A
cestui qui trust under twenty-six trust deeds of
land, executed to five different sets of trustees, to secure the
payment of money filed a bill in equity in the Supreme Court of the
District of Columbia to procure a sale of the land. Some of the
deeds covered only a part of the land. One of them covered the
whole. All of the trustees were made defendants, and the bill was
taken
pro confesso as to ail of them. As to the trustees
in twenty-two of the deeds, the bill alleged that they had declined
to execute the trusts. The holders of judgments and mechanics'
liens and purchasers of some of the land were made defendants. Some
of the trust deeds did not specify any length of notice of the time
and place of sale by advertisement. The bill alleged the insolvency
of the grantor and the inadequate value of the land to pay the
liens. On an objection by the grantor that the
cestui que
trust could not maintain the bill,
held that the
objection could not be sustained.
The bill was not multifarious.
The Special Term made a decree for the sale of the land without
hearing evidence on issues raised by the pleadings. On appeal, the
General Term reversed the decree and remanded the cause to the
Special Term for further proceedings, with permission to the
parties to apply to the Special Term for leave to amend their
pleadings. Held that this was a proper order under § 772 of
the Revised Statutes of the District of Columbia.
A decree in a prior suit held not to be pleadable as
res
adjudicata in view of the proceedings in that suit.
Page 121 U. S. 106
Pleas filed with an answer, where the answer extends to the
whole matter covered by the pleas, held to have been properly
overruled.
The appointment of a receiver twenty days after the filing of
the bill to collect rents and to lease unrented property upheld as
within the rule laid down in
Kountze v. Omaha Hotel Co.,
107 U. S. 378,
107 U. S.
395.
The appointment of a receiver by an interlocutory decree held
not to have been superseded, because it was not expressly continued
by the final decree.
Commissions on loans not paid by the borrower to the lender held
not to constitute usury.
Bill in equity. Decree for complainant. Respondent appealed. The
case is stated in the opinion of the Court.
MR. JUSTICE BLATCHFORD delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a suit in equity brought in the Supreme Court of the
District of Columbia on the 17th day of April, 1875, by the Phoenix
Mutual Life Insurance Company, a Connecticut corporation, against
Albert Grant and others to enforce certain deeds of trust, 26 in
number, executed by Grant and his wife to secure sundry sums of
money, the plaintiff claiming to be the owner of all of the debts
secured by the deeds of trust, which cover various lots in Square
760 in the City of Washington. The suit applies to lots 1, 3, 4, 5,
6, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 14, 16, 17, and 18, all of which, but lots 16,
17, and 18, had buildings on them when the suit was brought. The
total amount of principal moneys alleged in the bill to be due on
the debts secured by the deeds of trust is $312,658.14. The
trustees in the several deeds of trust, being five different sets
of trustees, two in each set, are made parties defendant, as are
certain judgment and mechanics' lien creditors of Grant and
purchasers from him. The bill alleges that Grant is insolvent; that
the property is very much deteriorating for the want of necessary
repairs to the buildings upon it, which Grant is
Page 121 U. S. 107
unable or unwilling to make, and that 10 of the buildings are
unoccupied. The bill prays for the appointment of a receiver to
rent and properly care for 12 of the lots; that the net amounts
collected by the receiver be paid over to the plaintiff on account
of the indebtedness; that the 14 lots covered by the trust deeds
may be sold to pay the indebtedness due to the plaintiff, and that
the proceeds of the sale be paid to the parties lawfully entitled
thereto.
On the 7th of May, 1875, after a hearing, the court made an
order appointing a receiver of 10 of the lots to collect the rents
of rented property and to lease such as was unrented. On the 6th of
July, 1875, Grant demurred generally to the bill. This demurrer was
overruled on the 8th of November, 1875, with leave to answer. On
the 27th of November, 1875, Grant filed an answer denying his
indebtedness as to a large part of the amount claimed by the
plaintiff and denying generally the equities of the bill, and with
the answer filed four pleas, setting up (1) a want of jurisdiction
in the court to decree a sale on the ground that the only lawful
authority to make the sale without the consent of Grant was vested
in the several trustees; (2) the nonjoinder of numerous parties
named in the plea; (3) the illegality of the indebtedness claimed,
because $9,000 of illegal and usurious interest was charged by the
plaintiff and paid by Grant on such indebtedness; (4) that all the
indebtedness was paid and satisfied before the bringing of the
suit.
