Where appeals by five defendants from a final decree were
allowed in open court in October, 1880, and the amount of the
supersedeas bond as to one of them was fixed at $100, but he never
gave it, and the others perfected their appeal, and the record was
filed in this Court in October, 1886, and, when the case came on
for hearing in November, 1889, he asked leave to file a proper
bond, it was granted
nunc pro tunc as of the day of
hearing.
S. gave two deeds of trust of a lot of land in the District of
Columbia to secure loans made by P. Afterwards he gave a deed of
trust of the same lot to secure a loan made by C., that deed
covering also a lot in the rear of the first lot, and fronting on a
side street. At the time all the deeds were given, there was a
dwelling house on the premises, the main part of which was on the
first lot, but some of which was on the rear lot. P., on an
allegation that B., a trustee in each of the first two deeds, had
refused to sell the property covered by them, filed a bill asking
the appointment of a trustee in place of those appointed by the
first two deeds. The suit resulted in a decree appointing a new
trustee in place of B. "in the deed of trust," but not identifying
which one. The new trustee and the remaining old one then sold the
land at auction to P.
Page 133 U. S. 627
under the first trust deed. S. then filed a bill to set aside
the sale, and P. filed a cross-bill to confirm it. The bill was
dismissed. P. then filed this bill against S. and C. and all
necessary parties to have a trustee appointed to sell the land
covered by the three trust deeds, and the improvements on it, to
have a receiver of the rents appointed, and to have the rents and
the proceeds of sale applied first to pay P. A receiver was
appointed, and a decree made for the sale of the entire property as
a whole by trustees whom the decree appointed, and for the
ascertainment by the trustees of the relative values of the land
covered by the first two trust deeds and the improvements thereon,
and of the rear piece of land and the improvements thereon, and for
the payment to P. of the net proceeds of sale representing the
value of the land and improvements covered by the first two trust
deeds, less the expenses chargeable thereto, and of the residue to
C., and, out of the rents, to P., what he had paid for taxes and
insurance premiums, and for a personal decree against S. in favor
of P. for any deficiency in the proceeds of sale to pay the claims
of P.
Held:
(1) It was the intention of both S. and P. that the first two
deeds of trust should include the rear land as well as the front
lot.
(2) The decree in the first suit by P. was so uncertain as to be
practically void, and there was no effective appointment of a
trustee and no effective sale to P.
(3) P. was not estopped by that sale from having the property
sold again.
(4) P. was not required, as a condition of the sale of the rear
lot, to pay the whole of the debt clue to C., and the case was a
proper one for selling the property as an entirety.
(5) It was also a proper one for the appointment of a receiver
of the rents, and those rents in the hands of the receiver, after
paying charges, ought to go to make up any deficiency in the
proceeds of sale to satisfy the corpus of all the secured debts,
and ought to he first applied to pay any balance due to P.
(6) Under § 808 of the Revised Statutes, relating to the
District of Columbia, a decree
in personam for a
deficiency is a necessary incident of a foreclosure suit in
equity.
(7) As the notes secured by the deeds of trust bore interest at
the rate of nine percent per annum until paid, it was proper to
allow that rate of interest on the principal until paid, and not to
limit the rate to six percent after decree, because the contracts
were not merged in the decree.
(8) The rate of interest on the decree for deficiency is
properly six percent, under §§ 713 and 829 of said
Revised Statutes.
(9) The statute of limitation not having been pleaded as to any
part of the principal or interest, the defendant cannot avail
himself of it.
In equity. Decree in favor of the complainant. The respondents
appealed. The case is stated in the opinion.
Page 133 U. S. 628
MR. JUSTICE BLATCHFORD delivered the opinion of the Court.
On the 1st of June, 1874, Alexander R. Shepherd and his wife
made a deed of trust to Andrew C. Bradley and William H. Philip,
conveying to them real estate situated in the City
Page 133 U. S. 629
of Washington, in the District of Columbia, described in the
deed as follows:
"Part of lot numbered two (2), in square numbered one hundred
and sixty-four (164), and bounded and described as follows,
viz.: beginning at a point on North K Street forty-three
feet and nine inches (43 9/12 ft.) east of the southwestern corner
of said square, and running thence west on K Street forty-three
feet and nine inches, (43 9/12 ft.), to said southwestern corner of
said square; thence northwesterly, along the line of Connecticut
Avenue, about eighty feet and ten inches, (80 10/12 ft.), to the
south line of original lot numbered three (3), in said square;
thence northeasterly, and at right angles with said avenue, and
along the line of said lot three (3) about eighty-five (85) feet to
intersect a line drawn due north from the point of beginning, and
thence due south, to the point of beginning."
The deed recited that Shepherd was indebted to George S. Pepper
in the sum of $35,000, evidenced by a promissory note executed to
Pepper dated June 1, 1874, and payable in five years after date,
with interest, payable semiannually at the rate of nine percent per
annum until paid, accompanied by ten coupon notes for $1,575 each,
representing the interest, and it conveyed the land in trust to
secure the payment of the notes. It gave power to the trustees to
sell the premises at public auction on a default in the payment of
the notes or any installment of interest, and to convey the
property in fee simple to the purchaser. Shepherd covenanted in the
deed to keep the buildings on the land insured during the
continuance of the trust in the sum of $25,000, and to have the
policies assigned to the trustees, and that, on his failure to do
so, Pepper might do it, and the premium he should pay should be
considered as secured by the trust deed.
On the 22d of March, 1875, Shepherd and his wife executed to
William F. Mattingly and the said Andrew C. Bradley another deed of
trust, covering the same premises by the same description as in the
first deed, to secure the payment of the said Pepper of a
promissory note dated March 22, 1875, for $10,000, payable five
years after date, with interest, payable semiannually at the rate
of nine percent per annum until paid, accompanied by ten coupon
notes of $450 each, representing
Page 133 U. S. 630
the interest. The other provisions of this trust deed were in
terms like those of the first one, except that the insurance
against fire was to be $10,000.
On the 15th of May, 1876, Shepherd and his wife executed a deed
of trust to James E. Fitch and Lewis J. Davis, covering premises
described as follows:
"All that certain piece or parcel of ground situate and lying in
the City of Washington, District of Columbia, and known and
described upon the ground plat or plan of said city as lot number
three (3), in A. R. Shepherd's subdivision of square number one
hundred and sixty-four (164), said lot number three (3) fronting
forty-three feet and nine inches (43 ft. 9 in.) on K Street N.W.,
and one hundred and nine feet and one-half inch (109 ft. 1/2 in.)
on Connecticut Avenue."
