Under a deed of trust to secure M. covering land in the District
of Columbia owned by B. and W. as tenants in common, the land was
sold to B., in 1873. The amount secured by the deed was $5,000 of
principal and $2,429.02 interest, expenses and taxes. The sale was
for enough to pay all this and leave a sum due to W. for her share
of the surplus. The terms of sale were not carried out, but M.
advanced to B. $3,200 more (out of which the $2,429.02 was paid),
and took a deed of trust for $8,200, which was recorded as a first
lien. A deed of trust to secure the amount going to W. was recorded
as a second lien, but was never accepted by W. Litigation
afterwards ensued, to which M. and B. and W. were parties, and in
which a sale of the land was ordered and made in 1880, and M.
bought it, for a sum not sufficient to pay the $7,429.02, with
interest, and the subsequent
Page 112 U. S. 42
taxes on the land. W. claimed priority out of the purchase money
for her share of the surplus on the sale of 1873, and M. claimed
the right to set off against the purchase money enough of her claim
for the $7,420.02, and interest, and the subsequent taxes, to
absorb it.
Held that the parties had abandoned the sale of
1873, and that the sale of 1880 must be regarded as a sale to
enforce the original deed of trust to secure M., and that W. had no
right to any of the proceeds of the sale of 1880.
The facts which make the case are stated in the opinion of the
Court.
MR. JUSTICE BLATCHFORD delivered the opinion of the Court.
Mrs. Susan L. Wallach, the wife of Charles L. Wallach, and Mrs.
Catharine Burche, the wife of Raymond W. Burche, sisters and
owners, as tenants in common, of land and buildings on the
northwest corner of Sixth Street West and D Street North in the
City of Washington, joined with their husbands on January 15, 1872,
in the execution to Joseph C. G. Kennedy of a deed of trust of that
property to secure the payment to Mrs. Rebecca R. Mellen of a joint
and several promissory note for $5,000, made by the grantors,
payable at the end of five years from that date, with interest at
the rate of ten percent per annum, payable in quarterly
installments. The deed provided that the trustee might, on default,
sell the property at public sale to the highest bidder on such
terms and conditions as he might deem most for the interest of all
parties concerned in the sale, first giving at least ten days'
notice of the time, place, and terms of sale, by published
advertisement. The deed provided that the proceeds of the sale,
after paying its expenses, and other expenses of the trust, and a
commission to the trustee, should be used to pay the debt,
interest, costs, and expenses, whether due and unpaid, or unpaid
though not due, and the surplus to the grantors. There was also a
provision that the expense of insurance, as well as of any taxes
the payment whereof might become necessary, should thereupon
become
Page 112 U. S. 43
a debt due and owing by the grantors, the payment of which
should be secured by the deed.
There being default in the payment of interest, the trustee
published a notice that he would sell the property at public
auction on December 8, 1873, on the following terms: $5,000, with
interest thereon at the rate of ten percent per annum, from January
15, 1873,
"together with the expenses of sale, in cash, and the balance at
one and two years, for which the purchaser is to give his notes,
bearing interest at the rate of eight percent per annum, and
secured by deed of trust on the property sold."
The property was sold for $16,509.66. The purchaser was Mrs.
Burche. The charges against the purchase money were stated by the
trustee to be $7,692.45, made up of $5,093.74 for note and
interest, and $2,598.71 for taxes, trustee's fee, auctioneer's
commission, and advertising. This left a net balance of $8,817.21,
of which one-half, or $4,408.60, was stated to belong to Mrs.
Wallach, and to be the sum to be secured for her benefit under the
deed of trust to be given on the property sold, according to the
published terms of sale. Mr. Kennedy, as trustee, and Mrs. Mellen,
on December 15, 1873, made a deed to Mrs. Burche, conveying the
property to her. This deed was acknowledged by the trustee on
December 24, 1873. On that day, Mrs. Burche executed to Mrs. Mellen
a deed of trust of the same property to secure the payment of a
promissory note bearing that date, made by Mrs. Burche, for $8,200,
payable to the order of Mrs. Elizabeth Hain, five years after date,
with interest at the rate of ten percent per annum, payable
quarterly. This deed was acknowledged and recorded on that day, so
as to make it a first lien on the property. On the same day, Mrs.
Burche executed two promissory notes, payable to the order of Mr.
Kennedy, each for $2,204.30, payable one in one year and the other
in two years after date, with interest at the rate of eight percent
per annum, and to secure them executed to Anthony Hyde and Albert
F. Fox a deed of trust on the same property. This deed was
acknowledged December 31, 1873, and recorded January 7, 1874. Of
course, it was only a second lien on the property. Mrs. Mellen,
Mrs. Burche, and the trustee intended
Page 112 U. S. 44
that these notes to Mr. Kennedy and this second deed of trust
should be the provision for the $4,408.60 for Mrs. Wallach.