On the same day, Grant filed a cross-bill, making as defendants
the parties to the original bill and those named in the second
plea, in which he set up that a contract had been made between him
and the plaintiff on the 1st of March, 1873, by the terms of which,
among other things, all of his obligations to the plaintiff were to
be surrendered to him in consideration of a deed in fee to be made
by him to the plaintiff of 11 of the lots. The cross-bill prayed
for a specific performance of such contract by the plaintiff.
On the 23rd of December, 1875, the plaintiff moved to strike out
the pleas and also demurred to the cross-bill. On the 15th of
March, 1876, the demurrer to the cross-bill was sustained,
Page 121 U. S. 108
with leave to amend. On the 20th of March, 1876, the plaintiff
filed a general replication, joining issue with Grant. On the 6th
of May, 1876, the court in Special Term made an order referring the
cause to the auditor of the court to state the account between the
plaintiff and Grant, the amount due under the several deeds of
trust, the amounts due to the judgment and mechanics' lien
creditors referred to in the bill, whether the same are liens upon
any of the real estate, the relative priorities of the claims of
such creditors and the plaintiff, and the value of the real estate.
From this order Grant appealed to the General Term. On the hearing
before the auditor, he refused to receive evidence on the part of
Grant in support of any of the defenses raised by his answer.
On the 19th of June, 1876, the auditor filed his report, in
which he reported upon the several matters referred to him and
found the amount due on the several deeds of trust on the real
estate, the sale of which the bill prayed for, to be $425,848.83,
including interest, and stated the value of the 14 lots, and of the
buildings upon them, to be $200,425. Grant filed exceptions to this
report, and on the 11th of December, 1876, the court made a decree
overruling the exceptions and confirming the report. The decree
directed that the 14 lots be sold by trustees named in the decree
unless Grant should by a day specified pay into court for the
plaintiff the sum of $407,117.58. In case of a sale, the proceeds
were to be brought into court to abide further order. Grant
appealed to the General Term from this decree.
On the 28th of March, 1877, a decree was made by the General
Term reversing the decree of the Special Term of December 11, 1876,
setting aside the order of reference to the auditor, and the
proceedings thereunder, and remanding the cause to the Special Term
for further proceedings, to commence with the cause as it stood
after the filing of the replication and when application for the
reference to the auditor was made, with leave to Grant to move to
amend his cross-bill, and to the plaintiff to apply for such order
as it might be advised in regard to its replication. The decision
of the General Term, reported in 3 MacArthur 42, considers the
objection
Page 121 U. S. 109
raised to the jurisdiction of the court to decree a sale on the
ground that by the trust deeds, the sales were to be made by the
trustees, and overrules it. It says:
"The present case contains many particular features which seem
to render the jurisdiction of the court absolutely indispensable in
order that a fair sale should be made and bidders should know
beforehand that they could get a valid title under a decree in
which the rights of every person having a claim upon the property
had been ascertained and settled. From the face of the bill, it
appears that the property in question has been subdivided into
numerous lots. Some of the deeds of trust are liens upon all the
lots; others upon some of them only. Payments have been made on
account of some of the claims and none upon others. The aggregate
liens exceed the value of the property, and the owner is apparently
insolvent. Purchasers from Grant subsequent to the liens are
parties to the bill, and in justice to them the securities should
be marshaled. The parties in interest are numerous, and the
complication of rights is so great that nothing can settle them
except a decree in equity."
It goes on to hold that the order of reference to the auditor
was erroneous in the then condition of the cause, and that the
issues raised by Grant ought to have been first tried in the usual
way.
On the 21st of May, 1877, by leave of the court in Special Term,
Grant filed amendments to his cross-bill. On the 21st of July,
1877, the plaintiff, by an order of the Special Term, withdrew its
replication filed March 20, 1876, and filed a general replication
to the answer of Grant, and set down for argument the pleas filed
with Grant's answer. On the 11th of September, 1877, Grant filed a
supplemental answer setting up as a bar to the suit a decree made
by the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia in equity in a
suit wherein Aaron Carter, Jr., and others were plaintiffs and
Grant and the Phoenix Mutual Life Insurance Company and others were
defendants, and the company filed an answer to the amended
cross-bill of Grant.