The deed was made to secure the payment of a promissory note for
$35,000, made by Shepherd, dated May 15, 1876, given to Mercy Maria
Carter, payable three years after date, with interest at the rate
of nine percent per annum, payable quarterly. This deed covered the
same premises embraced in the first two deeds of trust, and an
additional piece of land in the rear of those premises, having a
frontage on Connecticut Avenue of 28 feet 2 1/2 inches, and running
eastward across the rear part of the premises covered by the first
two deeds of trust.
On the 15th of November, 1876, Shepherd and his wife executed an
assignment, for the benefit of the creditors of Shepherd, to George
Taylor, Henry A. Willard, and Samuel Cross, which assignment
covered "lot 3, in square 164." Willard refused to accept the
trust, and Peter F. Bacon was duly appointed assignee in his
place.
On the 11th of April, 1878, Pepper filed a bill in equity in the
Supreme Court of the District of Columbia making as defendants
Shepherd and his wife, Bradley, Philip, Mattingly, Taylor, Cross,
and Bacon. The bill set forth the making and contents of the two
deeds of trust in favor of Pepper and of the assignment by
Shepherd; that Pepper was still the holder of the note for $35,000
and the note for $10,000, and the coupon notes belonging thereto;
that there were large arrears of interest due thereon; that the
property was largely
Page 133 U. S. 631
encumbered with taxes, and had been sold for the taxes for the
year ending June 30, 1877; that Shepherd had failed to keep the
property insured, and Pepper had advanced the amount of the
premiums of insurance; that Pepper had, in writing, requested the
trustees, under the deeds of trust, to advertise the property for
sale, but the defendant Bradley, a trustee under each of the deeds,
had refused to do so by a letter to Pepper in which he also stated
"that the trust does not cover the entire area of the house,
cutting off about twenty feet of the rear."
There was and is a dwelling house on the land which covers the
entire width on K Street, and at least a part of it extends the
entire depth of the land embraced in the first two deeds of trust,
and a part of the rear part of it is built upon the land covered by
the deed of trust in favor of Mercy Maria Carter which is not
embraced in the two deeds of trust in favor of Pepper.
The bill averred that at the time the two loans were negotiated
by Pepper, he was informed and believed that the two deeds of trust
covered the whole of the house and lots; that he had nothing to do
with the preparation of those deeds, but they were prepared by
Shepherd or his attorney; that Pepper never saw them until after
the negotiations were concluded and the money paid; that Shepherd
alone was responsible for any mistake or omission; that at the
dates of the deeds of trust, the house was completed and occupied
by Shepherd as a dwelling; that sublot A, in square 164, being the
premises not covered by the two deeds of trust in favor of Pepper,
was at that time owned by Shepherd; that it was understood that the
two deeds of trust in favor of Pepper would and did cover the whole
area occupied by the house and grounds; that the part of the house
not included in those two deeds of trust was what is known as the
"picture gallery;" that the rear end of it could be detached
without marring or lessening the value of the property; that the
plaintiff was entitled to enforce the collection of the moneys due
to him irrespective of any injury which the sale might do to
Shepherd or anyone holding under him, and that in any event the
Page 133 U. S. 632
plaintiff had the right to enforce the sale of so much of the
property as was covered by the two deeds of trust in his favor. The
prayer of the bill was that a trustee might be appointed by the
court in place of the trustees under the two deeds of trusts, with
directions and authority forthwith to execute the trusts of the two
deeds.
Answers to this bill were put in by Mattingly, Bradley, and
Shepherd, the answer of Shepherd setting up that the loans to him
by Pepper were usurious and void under the laws of the State of
Pennsylvania which governed the contracts. Issue was joined, proofs
were taken, and the case was heard at special term, which, on the
12th of May, 1879, entered a decree overruling the defense of usury
and further decreeing as follows:
"That James M. Johnston be and is hereby appointed trustee in
the place and stead of Andrew C. Bradley in the deed of trust, and
recorded in Liber _____, folio _____, of the land records for the
District of Columbia, and referred to in the record in this cause.
This decree is without prejudice to all other rights of
defendant."
Shepherd, on the 14th of May, 1879, appealed from this decree to
the general term, but after the sale to Pepper hereinafter
mentioned, he dismissed his appeal.
Johnston and Philip, claiming and purporting to act under the
deed of trust of June 1, 1874, and regarding Johnston as having
been appointed trustee in the place of Bradley, under that deed, by
virtue of the decree of May 12, 1879, advertised for sale at public
auction the premises described in that deed by the description
contained in it. The sale took place on the 23d of October, 1879,
and the property was sold to Pepper at such auction for $50,000,
and Philip and Johnston, as trustees, executed and delivered to
Pepper a deed of the property.
On the 14th of November, 1879, Shepherd filed a bill in equity
in the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia against Philip,
Johnston, and Pepper setting forth the sale and the deed to Pepper,
and alleging that Johnston and Philip acted without authority in
selling the property inasmuch as Johnston was not a trustee under
the deed of trust, and the
Page 133 U. S. 633
decree of May 12, 1879, did not confer upon him any power under
that deed nor substitute him in the place of Bradley under it, nor
remove Bradley from his office of trustee under it; that it was
announced at the sale by the auctioneer that the sale was made
subject to taxes estimated at $2,700, and that the lot sold did not
include the rear part of the building; that the property was
knocked down to Pepper for $50,000 and the said taxes; that the
price was grossly inadequate; that Shepherd at the time of the sale
was the owner of a valuable equitable interest in the property, and
that the sale was void.
The prayer of the bill was that the sale be set aside and the
deed to Pepper cancelled; that the defendants be restrained from
interfering with the property or attempting to enforce at law any
legal right claimed as a consequence of the sale or the deed, and
for general relief.
Philip and Johnston answered the bill, as also did Pepper.
Pepper also filed a cross-bill against Shepherd, Philip, and
Johnston setting forth the contents of the original bill and of the
answers to it and praying that the sale to Pepper be decreed to be
legal and valid, and the deed to him effectual to convey to him an
unencumbered fee simple title to the real estate; for a writ of
assistance to put him in possession of the premises; for a receiver
to collect the accruing rents; for an injunction to restrain
Shepherd and all persons claiming under him from interfering with
the plaintiff in respect of the premises, and for general
relief.
A replication was filed to the answers to the original bill, and
Shepherd, and also Philip and Johnston, answered the cross-bill.
Issue was joined on such answers, and proofs were taken. The case
was heard at special term, and a decree was made on the 30th of
October, 1880, dismissing the bill with costs, the decree being
made by Mr. Justice James. It stated that Shepherd appealed to the
general term from the decree.
