I also think that the sale was made in pursuance of the terms of the trust deed.
I now come to the third point, namely, that the sale was void because the Equitable Insurance Company was in bankruptcy at the time. Now, the position of the company was simply that of mortgagee of Rogers’ equity of redemption. That they held that, is clear, but it is clear also that he had the right to redeem from both the King and Montgomery incumbrance in which the insurance company was interested. Now, it has been held in several instances that when a bankrupt was the owner of the equity of redemption, and foreclosure proceedings were instituted after the bankruptcy, or an attempt was made to foreclose by a sale under a power in a trust deed, that the proceedings were void unless made with leave of the bankrupt court. Hutchings v. Muzzy Iron Works [Case No. 6,952]; In re Brinkman [Id. 1,884]. In this case, however, the company did not hold the equity of redemption vested in Rogers. The only interest the company held was as second mortgagee. King, by the power delegated to him under the first trust deed, was authorized to sell upon certain contingencies. These contingencies which so authorized him to sell had actually arisen and happened, and accordingly he proceeded to; and did, make the sale. The grantor to him was not in bankruptcy; he was capable of acting. Rogers was capable of paying off the debt, — at least nothing has been proved to the contrary; and, consequently, he was capable of acting. Now the ground upon which the courts have gone in the question above referred to is, that the grantor could not pay off the debt without leave of the court, and that therefore the proceedings were void, because of the invalidity
The bill will therefore lie dismissed.