On the 12th of February, 1878, the court in General Term, on an
application made by Grant at the Special Term, and
Page 121 U. S. 110
which it ordered to be heard in the first instance by the
General Term, made an order vacating the receivership and directing
the receiver to deliver to Grant possession of 10 of the lots and
to pay into the registry of the court all moneys in his hands
derived from rents and profits.
On the 4th of March, 1878, the court in Special Term made an
order overruling all of the pleas filed by Grant. Grant appealed to
the General Term from so much of this order as overruled the
second, third, and fourth pleas.
On the 2d of July, 1879, the General Term affirmed the order of
the Special Term overruling the second, third, and fourth pleas,
and remanded the cause to the Special Term for further proceedings.
On the 22d of November, 1879, the plaintiff filed a replication
joining issue with Grant on his supplemental answer to the
bill.
Thereafter, testimony was taken by both parties on the issues
raised. Testimony was taken at Hartford, Connecticut, on the part
of the plaintiff, by commission. Grant moved to suppress certain
depositions taken under that commission. The motion was granted as
to three depositions, and overruled as to the others. Complaint is
made by Grant that, upon the motion to suppress, he was not
permitted to read certain affidavits, and that he was denied leave
to cross-examine orally certain witnesses at Hartford, and that he
was denied an extension of time in which to take testimony in
rebuttal of evidence taken on the part of the plaintiff at
Hartford.
On the 9th of February, 1881, the court in Special Term made an
order referring the cause to the court in General Term for hearing
in the first instance.
On the 2d of March, 1882, the cause having been heard by the
General Term on the pleadings and proofs, a decree was made by it
declaring that Grant is not entitled to any relief under his
cross-bill; that the plaintiff is the holder and owner of the
several obligations of Grant, secured by the deeds of trust of the
real estate the sale of which the bill prays for; that Grant has
made default in the payment of his said obligations, on which he is
indebted to the plaintiff in large sums of money; that the taxes on
the real estate are in arrear for
Page 121 U. S. 111
more than $20,000; that the indebtedness of Grant to the
plaintiff largely exceeds the value of the real estate; that the
plaintiff has no personal security for its debt, and referring the
cause to the auditor of the court to state the account between the
plaintiff and Grant, the amount due under the deeds of trusts, the
amounts due to judgment and mechanics' lien creditors, whether the
same are liens upon any of the real estate, the relative priorities
of the claims of those creditors and the plaintiff, the value of
the real estate, the amount of taxes in arrear, and the particulars
of any sales for taxes. The decree also appoints a receiver in the
cause, to take possession of 12 of the lots and lease them, and
enjoins Grant from interfering with the receiver in his possession
and control of the property.
The reference was had before the auditor, and on the 1st of May,
1882, he filed his report, finding that there was due on that date
from Grant to the plaintiff on the indebtedness secured by the
trust deeds $285,202.09 of principal, and $225,117.98 of interest,
making a total of $510,320.07. The report also showed that the
amount of taxes, and interest thereon, in arrear upon the real
estate was $48,755.05, and that the value of the 14 lots and the
improvements upon them was $137,000. On the 5th of March, 1883,
Grant filed exceptions to the auditor's report. The case was
brought to a further hearing in the General Term, on its
interlocutory decree of March 2, 1882, and on the report of the
auditor, and on the exceptions of Grant thereto, and, on the 16th
of June, 1883, it made a final decree overruling the exceptions,
confirming the report, and dismissing the cross-bill of Grant and
decreeing that unless Grant should, by a day specified, pay to the
complainant the sum of $510,320.07, with interest on $285,202.09
from May 1, 1882, and the costs of the suit, the 14 lots should be
sold by a trustee appointed by the decree, and the proceeds of the
sale should brought into court to abide further order. From that
decree Grant has appealed to this Court.