On the 24th of December, 1880, Mr. Justice James filed an
opinion in the suit in which he stated that the decree of May 12,
1879, in the suit of Pepper against Shepherd, was inoperative and
void for uncertainty. He added:
"It purports to
Page 133 U. S. 634
substitute a trustee in one of two deeds mentioned in the
pleadings without designating which of them. It is true that it can
be inferred from the comparative effects of the substitution in the
one or the other case that the court was not likely to intend to
substitute Mr. Johnston for Mr. Bradley in the deed which conveyed
only an equitable title, but I do not think that I am at liberty to
explain and give considerations. It has been suggested that a
decree may be explained by reference to the pleadings on which it
is based, and this undoubtedly may be done in a proper case, but I
do not find that the uncertainty of the decree in this case can be
cleared up in that way. It follows that if the decree is uncertain
on its face, the alleged title of Pepper, through Mr. Johnston as
substituted trustee, is not a cloud upon the title of the
complainant, and consequently this Court cannot take jurisdiction
to grant the relief prayed. Therefore the decree must be that the
bill be dismissed."
On the 14th of January, 1881, the defendants in the suit of
Shepherd against Pepper entered an appeal from the decree of
October 30, 1880. On the 11th of February, 1881, Shepherd dismissed
his appeal from that decree. A motion by Shepherd to dismiss the
appeal from that decree taken by the defendants therein appears to
have been granted by default, and they, on the 25th of February,
1881, filed petitions praying the court in general term to
reinstate their appeal. The ground of these petitions was that the
opinion of Mr. Justice James found as a fact that the trustees,
Philip and Johnston, had no power to make a sale, which finding did
not appear in the decree of October 30, 1880. The court acted upon
the petitions for reinstating by making an order on the 17th of
June, 1881, striking from the files of the court the opinion of Mr.
Justice James. This left the decree of the special term, made
October 30, 1880, to stand as a decree merely dismissing the bill
of Shepherd.
On the 20th of July, 1881, Pepper began the present suit by
filing in the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia a bill in
equity against Shepherd and his wife, Mercy Maria Carter, who had
been married and become Mercy Maria Carter Gray,
Page 133 U. S. 635
Fitch and Davis, the trustees in the deed of trust for the
benefit of Mrs. Gray, Bradley, Mattingly, and Johnston, trustees
(Philip having died), David R. Bartlett, Bacon, and Cross,
assignees under the deed of assignment of November 15, 1876
(Bartlett having been appointed assignee in the place of Taylor),
and John Alexander and George M. Barker, two of the creditors
secured by that assignment, as representatives of that class of
creditors.
The bill sets forth the two deeds of trust in favor of Pepper
and the deed of trust in favor of Mrs. Gray. It avers that Pepper
owns and holds the promissory note for $35,000 and the one for
$10,000; that they are both overdue; that a large amount of
interest is due upon them; that Pepper has advanced moneys on
account of taxes and insurance on the premises covered by the three
deeds of trust, which moneys are secured by the two deeds of trust
in his favor; that Mrs. Gray still holds her promissory note for
$35,000, which is overdue, with interest from May 15, 1877, and
that the parties who claim to be secured by the assignment of
November 15, 1876, a copy of which is annexed to the bill, are very
numerous and cannot without inconvenience and delay be brought
before the court. It then sets forth the filing of the former bill
by Pepper; the contents of the decree of May 12, 1879; the appeal
by Shepherd from that decree; the sale of the property to Pepper by
Philip and Johnston, trustees; the filing of the bill by Shepherd;
the proceedings thereunder, and the entry of the decree of October
30, 1880; the filing of the opinion of Mr. Justice James, and the
order striking that opinion from the files.
The bill further alleges that it is competent to show at any
time the grounds upon which the decree of October 30, 1880, was
placed by the opinion of the court; that as that opinion states
that the decree of May 12, 1879, did not give to Johnston any power
to sell, the decree of October 30, 1880, was in effect an
adjudication upon, and favorable to, the averments in the bill
filed by Shepherd, that the sale to Pepper was made without
authority, and that the deed of Philip and Johnston to Pepper was
null and void; that, as Shepherd had always insisted that
Page 133 U. S. 636
the decree of May 12, 1879, was void and the sale to Pepper a
nullity, and to the end that said lot 3 may be sold as a whole,
Pepper files his bill in order that an undisputed title to the
whole property may be obtained by means of foreclosure proceedings
under the decree of the court; that the lot numbered 3 in
Shepherd's subdivision of square 164, fronting 43 feet 9 inches on
K Street and 109 feet 1/2 inch on Connecticut Avenue, being the
property described in the deed of trust in favor of Mrs. Gray, is
improved by an expensive dwelling house erected thereon by
Shepherd; that the portion of that lot 3 contained in the
descriptive clauses of the two deeds of trust given by Shepherd to
secure the moneys loaned to him by Pepper does not embrace all the
ground covered by and appurtenant to the dwelling house, the
portion omitted from those two deeds of trust being a lot
designated as sublot A, fronting about 28 feet 2 1/2 inches on
Connecticut Avenue, and running back with that width; that the
omission of that strip from those two deeds of trust was either by
accident or fraud on the part of Shepherd or his agents; that in
either case Pepper is entitled to have the description of the
ground in those deeds corrected so as to include that strip; that
by the agreement of Pepper with Shepherd, it was provided that
Shepherd should grant to trustees, to secure Pepper, all of the
real estate covered by his residence on the corner of K Street and
Connecticut Avenue, and all the property to be used as appurtenant
and connected therewith, and which is designated on the plat books
of the city as lot 3 of Shepherd's subdivision of square 164; that,
relying upon the fact that the first deed of trust embraced all the
property now described as lot 3 in square 164, Pepper agreed to
make a second loan on the same property, and therefore the second
deed of trust was executed as now found; that, relying upon the
belief that both of the deeds of trust embraced all of the real
estate used or to be used by Shepherd for his residence and
appurtenant thereto, Pepper advanced the $45,000, and relied upon
the deeds as his security for the loan, believing that they
conformed to his contracts with Shepherd, and embraced all the real
estate owned at that point by Shepherd, and all the land covered by
the house and
Page 133 U. S. 637
appurtenant thereto; that he would not have loaned any money to
Shepherd if he had known that the deeds of trust did not embrace
all of such real estate, and the improvements made or to be made at
that point by Shepherd, with the yard now belonging thereto; that,
after the execution of the deeds and the advance of the $45,000,
Pepper discovered that sublot A, constituting the rear 28 feet 2
1/2 inches of lot 3, in square 164, was omitted entirely from the
deeds, thereby cutting off a portion of the improvements and
seriously impairing the security; that the omissions were made by
the fraud of Shepherd or his agents, and without any suspicion of
the omission on the part of Pepper; that Shepherd states that he
fully intended to embrace in the two deeds all the said real
estate, and executed the deeds with the belief that all of said
property was so included, but that the omission to include all of
it was due to accident or mistake on the part of himself or of his
agents, who prepared the deeds, and without fraud on his or their
part; that it was well understood by Mrs. Gray when and before she
loaned the $35,000 to Shepherd, that the two prior deeds of trust
in favor of Pepper constituted prior liens on all the real estate
embraced in the deed of trust to secure her -- that is, lot 3, in
square 164; that she made her loan with the belief on her part that
both of the prior deeds of trust actually embraced all of the said
real estate, and with the belief that Pepper and Shepherd
understood that all of said real estate was so embraced; that she
had actual notice that Pepper and Shepherd fully intended to
embrace in the first and second deeds of trust all the real estate
embraced in the third one; that the lien of Pepper under his two
deeds of trust is paramount to that to Mrs. Gray as to all of the
real estate referred to in her deed of trust, and ought to be
enforced either by reforming the first two deeds by including
therein all of the real estate embraced in the deed in favor of
Mrs. Gray or by enforcing the lien of Pepper on lot 3 as an
equitable mortgage prior to any rights of Mrs. Gray therein; that
after Pepper had so advanced to Shepherd the $45,000, he learned
for the first time that Shepherd, when he executed the first two
deeds, had only a tax title to sublot A, in square 164; that
Shepherd had, since said loans were made
Page 133 U. S. 638
to him, perfected his title to sublot A by buying in all adverse
claims, and had paid the money therefor from his own means; that
such sublot A was conveyed either to Shepherd or to some friend as
trustee for him, and that in either case the perfected title will
inure to the benefit of Pepper and of Mrs. Gray.