What was done came about in this way:
Mrs. Mellen made an arrangement with Mrs. Burche to let the
$5,000 of principal stand, and to lend her $3,200 more, if she
would secure the $8,200 by a first lien on the property. Mrs. Hain
was the mother of Mrs. Mellen, and lent to her $1,000 of the
$3,200. Mrs. Mellen furnished the rest, and had the note made to
Mrs. Hain, and herself made trustee. Subsequently the notes were
transferred to her. With some of the $3,200, the interest, taxes,
expenses, etc., beyond the $5,000, were paid, and the remainder
Mrs. Burche retained. Mrs. Wallach never accepted the two notes
given to Mr. Kennedy or the deed of trust securing them, and did
not record that deed or procure or authorize it to be recorded.
In September, 1873, there being a dispute between Mrs. Wallach
and Mrs. Burche as to the application of the rents of the property,
which, under an agreement between them, Mrs. Wallach had been
receiving for several years, and as to other matters concerning the
property, they agreed, in writing, to submit the matter to three
referees, who made an award November 8, 1873. On January 29, 1874,
Mrs. Burche brought a suit in equity in the Supreme Court of the
District of Columbia against Mrs. Wallach and Mr. Kennedy, praying
for an accounting between herself and her sister respecting their
interests in the property, and respecting the rents received, and
taxes paid, and repairs made by Mrs. Wallach, and respecting the
moneys Mrs. Burche had paid or secured on the property for taxes
and expenses of the trustee's sale, and interest on the debt to
Mrs. Mellen, and respecting charges on the property at the time of
the sale, and that the amount which should be found to be due to
Mrs. Burche be deducted from the $4,408.60 going to Mrs. Wallach,
and that Mrs. Wallach convey her interest in the property to Mrs.
Burche in fee simple, and that Mr. Kennedy and Mrs. Wallach be
enjoined from parting with the two notes or their proceeds till a
final decree.
On December 1, 1874, Mrs. Wallach filed an answer to Mrs.
Burche's bill, and also a cross-bill against Mr. Kennedy,
Page 112 U. S. 45
Mr. and Mrs. Burche, Mrs. Hain, and Mrs. Mellen. In this bill
she attacked the validity of the sale under the deed of trust, for
various reasons, and prayed for an accounting between herself and
Mrs. Burche, and for the setting aside of the award and of the sale
under the deed of trust, and for the canceling of the deed from Mr.
Kennedy to Mrs. Burche, and for a sale of the property. This
cross-bill was not prosecuted, but on the 16th of January, 1875,
Mrs. Wallach filed an original bill in the same court against the
same defendants as in the cross-bill, and containing in substance
the same allegations, and praying the same relief, and, in
addition, the canceling of the trust deed from Mrs. Burche to Mrs.
Mellen, and of that from Mrs. Burche to Hyde and Fox. This bill
contains the averment that Mrs. Wallach never admitted that the
sale to Mrs. Burche was a valid one, and that she had never
received, or sought to receive, any benefit therefrom, or to claim
anything thereunder, and that, shortly after the sale was made, she
gave notice to Mr. Kennedy that she denied that the sale was
valid.\
Mr. and Mrs. Burche answered this bill. So did Mrs. Mellen. The
two suits were brought to a hearing together, on proofs, before the
court at special term, and on the 27th of June, 1877, a decree was
made, entitled in both suits, adjudging the sale of December 8,
1873, to have been a valid sale, and that Mrs. Burche and Mrs.
Wallach agreed with Mrs. Mellen that the sale should be made, and
that, if either of them should purchase at the sale, Mrs. Mellen
should lend to the purchaser so much money as should be found
necessary to pay off the liens on the property and the arrears of
interest, with costs and expenses of sale, and add the same to the
original debt of $5,000, and take a new deed of trust for the
aggregate amount of those two sums, which deed was to be the first
mortgage on the property. The decree referred the suit brought by
Mrs. Burche to an auditor to state accounts between Mrs. Burche and
Mrs. Wallach. A decree was made dismissing the bill filed by Mrs.
Wallach. She appealed from both decrees to the court in general
term, which, by a decree made June 5, 1878, consolidated the two
suits, reversed the decree in the suit brought by Mrs.