The first assignment of error is that the court erred in
overruling the demurrer of Grant. The bill seeks to foreclose the
equity of redemption of Grant in the property covered by
Page 121 U. S. 112
26 trust deeds executed to five different sets of trustees, the
plaintiff being the
cestui que trust in all of them,
either originally or by purchase. Some of these deeds cover only
one lot; others embrace two or more lots, and there is but one of
them which embraces all of the property. All of the trustees are
made defendants, and the bill has been duly taken
pro
confesso as to all of them. As to Gallaudet and Paine,
trustees in 22 of the 26 deeds, the bill alleges that they have
declined to execute their trusts. The bill also sets forth a number
of judgments and mechanics' liens held by parties who are made
defendants, none of the mechanics' liens covering the whole
property, and a number of purchases of lots from Grant. The
objection made is that the bill does not show a right in the
plaintiff to maintain the suit; that each trust deed vests in its
trustees a legal title to the property covered by it, with power to
sell; that the interest of the
cestui que trust is
represented by the trustees, who must enforce the trust, and that,
unless the bill shows a failure on their part to do so, through
incapacity or otherwise, the
cestui que trust has no
standing in court in its own right. The bill alleges that in 12 of
the deeds of trust executed January 1, 1872, to Gallaudet and Paine
as trustees, the length of notice of the time and place of sale by
advertisement is left blank; that this would prevent the trustees
from executing such power of sale; but that in a court of equity,
the deeds would be considered as mortgages. It is urged on the part
of Grant that this defective power of sale renders it the more
necessary that the trustees, rather than the
cestui que
trust, should act in either seeking a correction of the defect
or in enforcing the trust. But we think there is nothing in the
objection thus raised. The case is one clearly of equity cognizance
for the reasons above set forth and those contained in the opinion
of the General Term above quoted. No objection is made on the part
of any of the trustees to the maintenance of the suit. The bill is
taken as confessed as to all of them, and there is no possible
prejudice to the defendant Grant in the bringing of the bill in its
actual shape by the
cestui que trust.
Nor is the bill open to the objection that it is
multifarious.
Page 121 U. S. 113
The fact that one of the deeds of trust covers the entire
property and that some of the creditors of Grant who were made
defendants have liens upon various portions of that property makes
it eminently proper, and indeed, indispensable, if a clear title is
to be given by a sale, to adjudicate all the claims in one
suit.
The second assignment of error is that the General Term erred in
its decree of March 28, 1877, in remanding the cause to the Special
Term for further proceedings after it had reversed the decree of
the Special Term of December 11, 1876, and especially in then
authorizing the plaintiff to apply to the Special Term for such
order as it might be advised in regard to its replication. The
ground taken is that as at the time of the hearing which resulted
in the decree of the Special Term of December 11, 1876, no
testimony had been taken upon any of the issues raised by the
pleadings, and as the plaintiff had gone to hearing in that state
of the case and had obtained a decree of sale in the Special Term,
that decree was a final decree in its favor on the merits, and
that, on the hearing in the General Term, on the appeal of Grant,
upon the same record, the General Term, finding the decree of the
Special Term to have been erroneous, was bound to enter a decree on
the merits in favor of Grant, reversing the decree of the Special
Term and dismissing the bill. But we are of opinion that the
General Term had power to make its decree of the 28th of March,
1877. The error of the Special Term was in making a decree of sale
on the report of the auditor without a trial of the issues raised
by the pleadings. For that error its decree was reversed, and it
was proper for the General Term to remand the cause to the Special
Term for further proceedings in the taking of testimony on the
issues, and with permission to the parties to apply in the Special
Term for leave to amend their pleadings. This was, within §
772 of the Revised Statutes of the District of Columbia, a
modification of the decree of the Special Term on an appeal
involving the merits of the action. The decree of the General Term
reversed that of the Special Term and vacated the order of
reference to the auditor and all proceedings thereunder, and the
further
Page 121 U. S. 114
directions in the decree of the General Term were but
modifications of the decree of the Special Term.