The bill further alleges that the said principal sums, with
large arrears of interest, are due to Pepper and to Mrs. Gray
respectively, and sums are also due to Pepper for premiums of
insurance and taxes paid by him; that Shepherd had been receiving
$6,000 per annum as rent for the premises and the furniture in the
house; that the encumbrances on the real estate in favor of Pepper
and Mrs. Gray with the arrears of taxes amount to about $120,000,
and are increasing at the rate of about $9,000 a year; that the
real estate is an inadequate security for the sums charged upon it,
and cannot be sold for a sum sufficient to meet even the existing
liens on it, and will not yield from rents an adequate income on
the sum charged upon it; that Shepherd is insolvent, and there are
unsatisfied judgments of record against him in the Supreme Court of
the District of Columbia, besides unsecured debts estimated by
Shepherd to amount to $310,000; that Shepherd is unwilling and
unable to make good the deficiency due to Pepper, after properly
applying the net proceeds of the sale of the property, and that
Bradley refused to sell the property vested in him as trustee under
the first deed of trust, and has endeavored to delay and prevent
its sale.
The prayer of the bill is for the appointment of a receiver to
receive the rents due and to become due for lot 3, and the
improvements upon it; for the appointment of a trustee or trustees
to sell the whole of such lot and improvements; that the rents and
the proceeds of the sale of lot 3 be applied first to pay said
indebtedness to Pepper, with all interest, costs, charges, and
expenses due to him by reason of the premises; that Shepherd may
discover the name of the holder of the legal title to said sublot
A, and be restrained from receiving or disposing of any part of the
rent paid or to become due for lot 3, and the improvements thereon,
and for general relief.
Page 133 U. S. 639
A restraining order against Shepherd, as prayed for, was issued
on the filing of the bill.
Bradley answered the bill, and took the ground that in the first
bill filed by Pepper the latter had insisted upon his right to the
sale of the property as described in the two deeds of trust made in
his favor, and did not ask to have the defective description
corrected, and had procured the property to be sold, and had
purchased it and received a deed for it, and claimed title to it,
by the description contained in those two deeds of trust. Bradley's
answer also set up that Pepper had brought a suit at law, on the
20th of April, 1880, against Shepherd, to recover on the several
promissory notes mentioned in the first two deeds of trust.
The bill was taken as confessed by Fitch, Mattingly, Alexander,
and Barker.
Mrs. Gray answered the bill alleging that at the time the deed
of trust in her favor was made she was informed and believed that
the two prior deeds of trust covered only the property described in
them, and that the deed of trust given to secure her was a second
lien on the part of lot 3 described in those deeds of trust, and
the first lien on the remaining part of that lot; that, relying on
that information, which was true, she loaned to Shepherd the
$35,000 on the security of that lot; that she had no knowledge or
information that Pepper claimed that there was any accident,
mistake, or fraud in connection with the first two deeds of trust,
or that they should have covered any property beyond what they
actually covered, and that Pepper has no right to have the first
two deeds of trust amended, extended, or changed as against her, or
any right to any lien on any part of lot 3 as against her, except
that part described in the first two deeds of trust. She objects to
a sale of lot 3.
Cross and Bacon put in an answer to the bill, and the court, on
the 1st of December, 1881, on a hearing, granted an injunction as
prayed, against all of the defendants except Alexander and Barker,
and appointed a receiver of the rents accrued and to become due.
The order states that each of the defendants enjoined appealed from
it. Johnston afterwards withdrew his
Page 133 U. S. 640
appeal, and on the motion of Pepper, the appeal of the other
defendants was dismissed by the general term. Shepherd put in an
answer to the bill on the 1st of June, 1882, denying that the bill
filed by him was dismissed for want of jurisdiction; denying that
the omission of sublot A from the first two deeds of trust was an
accident or a fraud on his part or on that of his agents, and
denying that Pepper has the right to have the deeds corrected so as
to include sublot A, but admitting that he (Shepherd) executed the
first two deeds of trust in the belief that the whole property
covered by the house was embraced in them. The answer sets up that
Pepper has no right to the rents of the house, or to the rent of
the furniture contained in it, and no interest in the premises
except to have them sold and his claims paid out of the proceeds of
sale, and the subject matter of the bill is embraced in the prior
suit brought by Pepper, which is still pending, and that, if Pepper
has any right to relief, he must seek it in that suit by bill of
review or otherwise.
On the 21st of July, 1882, Pepper amended his bill by averring
that lot 3 was wholly insufficient security for the debt admitted
by Shepherd to be due to Pepper and charged thereon, and could not
be sold for a sum sufficient to meet the debt so admitted, and
would not yield in rents an adequate income on the value of the
same, even assuming such value to be equal to the amount of the
debt admitted to be due to Pepper and charged on the lot. The
amendment also stated that Philip died intestate, leaving surviving
him a widow and four children, infants, whose names were given, and
added the names of such children as defendants. It also stated that
Pepper was willing to surrender, and did thereby surrender, for the
purpose of a resale of the said real estate, any title in fee
simple which he might have thereto by reason of the deed to him
from Philip and Johnston, trustees, and that, for the purpose of
reselling such real estate, he waived any interest, claim, or title
vested in him by that deed, and offered to make any conveyance
which the court might deem proper or necessary to accomplish the
purpose indicated.
The bill and amendments were answered by Davis, Fitch,
Page 133 U. S. 641
and Barker, and the amendments were answered by Cross, Bacon,
Bradley, and Mrs. Gray. The answer of Mrs. Gray alleged that it was
not in the power of Pepper to make or carry out the offer contained
in the amendments; that if any title passed to him by the sale and
the deed to him by Philip and Johnston, he had no right to bring
this suit, and that if, on the contrary, no title passed to him by
the sale, the offer contained in the amendments was a vain and
useless form.