Page 112 U. S. 46
Wallach, modified the decree in the other suit, and directed the
court in special term to enter a decree in the consolidated suits,
confirming the sale by Mr. Kennedy, and referring it to an auditor
to take various accounts between the parties. On the 5th of May,
1879, he reported eight accounts. Mrs. Mellen excepted to the
report, and the auditor was directed to state a further account. He
did so on October 30, 1879. On the 3d of January, 1880, the court
in special term made a decree in the consolidated suit, adjudging
that the sum of $5,000 due to Mrs. Mellen, and the further sum of
$2,429.02 afterwards advanced by her for the payment of interest in
arrear, taxes, and other encumbrances, constituted the only lien
upon the estate of Mrs. Burche and Mrs. Wallach in the property on
the day of sale, December 8, 1873; that the further sum of $970.98
was due Mrs. Mellen from Mrs. Burche, and chargeable on her share
in the property; that the sum of $3,975.49 became due on December
8, 1873, to Mrs. Wallach, with interest at the rate of eight
percent per annum, for her share of the net proceeds of the sale of
the property on that day, and that the property be sold by
trustees. An ineffectual attempt by them to sell at auction was
made January 26, 1880; $11,000 being bid, and the property being
then withdrawn. On June 9, 1880, they sold it at auction to Mrs.
Mellen for $9,900. On exceptions by Mrs. Wallach, the court, on
November 8, 1880, set aside the sale, and ordered another. It was
made at auction on November 19, 1880, to Mrs. Mellen for $9,900. On
December 29, 1880, the court in special term made a decree
confirming the sale, and allowing Mrs. Mellen to discount out of
the purchase money her claim of $7,429.02, fixed by the decree of
January 3, 1880, with interest on $7,105.41 thereof from December
8, 1873, and the taxes and assessments which had accrued against
the property since that date. A statement agreed to between Mrs.
Mellen and Mrs. Wallach showed that the net proceeds of sale were
insufficient to pay the claims so allowed to Mrs. Mellen by the sum
of $3,580.81. Mrs. Wallach appealed to the court in general term,
and on the 9th of July, 1881, it made a decree (1 Mackey 236) which
adjudged that the arrangement made between Mrs. Burche and Mrs.
Page 112 U. S. 47
Mellen to encumber the property for $8,200 was without the
knowledge of Mrs. Wallach, and was never approved or ratified by
her; that at the time of the execution of the trust deed for
$8,200, Mrs. Wallach was entitled to have out of the property
$3,975.49, with interest at the rate of eight percent per annum
from December 8, 1873; that the rights of Mrs. Wallach had not been
waived by her, and could not be affected by any arrangement between
Mrs. Burche and Mrs. Mellen; that the decree of the court in
special term, made December 29, 1880, be reversed; that Mrs. Mellen
comply with the terms of sale on her purchase within thirty days,
or the property be resold at her risk and cost; that the proceeds
of the property be applied in the first place to pay to Mrs.
Wallach the $3,975.49, with interest thereon at the rate of eight
percent per annum from December 8, 1873, and the residue to be paid
to Mrs. Mellen, and that Mrs. Mellen pay the costs of the suits.
From this decree Mrs. Mellen has taken the present appeal.
The only question for consideration is whether Mrs. Mellen or
Mrs. Wallach is entitled to priority of payment out of the net
proceeds of the sale of the property under the decree of January 3,
1880. If Mrs. Mellen is entitled to priority, there is nothing for
Mrs. Wallach, and she will have lost her interest in the property
and her share of the net proceeds of its sale by Mr. Kennedy. Mr.
Kennedy was authorized by the deed of trust to sell upon such terms
and conditions as he might deem most for the interest of all
parties concerned in the sale. He exercised his best judgment in
prescribing the terms he did, which were $5,000, with interest at
the rate of ten percent per annum from January 15, 1873, and the
expenses of the sale, in cash, and the balance at one and two
years, with interest at eight percent per annum, secured by deed of
trust on the property sold. Although Mrs. Wallach attacked the
validity of the sale by her suit, and prayed for the canceling of
the deed from Mr. Kennedy to Mrs. Burche, and of the trust deed
from Mrs. Burche to Mrs. Mellen, the court, in special term, by its
decree of June 27, 1877, adjudged the sale to be valid, and,
although Mrs. Wallach appealed, the court in general term confirmed
the sale. If that sale had been carried
Page 112 U. S. 48
out according to its terms, Mrs. Mellen would have received in
cash her $5,000 of principal, and what was due to her beyond that
would have been secured in notes at one and two years, with a deed
of trust, and the surplus going to Mrs. Wallach would have been
secured by the same deed of trust. But in such event, Mrs. Mellen
would have been entitled to receive first the whole amount going to
her before Mrs. Wallach could receive anything, because Mrs.
Wallach's claim was only to the surplus. But the sale by Mr.