The third assignment of error is that the court erred in not
sustaining Grant's defense of
res adjudicata, as set up in
his supplemental answer of September 11, 1877. There is attached to
that answer a transcript of the record in the suit of Carter and
others against Grant and others. The bill in that case was filed on
the 30th of October, 1872, and was brought by three judgment
creditors of Grant, on their own behalf and that of all others
similarly situated, who should become parties. The defendants in it
were Grant and his wife, the Phoenix Mutual Life Insurance Company,
the trustees in the various trust deeds sought to be enforced by
that company, and various creditors of Grant. It set forth the
existence of the various deeds of trust mentioned in the bill in
this suit, and prayed for the sale of 12 of the lots covered by
those deeds of trust, and that the proceeds of the sale, after
satisfying all valid prior liens upon the lots, be applied to the
payment of the complainants' judgments. An amended and supplemental
bill having been filed in the Carter suit, the Phoenix Mutual Life
Insurance Company filed an answer on the 12th of June, 1874,
setting up that Grant is indebted to it in the full amount called
for by the several deeds of trust held by it; that the amount of
said indebtedness is equal to the value of the property, and that
it is willing that the property should be sold under the decree of
the court, and all equities adjusted on the distribution of the
fund, claiming at the same time, that the judgment creditors have
no standing in court without having first offered to redeem the
encumbrances on the property which are prior in date to the
judgments. After a decree by the Special Term in favor of the
plaintiffs in the Carter suit directing a sale of 12 of the lots
free from all liens, and that the proceeds be brought into court,
and that all equities between the parties to the cause be reserved
for consideration on the distribution of the fund, the General
Term, on an appeal to it by Grant from the decree, reversed it on
the 6th of March, 1875, and dismissed the bill.
We are of opinion that there is nothing in the record of the
Page 121 U. S. 115
Carter suit, or in the above-recited proceedings therein, or in
any other proceedings therein, which operates to sustain the
defense of
res adjudicata. The Phoenix Company was a
defendant, and merely a defendant, in the Carter suit, subject to
the decree which might be made therein, setting up and maintaining
its claims, and expressing its willingness that the property in
question should be sold, and the equities adjusted on the
distribution of the proceeds of sale. The plaintiffs' bill being
dismissed out of court, there is nothing which can operate as a bar
to the bill in the present suit.
The fourth assignment of error is that the court erred in
overruling the second, third, and fourth pleas to the bill. The
ground on which the General Term affirmed the order of the Special
Term overruling the pleas is stated in the opinion of the General
Term, delivered by Mr. Justice Cox, MacArthur & Mackey 117, to
have been that the second, third, and fourth pleas, to which alone
the appeal related, raised defenses that were covered by the answer
of Grant. That answer distinctly sets up the defense of usury,
covered by the third plea, and the defense of payment, covered by
the fourth plea. The second plea, relating to the want of proper
parties, was overruled on the ground that the necessity of making
the omitted persons parties was not apparent. We concur in the
disposition made, for the reasons thus stated, of these pleas. The
defendant has had, under his answer, the benefit of the defenses of
usury and payment set up in the third and fourth pleas, and the
rule that no plea is to be held bad, only because the answer may
extend to some part of the same matter as may be covered by the
plea, is not applicable where the answer extends to the whole of
the matter covered by the plea.
The fifth assignment of error complains that the court overruled
the motion of Grant to suppress certain depositions taken by the
plaintiff at Hartford, when those depositions had been taken after
the time limited for the taking of depositions by the plaintiff,
and the witnesses had refused to answer certain
cross-interrogatories propounded by Grant, and for other
irregularities appearing on the motion to suppress the depositions,
and the sixth assignment of error complains that the court
Page 121 U. S. 116
erred in refusing to allow Grant further time to take
depositions in rebuttal of the depositions on the part of the
plaintiff. We are unable to see that the court did not exercise a
proper discretion in its action in the matters thus complained
of.
The seventh assignment of error is that the court took the
property in controversy out of the possession of Grant, by the
appointment of a receiver before a sale, and thus deprived him of
the use of the property and of its rents and profits, and that it
erred in the final decree in finding the equities of the case in
favor of the plaintiff and against Grant and in dismissing the
cross-bill of Grant and ordering a sale of the property.