Shepherd also answered the amendments, alleging that the
proposed offer by Pepper was no actual surrender of any interest or
waiver of any right.
The order
pro confesso as to Mattingly having been
vacated, he put in a plea setting up the sale and the deed to
Pepper, the filing of the bill by Shepherd and of the crossbill by
Pepper, and the decree of October 30, 1880, and averring that
Pepper, ever since the deed to him, had claimed to be the owner of
the property in fee simple, and still so claimed. The bill was
taken as confessed against the wife of Shepherd; a guardian
ad
litem was appointed for the infant children of Philip, who put
in an answer to the bill; Johnston and Bartlett also answered it
and the amendments; issue was joined as to all the defendants who
had answered, and the plea of Mattingly was ordered to stand as his
answer.
Proofs were taken on both sides, the cause was heard by the
court in special term, and afterwards, on the 24th of March, 1885,
Shepherd presented to the court two petitions wherein he set forth
the bringing of a suit at law against him by Pepper on the 20th of
May, 1882, upon the promissory notes; that at the hearing he
learned for the first time that Pepper claimed a personal decree
against him, under the prayer in the bill for general relief; that
when the claim to such personal decree was made at the hearing, his
personal liability upon the notes was barred by the statute of
limitations because the notes were all of them then more than three
years overdue, and that he ought to be allowed to interpose that
objection to a personal decree. He therefore prayed for a hearing
on the subject of the right of Pepper to a personal decree against
him, and to be allowed to take proof as to the
Page 133 U. S. 642
fact of the pendency of the action at law; that the plaintiff
might be required to elect between the pending acting at law and
his claim for a personal decree for a deficiency; that if he
elected to claim such personal decree, he might be required by
amendment to make his bill a bill for that purpose, and Shepherd be
allowed to answer or plead to it; that Shepherd be allowed a
rehearing on the questions as to the disposition of the funds in
the hands of the receiver and as to interest upon the coupon notes,
and that he be allowed to interpose by plea or answer the defense
of the statute of limitations to a claim for a personal decree.
These petitions were dismissed by the court. On the 26th of
March, 1885, the court in special term made a decree that unless
Shepherd should pay to Pepper, on or before the 1st of July, 1885,
$35,000, with interest thereon at the rate of nine percent per
annum from the 1st day of June, 1879, until paid, and the further
sum of $9,450, being the amount of six coupon notes, all dated
Junel, 1874, signed by Shepherd, and representing six semiannual
installments of interest due by him on the principals um of
$35,000, with interest upon them at the rate of six percent per
annum until paid, namely, upon six sums of $1,575 each, one from
December 1, 1876, one from June 1, 1877, one from December 1, 1877,
one from June 1, 1878, one from December 1, 1878, and one from June
1, 1879, and also the sum of $10,000 due to Pepper, with interest
thereon at the rate of nine percent per annum from March 22, 1880,
until paid, and the further sum of $3,150, being the amount of
seven coupon notes, all dated March 22, 1875, signed by Shepherd
and representing seven semiannual installments of interest due by
him on the principal sum of $10,000, with interest on them at the
rate of six percent per annum until paid, namely, upon seven sums
of $450 each, one from March 22, 1877, one from September 22, 1877,
one from March 22, 1878, one from September 22, 1878, one from
March 22, 1879, one from September 22, 1879, and one from March 22,
1880, and also the taxed costs of the suit, lot 3 in Shepherd's
subdivision of square 164, with the buildings and improvements
thereon, be sold at public auction, by Henry W.
Page 133 U. S. 643
Garnett and John F. Hanna as trustees. The decree prescribed
what notice of sale was to be given, and the terms of sale, and
directed the proceeds to be brought into court. It also provided
that the trustees, before July 1, 1885, should examine witnesses
before the auditor of the court to ascertain the relative values of
the real estate covered by the first two deeds of trust, with the
buildings and improvements thereon, and of the part described as
sublot lot A, in square 164, being the rear 28 feet 2 1/2 inches of
lot 3, with the buildings and improvements upon such sublot A; that
notwithstanding such inquiry, the sale should proceed; that the net
proceeds of the sale which should appear to represent the value of
that part of the real estate described in the first two deeds of
trust, with the buildings and improvements thereon, after deducting
therefrom the aliquot parts of the costs, commissions, expenses,
and charges of the suit chargeable against such part, should be
applied toward the payment of the claims of Pepper, and the residue
of such net proceeds should be applied toward the claims of Mrs.
Gray; that if the net proceeds of the property described in the
first two deeds of trust should exceed the amount of the claims of
Pepper, the excess should be applied toward paying the claims of
Mrs. Gray if the same should remain unsatisfied after applying the
net proceeds of sublot A; that the net amount of rents in the hands
of the receiver, after deducting costs, commissions, expenses, and
repairs, should be applied to the payment of the taxes theretofore
paid by Pepper and the insurance premiums properly paid by him, and
to the payment of taxes due and unpaid, and the residue of the
receipts from rents should await the further order of the court,
and that if the net proceeds of the sale applicable to the claims
of Pepper should prove insufficient to discharge them, he should
recover from Shepherd whatever amount might remain due of the
claims so decreed to be due by Shepherd to Pepper after the
application thereto of the net proceeds of sale, and should have
execution therefor as at law.
Shepherd, Bartlett, Bacon, and Cross-appealed to the general
term from this decree; Mrs. Gray appealed from so much of it as
directed the sale of sublot A, and Pepper also appealed from
it.
Page 133 U. S. 644
The court in general term, on the 29th of October, 1885,
affirmed the decree of the special term of March 26, 1885, with
these modifications: it directed that the inquiry as to the
relative values of the two parcels of property should take place
after the sale had been made; that if the debt due to Mrs. Gray
should be satisfied otherwise than by applying thereto her proper
share of the proceeds of the sale, the entire proceeds of the sale
of lot 3 should be applied to the payment of Pepper's debt and
interest, or if the proportion of such proceeds set apart by the
decree to satisfy Mrs. Gray's debt should more than suffice to
satisfy it, then any surplus of such proceeds should be paid over
to Pepper on account of his debt and interest, and that the balance
of rents remaining in the receiver's hands, after deducting the
payments to be made out of such rents as specified in the decree
and after paying interest to Pepper on the sums advanced by him for
taxes and insurance premiums, should be paid by the receiver to
Pepper on account of any balance of principal and interest, as
decreed, that should remain due after applying the proceeds of lot
3, as directed by the decree to be apportioned and applied. It also
affirmed the orders dismissing the two petitions filed by Shepherd
on the 24th of March, 1885, and charged Shepherd with the costs of
the appeal.