Kennedy was not carried out according to its terms. The court in
general term, by its decree of June 5, 1878, confirmed the sale and
provided for taking accounts, although it reversed the decree which
had dismissed Mrs. Wallach's bill, and evidently contemplated then
that the sale might be carried out; for the decree says that
inasmuch as the settlement for such sale, made by Mrs. Mellen and
Mrs. Burche, was complained of, and it was alleged that the account
on which the sale was settled was made up without the knowledge of
Mrs. Wallach, and Mrs. Wallach alleged that a much larger amount
had been charged to her than ought to have been therefore in order
to settle the equities of the parties interested in the sale,
between Mrs. Mellen and Mrs. Wallach and Mrs. Burche, and between
Mrs. Mellen and Mrs. Burche, and between Mrs. Wallach and Mrs.
Burche, growing out of the sale and otherwise, the reference is
made. The reference embraced an ascertainment of the liens on the
property at the date of its sale, and what share of them was
chargeable to Mrs. Wallach, and what sum, if any, due from her to
Mrs. Burche ought to be set off against Mrs. Wallach's interest in
the proceeds of Mr. Kennedy's sale, and what were the expenses of
such sale. The same decree reserved all the equities between the
parties touching the matters in controversy until the report should
be made and confirmed.
The $8,200 deed of trust was given by Mrs. Burche to Mrs.
Mellen, and the parties got into litigation. As a result of that,
the court in special term decreed, on January 3, 1880, that the sum
of $5,000 due to Mrs. Mellen, and the $2,429.02 which she had
advanced to pay interest in arrear, taxes, and other encumbrances,
were liens on the property on the day of Mr.
Page 112 U. S. 49
Kennedy's sale. But the decree went on to direct a sale of the
property, and of all the interest and estate therein, of all the
parties to the suit, by trustees whom it appointed. The decree
directed the trustees to bring into court the money and notes which
they should receive, to be distributed under the further order of
the court. This decree was not appealed from, but the sale took
place under it. That sale was confirmed by the court in special
term, by its decree of December 29, 1880. Mrs. Mellen acquiesced in
that decree by not appealing from it. On Mrs. Wallach's appeal from
it, the court in general term decreed that the trustees who made
the sale should require Mrs. Mellen to comply specifically with the
terms of her purchase. Mrs. Wallach did not appeal from that, and
so she acquiesced in it, and Mrs. Mellen, on her appeal to this
Court, assigns for error only the action of the general term in
giving to Mrs. Wallach priority of payment. Mrs. Burche, being a
party to both suits, and not appealing, is bound by the decrees. In
view of all this, it must be held that all parties have by their
action abandoned the sale by Mr. Kennedy, and acquiesced in the
subsequent sale to Mrs. Mellen. It follows from this that all claim
of Mrs. Wallach to any surplus from the sale by Mr. Kennedy is
gone. Mrs. Mellen, instead of exacting on the sale in cash her
$5,000, was willing to leave it to be still a first lien on the
property. Her priority of lien, as established by the decree of
January 3, 1880, which was not appealed from, extended to the sum
of $2,429.02, beyond the $5,000, as money which she had paid to
discharge interest, costs, expenses, and taxes which were made a
lien on the property by the trust deed to Mr. Kennedy. That amount
was, with the $5,000 embraced in the $8,200, covered by the deed of
trust made by Mrs. Burche. But, to the extent of $7,429.02, with
the interest awarded by the decree of December 29, 1880, Mrs.
Mellen's claim stands and has never been satisfied. It is a first
lien under the trust deed to Mr. Kennedy, which remains to be
enforced for the benefit of Mrs. Mellen, the sale under that deed
being, as shown, out of the way, by assent of all parties. Mrs.
Mellen has never waived that claim and lien. She asserted them by
taking the trust
Page 112 U. S. 50
deed from Mrs. Burche, to which we see no valid objection, so
far at least, as the amount for which she had a lien at the date of
Mr. Kennedy's sale is concerned, and which is the amount allowed
her by the court in special term as a lien. She has asserted the
same claim and lien constantly ever since. She did not abandon them
by assenting to the resale provided for by the decree of January 3,
1880. In fact, that decree, so far as the $7,429.02 adjudged by it
to be due to Mrs. Mellen and to have been a lien on the property on
the day of Mr. Kennedy's sale, and so far as Mrs. Mellen's claim to
that extent is concerned, may properly be regarded as ordering a
resale to enforce Mrs. Mellen's rights under the deed of trust to
Mr. Kennedy. Such is its effect.
Astor v. Miller, 2 Paige
68;
Olcott v.
Bynum, 17 Wall. 63;
Markey v. Langley,
92 U. S. 142,
92 U. S.
155.
The decree of the court in general term, made July 9, 1881,
is reversed, and the cause is remanded to that court, with
direction to affirm, with costs, the decree of the court in special
term made December 29, 1880, and to take or direct such further
proceedings as may be in conformity with law and not inconsistent
with this opinion.