The original order for the appointment of a receiver was made on
the 7th of May, 1875. It put into the possession of the receiver 10
of the lots, with power to collect the rents of such of them as had
been rented and to lease the others. After a lapse of 33 months,
and on the 12th of February, 1878, the General Term, in which a
motion to discharge the receiver was heard in the first instance by
order of the Special Term, made an order vacating the receivership.
The opinion of the General Term in this matter, reported in 3
MacArthur 220, shows that the ground taken by the majority of the
five judges (two of them dissenting from the decision) in
discharging the receivership, was that it had failed to accomplish
its purpose, and that the property was going to destruction without
yielding a revenue sufficient to pay the ordinary taxes. The
receivership was renewed by the decree of the General Term of March
2, 1882, establishing the rights of the plaintiff, and ordering a
sale of the 12 lots. The defendant contends that the court had no
power before a sale to appoint a receiver of the property involved
in the litigation and thus deprive him of its use and of its rents
and profits on the ground that the trust deeds do not embrace the
rents and profits of the property. But we are of opinion that the
original appointment of a receiver, and the appointment of one made
by the decree of the General Term, of March 2, 1882, were proper
and were a reasonable exercise of the discretion of the court,
within the principle stated by this Court,
Page 121 U. S. 117
speaking by MR. JUSTICE BRADLEY, in
Kountze v. Omaha Hotel
Co., 107 U. S. 378,
107 U. S. 395,
in these words:
"Courts of equity always have the power, where the debtor is
insolvent and the mortgaged property is an insufficient security
for the debt, and there is good cause to believe that it will be
wasted or deteriorated in the hands of the mortgagor, as by cutting
of timber, suffering dilapidation, etc., to take charge of the
property by means of a receiver, and preserve not only the corpus,
but the rents and profits for the satisfaction of the debt."
The circumstances which, within this rule, justified the
exercise of the discretion of the court in appointing a receiver
originally existed in greater force when the receiver was appointed
by the decree of March 2, 1882. A point is made that as the
appointment of the receiver made by the interlocutory decree of
March 2, 1882, was not expressly continued by the final decree of
June 16, 1883, it was superseded; but there is no force in this
suggestion.
In the final decree, the court found to be due the whole debt
shown on the face of the trust deed of August 26, 1871, to Davis
and Downman, trustees, covering 14 lots, to secure $40,000 due to
one Fletcher, and also the whole debt shown on the face of the 12
trust deeds of January 1, 1882, to Gallaudet and Paine, to secure
in the aggregate to the plaintiff $81,000. It is claimed by Grant
that the trust deed to Davis and Downman, and the several trust
deeds to Gallaudet and Paine, were executed to secure loans from
the plaintiff; that Fletcher was the agent of the plaintiff in the
Davis and Downman trust deed, and that the trust deeds of January
1, 1872, to Gallaudet and Paine, for $81,000, provided for, and in
effect paid, the $40,000 Fletcher indebtedness secured by the Davis
and Downman trust deed. We have examined the evidence on this point
and are of opinion that the contention of Grant is not sustained by
it. It is not profitable to discuss it.
It is also contended by Grant that the loans received by him
from the plaintiff were upon usurious interest to the amount of
$9,000, and that thereby the entire interest decreed was forfeited.
But we are of opinion that the evidence shows that the commissions
paid by Grant upon the loans (in
Page 121 U. S. 118
which the usury is alleged to have consisted) were not paid to
the plaintiff. The plaintiff made no contract for usurious
interest, nor did it take any.
Call v. Palmer,
116 U. S. 98.
The gravamen of the cross-bill of Grant is that his debt to the
plaintiff was extinguished by reason of a contract of sale entered
into by him with it, by which, in consideration of the advances it
had made to him and of the amount due from him to it on the several
trust deeds, and certain other considerations, he agreed to convey
to it 11 of the lots involved in this litigation. It is sufficient
to say that the proofs do not sustain the existence of any such
contract. No such contract was ever executed in writing, none was
even in part performed by either of the parties, and letters which
passed between them subsequently to March 1, 1873 (the alleged date
of the contract), show that no such contract was understood by them
to exist.
Other minor considerations are urged in the briefs of the
appellant which we have considered but which it is not deemed
important to discuss at length. We see no error in the final decree
of the court below, and it is
Affirmed.