Shepherd, Cross, Bacon, Bartlett, and Mrs. Gray appealed in open
court to this Court from the decree of October 29, 1885, the appeal
was allowed, and the amount of the supersedeas both on behalf of
the defendants other than Mrs. Gray was fixed at $1,000 and that on
her behalf at $100. The appeal of Pepper was abandoned. The
defendants other than Mrs. Gray gave the bond required of them.
Mrs. Gray did not give the necessary bond, and although the record
was filed in this Court on the 9th of October, 1886, she took no
action to perfect her appeal to this Court until the case came on
for hearing, on the 26th of November, 1889, when she offered to the
Court to be filed a proper bond in the sum of $100. No citation was
necessary on her appeal, as she had taken it in open court, the
record had been duly filed in this Court, on October, 9, 1886, and,
under the circumstances, we will permit the bond
Page 133 U. S. 645
on behalf of Mrs. Gray to be filed
nunc pro tunc as of
the 26th of November, 1889, and her appeal to stand as
perfected.
At the time the loans were made by Pepper to Shepherd, Shepherd
claimed to own, and agreed to give as security therefor, the land
and improvements situate at the northeast corner of Connecticut
Avenue and K Street, fronting 43 feet 9 inches on K Street and 109
feet 1/2 inch on Connecticut Avenue, containing 8,466.22 square
feet, known as "Lot No. 3," in Shepherd's subdivision of lots in
square No. 164. The improvements covered nearly the whole of that
lot, the portion not so covered being enclosed and used in
connection with the house. It was the intention of both Pepper and
Shepherd that the whole of this property should be included in the
deeds of trust, and if Pepper had any knowledge, information, or
suspicion to the contrary, he would not have loaned any of the
money. Shepherd testifies that when he executed the deeds of trust
he supposed that they embraced the whole property. On the piece of
land known as "sublot A," being that part of lot 3 which fronts 28
feet 2 1/2 inches on Connecticut Avenue, and has such a depth that
it contains 3,656 square feet, there had been actually constructed
at the time a portion of the dwelling house, which includes the
coal vaults, the laundry, the servants' apartments, and a portion
of the picture gallery.
It is not denied by Shepherd that the debts due by him to Pepper
are
bona fide debts and are overdue, and their existence
and amounts are satisfactorily proved. The sole defense of Shepherd
amounts to this, that by the uncertainty and delay of the law, and
by mistakes in the legal proceedings, Pepper has lost all right to
the execution of the trusts created for his benefit, and it is
urged that by reason of the proceedings in the prior suit brought
by Pepper, he is estopped from maintaining the present bill.
The opinion of the court in general term, delivered by Mr.
Justice Marrick, is reported in 4 Mackey 269. It states that when
the decree of May 12, 1879, in the suit brought by Pepper, came to
be made, there was by inadvertence an error in the description of
the property in the decree by leaving a blank in the designation of
the trust deed, the result of which was
Page 133 U. S. 646
that the decree was uncertain in itself, and practically void on
account of the uncertainty in its description of the property. As
Bradley was trustee in each of the first two deeds of trust, and as
the decree appointed Johnston to be trustee in the place and stead
of Bradley in but one deed of trust, which was so described that it
could not be identified, the whole transaction became uncertain and
void. It resulted from this, as the opinion states, that there was
no effective appointment of a trustee, and no effective sale, and
the bill in the suit brought by Shepherd was dismissed on the
ground that there was no cloud upon the title, because the sale
itself was a nullity. The opinion further states that while
Shepherd averred in his answer that the sale to Pepper was a
nullity and passed no title, and Mrs. Gray by her answer averred
the same thing, they were now taking the ground that Pepper had no
right to have a second sale of the property because, having bought
under the first sale, he must abide thereby -- in other words, that
although he acquired no title under the first sale, he is estopped
by that sale from having it sold again. The opinion adds that this
is a defense which a court of equity cannot entertain. It also
considers the point taken by Mrs. Gray that inasmuch as she is the
first encumbrancer on sublot A, Pepper cannot have the whole
property sold without first discharging her entire claim, and says
that the two pieces of property had been held in a general
ownership; that the testimony showed that to sever them would be
destructive of the value of both; that although Pepper had not
brought home to the knowledge of Mrs. Gray the equitable mortgage
as between him and Shepherd, yet the fact of the building being
upon the two lots, and the further fact that, if there is to be a
sale, the whole property ought to be sold together, because the
value of both would be decreased if they were sold separately,
constituted a case where a court of equity ought to order all the
property to be sold together; that it would be inequitable to
compel Pepper to redeem the whole of the debt to Mrs. Gray as a
condition of the sale of sublot A, because Mrs. Gray is entitled to
only an in considerable portion of the encumbered premises, except
in subordination to the claims under the first
Page 133 U. S. 647
two trust deeds, and that the decree of the special term, in
giving to Mrs. Gray such portion of the proceeds of sale as should
be determined to be the value of her interest in sublot A, upon
testimony as to the relative values of the two properties, gave to
her all that she was entitled to in equity. As to the rents and
profits, the opinion said that wherever property subject to a lien
has been brought within the domain of a court of equity and a
receiver of it is appointed, the rents and profits in the hands of
the receiver will be applied, along with the corpus of the fund, to
satisfy the lien, after paying charges such as taxes and insurance;
that the special term properly directed the application of the
rents to pay off premiums of insurance and taxes which had accrued;
but that the decree ought to be modified by directing that the
residue of the rents should go to make up any deficiency in the
proceeds of the sale of the two properties to satisfy the corpus of
the debts, recognizing the right of Mrs. Gray to her share of the
proceeds of sale according to the apportionment before indicated,
but dedicating the rents primarily to the satisfaction of the debts
due to Pepper, together with the proceeds of the sale of the
primary property upon which the house is built. We concur in these
views of the general term.
The bill in the first suit brought by Pepper was a bill merely
to substitute a trustee in the place of the trustees in the first
two deeds of trust. The prayer of the bill was that such trustee be
appointed, with directions and authority forthwith to execute all
the trusts reposed by the first two deeds of trust in the trustees
mentioned therein. It does not pray that an officer of the court
shall make the sale, or that the trustee to be appointed by the
court shall make the sale under any power to be given to him by the
court, but it prays that he may execute the trusts under the deeds
of trust. Moreover, the decree of May 12, 1879, declares that it is
made "without prejudice to all other rights of defendant." This
reserved the right of Shepherd to be heard on the question of the
right of Pepper to foreclose under the deeds of trust. The present
suit is a suit for foreclosure, and in it all defenses to the
claims of Pepper were open to be made by Shepherd. In respect
of
Page 133 U. S. 648
parties, in respect of subject matter, and in respect of the
relief prayed for, the two bills brought by Pepper are different,
and none of the questions involved in the pleadings in the present
suit were involved in or adjudicated in the first suit brought by
Pepper. Still further, the uncertainty and inoperative character of
the decree of May 12, 1879, make the whole suit fruitless, and of
no more effect than if it had never been commenced.
For the same reason, Pepper cannot be regarded as having made
any election, in the first suit brought by him, to enforce a sale
of the property described in the first two deeds of trust, aside
from a sale with it of sublot A, so as to be estopped from now
asserting a lien upon sublot A. When the first bill was filed by
Pepper, he knew that Shepherd had merely a tax title to sublot A,
and Shepherd, in his answer to that bill, averred that the title to
sublot A never belonged to him, and that he theretofore purchased
what is called a tax title to sublot A, but it turned out to be
void and of no effect. Therefore Pepper could not at that time have
attempted to reform the first two deeds of trust so as to include
sublot A, because Shepherd then had no title to that sublot. But
the fact that both Pepper and Shepherd agree that it was intended
by them that the first two deeds of trust should include sublot A
gave Pepper a right to assert an equitable mortgage against that
sublot, so that afterwards, when Shepherd bought in the proprietary
title to it, as the evidence shows he did, Pepper was for the first
time in a position to assert a lien against it.
It is, we think, very plain that Pepper acquired no title by the
deed to him under the sale by the trustees, and that the decree
dismissing the bill filed by Shepherd had no effect to establish
any legal title in Pepper to the real estate in question. Even if
resort may not be had to the opinion of Mr. Justice James, still it
is manifest that the propositions stated in that opinion are sound
-- namely, that if the decree of May 12, 1879, was uncertain on its
face in the respects and to the extent before mentioned -- the
alleged title of Pepper through the deed from the trustees to him
was not a cloud upon the title of Shepherd, and therefore the court
could not grant
Page 133 U. S. 649
Shepherd the relief he prayed for in the bill filed by him, and
that bill was properly dismissed.
This view of the case is taken by Pepper in his bill in the
present suit, because he says therein, in regard to the decree of
May 12, 1879, and the opinion of Mr. Justice James,
"that as it appears by the said opinion of the court that the
said decree did not give to the said Johnston any power to sell,
said decree was in effect an adjudication upon and favorable to the
averments in said Shepherd's bill of complaint in said court that
said sale was made without authority, and the deed of said Philip
and Johnston was null and void, and, as the said Shepherd has
always averred and insisted that said decree was void and said sale
a nullity, and to the end that said lot 3 of said Shepherd's
subdivision may be sold as a whole, the complainant files this bill
in order that an undisputed title to the whole property may be
obtained by means of foreclosure proceedings under the order and
decree of this Court."
Then the bill prays accordingly
"that a trustee or trustees may be appointed by this Court to
sell the whole of lot 3, in A. R. Shepherd's subdivision of square
numbered 164, with the improvements thereon."
Therefore it is not true that Pepper is still asserting a legal
title in himself.
We think that Pepper is entitled to have the whole of lot 3
sold. It was omitted at least by accident from the first two trust
deeds, when both parties supposed they covered it. Lot 3 embraces
not only sublot A, but the property covered by the first two deeds
of trust. Shepherd, in his answer to the first bill filed by
Pepper, said
"that in his opinion it would be impossible to make a sale and
division of the said property under the said deed of trust without
irreparable injury to, if not total destruction of, a large portion
of the dwelling house which is erected upon the said lot; . . .
that the said dwelling house would be entirely incomplete without
the addition of that portion called the 'Picture Gallery;' that the
servants' apartments and the laundry and drying room, etc., are
underneath the said portion of said dwelling house, as well as the
heating apparatus for a large portion of the house, and that if the
said sublot A, which is not included in the deed of
Page 133 U. S. 650
trust of the said complainant, shall be separated from that
portion which is included in the said deed of trust to the
complainant, a dividing line would not only take off the said
picture gallery, but would take off and destroy a portion of the
back part of the main dwelling house."
In regard to Mrs. Gray, the letter to her, written by Mr. Brown
of the firm of Fitch, Fox & Brown, who were negotiating for her
the loan to Shepherd, the letter being dated April 18, 1876, speaks
of the loan as one "to be secured by a second mortgage, the prior
mortgage being for $45,000." Besides this, the first two deeds of
trust were recorded, respectively, June 3, 1874, and March 24,
1875, and they conveyed, to secure Pepper, the premises described
in them,
"together with all the improvements, ways, easements, rights,
privileges, and appurtenances to the same belonging or in any wise
appertaining, and all the estate, right, title, interest, and claim
whatsoever, whether at law or in equity, of the said parties of the
first part, of, in, to, or out of the said piece or parcel of land
and premises."
The improvements and easements in question were visibly
necessary for the dwelling house as then constructed, and were
visibly upon, or required the use of, sublot A, as stated by
Shepherd, as before recited.
Mrs. Gray is only a mortgagee, and not the owner in fee of
sublot A, and her interest in the property is subject to the prior
and subsequent interests of other parties as those interests are
usually ascertained and administered by a court of equity for the
benefit of all concerned. It is not equitable that she should be
allowed to use her mortgage on sublot A to prevent a sale of the
entire lot 3. Her only right can be to have the proceeds of sublot
A applied first to the payment of her debt, and that right is
secured by the decree appealed from. The present bill is one to
obtain a decree for the sale of encumbered premises, and the
application of the proceeds of sale to discharge the encumbrances
according to priority. The debts to Pepper and to Mrs. Gray are
overdue, and under such circumstances a court of equity, on the
application of a junior encumbrancer, will provide for the sale of
the entire
Page 133 U. S. 651
encumbered property if the circumstances of the case show that
the interests of the mortgagor and of the encumbrancers require the
sale.
Finley v.
Bank, 11 Wheat. 304,
24 U. S. 306;
Hagan v.
Walker, 14 How. 29,
55 U. S. 37=38;
Jerome v. McCarter, 94 U. S. 734,
94 U. S.
735-736,
94 U. S. 740;
Hill v. National Bank, 97 U. S. 450,
97 U. S.
453-454;
Woodworth v. Blair, 112 U. S.
8;
Hefner v. Northwestern Life Ins. Co.,
123 U. S. 747,
123 U. S. 754;
Vanderkemp v. Shelton, 11 Paige 28. This authority is
properly exercised in the case of deeds of trust, where all the
encumbrances are due, and where the plaintiff has a first lien on
some of the property sought to be sold, and where all the
encumbrancers are parties to the suit. Here, Pepper has a first
lien on the bulk of the property sought to be sold and a second
lien, as decreed, on the small remaining portion, and the debts
secured by the first two deeds of trust were all overdue when the
bill in this case was filed, as well as the debt due to Mrs. Gray.
Under such circumstances, the mere nonassent of Mrs. Gray ought not
to prevent the court from doing what is equitable in regard to the
claims of Pepper, as well as those of herself.
There was no error in the dismissal of the two petitions of
Shepherd, filed in March, 1885, nor in entering a personal decree
against him for any deficiency which should remain after exhausting
the property covered by the deeds of trust.
The fact of the bringing of the suit at law upon the notes, by
Pepper against Shepherd, in April, 1880, was set up in the answer
of Bradley to the bill in the present suit, and was therefore in
issue; but it was not shown in defense that Shepherd had ever been
served with process in any such suit at law, or had appeared in it,
voluntarily or otherwise. Moreover, the principal notes given to
Pepper were not barred by limitation when the bill in this case was
filed. As to the interest notes or coupons, although some of the
unpaid ones for each of such two principal notes had been overdue
more than three years when the bill was filed, yet it makes a claim
to recover all the interest, and Shepherd does not, in his answer,
set up the statute of limitation as a bar to any part of the
principal or interest claimed.
The bill in this suit prays for general relief, and a decree
Page 133 U. S. 652
for a deficiency is a necessary incident of a foreclosure suit
in equity. It is provided as follows by section 808 of the Revised
Statutes relating to the District of Columbia:
"The proceeding to enforce any lien shall be by bill or petition
in equity, and the decree, besides subjecting the thing upon which
the lien has attached to the satisfaction of the plaintiff's demand
against the defendant, shall adjudge that the plaintiff recover his
demand against the defendant, and that he may have execution
thereof as at law."
This provision was interpreted by this Court in the case of
Dodge v. Freedman's Savings & Trust Co., 106 U.
S. 445, where it was held that it authorized a decree
in personam against the debtor for the balance remaining
due after the proceeds of the sale of lands covered by a mortgage,
or a deed of trust in the nature thereof, had been applied to the
satisfaction of the debt. The present cause is of the same
character of foreclosure proceeding as that involved in the case
cited. It was proper for the court under the bill as it stands and
the statute on the subject, to make a personal decree against
Shepherd for a deficiency, and the matter of granting the prayers
of his petitions filed in March, 1885, was a question of discretion
in the court below, and not reviewable.
As to the question of the disposition of the rents in the hands
of the receiver, we think the action of the court below was proper.
The pecuniary condition of Shepherd, his failure to pay taxes,
premiums of insurance, or interest, the inadequacy of the property
to pay the claims of Pepper and Mrs. Gray and the diversion of the
income from rents from making such payments to the use of Shepherd,
up to the time of the appointment of the receiver, were adequate
grounds for the appointment of the receiver.
Kountze v. Omaha
Hotel Co., 107 U. S. 378,
107 U. S. 395;
Grant v. Insurance Co., 121 U. S. 105. The
court, through its receiver, took possession of the rents in order
to preserve them for that party to the suit who should ultimately
be found to be equitably entitled to them.
Hitz v. Jenks,
123 U. S. 297,
123 U. S. 306.
The various reports of the receiver contained in the record, as to
his payment of taxes, premiums of insurance, and the expenses of
repairs on the
Page 133 U. S. 653
building, show the necessity of his appointment. It would be
grossly unjust, on the facts developed in this case, to appropriate
the rents in the hands of the receiver to the use of Shepherd.
It is contended on behalf of Shepherd that the decree appealed
from is erroneous because it allows interest at the rate of nine
percentum per annum on the principal of the notes, from June 1,
1879, and March 22, 1880, respectively until paid, and it is urged
that the interest should have been fixed at the rate of six percent
from the date of the decree, March 26, 1885, on the ground that
that was the rate of interest fixed by the statute on judgments and
decrees.
Section 713 of the Revised Statutes, relating to the District of
Columbia, provides as follows:
"The rate of interest upon judgments or decrees, and upon the
loan or forbearance of any money, goods, or things in actions,
shall continue to be six dollars upon one hundred dollars for one
year, and after that rate for a greater or less sum, or for a
longer or shorter time, except as provided in this chapter."
Section 829 of said Revised Statutes provides as follows:
"Upon all judgments rendered on the common law side of the court
in actions founded on contracts, interest at the rate of six
percentum per annum shall be awarded on the principal sum due until
the judgment shall be satisfied, and the amount which is to bear
interest, and the time from which it is to be paid, shall be
ascertained by the verdict of the jury sworn in the cause."
Section 714 authorizes parties to contract in writing for the
payment of interest at the rate of ten percent per annum. It is
urged that the decree is a decree which fixes the amount of each of
the debts due by Shepherd, and says that those sums are "hereby
decreed to be due and payable" by Shepherd to Pepper, with
interest, etc.; that this is the language of a judgment, and that
almost the same language is employed in reference to the accrued
interest. The decree provides that if the net proceeds of the sale
shall prove insufficient to discharge the claims of Pepper, he
shall have and recover of Shepherd whatever amount may remain due
of the claims decreed to be due by Shepherd to him, after the
application
Page 133 U. S. 654
thereto of the net proceeds of sale, and shall have execution
therefor as at law. It is contended, therefore, that as the decree
ascertained the amount of the debt still due and fixed the rate of
interest on it, it thereafter drew interest by virtue of the
decree, and not by virtue of the terms of the contract, because the
contract was merged in the decree.
We think, however, that on the face of the decree, the court did
not intend to, and did not, merge the contract in the decree, but
merely fixed the amount due according to the terms of the contract
on the payment of which, before the day fixed, the decree would not
go into effect, but the case would be dismissed. The statute has no
application, except as to the rate of interest charged on the
deficiency which shall be found to exist after applying the net
proceeds of sale to the debt, and the decree does not provide for
interest in excess of six percent per annum on such deficiency.
In regard to allowing interest on the principal of the notes at
the rate of nine percent per annum until paid, it is to be said
that such was the contract in each note.
It was stated at the bar that Hanna, one of the trustees
appointed by the decree of the special term to make the sale, had
died. If so, the court below will have power to appoint a new one
in his place.
The decree in general term is therefore
Affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE MILLER, dissenting.
I dissent from so much of the judgment of the court in this case
as requires the entire property to be sold together, and make
provision afterwards for dividing the proceeds according to the
valuation that may be made to ascertain how much of the money
should go to appellant Maria Gray.
I am of opinion that she has a right to have the piece of
ground, on which her mortgage is declared to be the first lien,
sold separately, so that she can bid whatever sum she may see
proper in satisfaction of her mortgage. If this sum should be more
than would satisfy the mortgage, of course, the excess would go to
the satisfaction of Pepper's debt. If it should
Page 133 U. S. 655
sell for less, then Pepper has no interest in it, and I see no
reason why she should be compelled to compete with Pepper or
anybody else in purchasing the entire property, which is worth four
or five times as much as her single piece is worth, in order to
make that piece bring its full value on the sale.