The amount involved in this case, when interest is properly
computed, is sufficient to give the court jurisdiction.
A contract by a mortgagee, made on receiving the mortgage, that
he will hold the securities, and that the mortgagor may "sell the
property named in said deeds and make titles thereto, the proceeds
of the sale to go to the credit of" the mortgagee, gives to the
mortgagor power to sell for cash, free from the mortgage, but not
to exchange for other lands, and does not cast upon the purchaser
for cash the duty of seeing that the mortgagor appropriates the
proceeds according to the agreement.
Such a contract is not a power of attorney to the mortgagor to
sell land of which the title is in the mortgagee, but only the
consent of a lienholder to the release of his lien in case a sale
is made, and it is not required by the laws of Georgia to be
executed before two witnesses.
The conveyance to the mortgagee in this case was a mortgage and
not a deed conveying the legal title.
The case is stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE BREWER delivered the opinion of the Court.
On April 10, 1884, appellants filed their bill in the Circuit
Court of the United States for the Southern District of Georgia,
praying for the foreclosure of a mortgage. The mortgagor and debtor
was Daniel A. Jewell. The other defendants were alleged to have
interests in the mortgaged
Page 140 U. S. 248
property. On October 29, 1885, a decree was entered dismissing
the bill. The opinion filed at the time is reported in 25 F. 689.
On December 30, 1885, a petition for rehearing was filed, which was
granted, but on the 17th of June, 1886, a second decree was entered
reaffirming the ruling in the first. Some question was made on the
argument as to whether the amount in controversy at the date of
either of the two decrees was over $5,000. The amount alleged to be
due was $4,099.13,
"besides interest, all of which, together with said debits and
credits, will more fully appear by a reference to a copy statement
of account hereto annexed, and marked 'Exhibit C.'"
On reference to such exhibit, an account appears stating a
balance due May 4, 1883, of $24,882.46. Thereafter certain credits
are shown of dates June 5, 1883, January 1, 1884, and March 20,
1884. These credits, applied on the balance, reduce the amount
thereof to the sum stated, $4,099.13, and that final balance is
approved by the assignees of Daniel A. Jewell, as the amount due,
"exclusive of interest on the account, which they are entitled to
from May 4, 1883." Now, if interest be computed on simply this
balance of $4,099.13 at seven percent, the then legal rate in
Georgia, from May 4, 1883, to the date of the last decree, the
amount would be less than $5,000; but that is not the true method
of computation. The balance due on May 4, 1883, was $24,882.46.
Interest on that amount should be computed to the time of first
payment, then the payment applied (it exceeding the interest up to
that time), and a computation made of the interest on the balance
to the time of the second payment, and so on. By this method of
computation, the amount due at the date of either decree would be
in excess of $5,000. This Court therefore has jurisdiction of the
appeal.
Upon the merits, it appears that Daniel A. Jewell was the owner
of a cotton mill in Georgia; that he consigned its products to the
appellants, commission merchants in New York city. This business
had been going on since 1870. On January 17, 1878, Jewell, having
drawn on appellants largely in excess of his shipments, was
indebted to them somewhere in
Page 140 U. S. 249
the neighborhood of thirty thousand dollars. To secure them for
these advances, he executed mortgages on several pieces of property
owned by him in Georgia. Among these mortgages was one covering a
tract of land of about 760 acres, known as the "Hurt Place," and
another of about 750 acres, a part of the Myrick homestead tract.
At the time of the execution of these mortgages, a contract was
entered into between the appellants and Jewell by which the
appellants agreed to hold the securities for three years, and also,
among other things, stipulated that
"the said Woodward, Baldwin & Co. further agree that the
said Jewell shall have full right and permission to sell the
property named in said deeds, and make titles thereto, the proceeds
of sale to go to the credit of the said Woodward, Baldwin &
Co."
This agreement was signed by both parties and witnessed before a
notary public. In pursuance of the authority given by this
stipulation, on February 8, 1879, Jewell conveyed to one Mary E.
Daniel three hundred and fifty-three acres of the Hurt lands for
the expressed consideration of one thousand dollars, and on
February 1, 1882, conveyed the balance of the Hurt lands, as well
as the Myrick tract, to Steth P. Myrick, for the expressed
consideration of four thousand and thirty-nine dollars. The
validity and effect of these two conveyances is the matter in
dispute.
But one construction can be placed upon this stipulation. It
gave to Jewell authority to sell and transfer title discharged of
the lien of the mortgage. It did not empower him to sell subject to
the mortgage -- that is, to transfer simply his equity of
redemption, for that he had without the stipulation, and it cannot
be supposed that a provision meaning nothing was deliberately
inserted in the contract. Further, the provision that the proceeds
should be applied to the credit of the appellants makes it clear
that they intended to give him power to transfer a full and
unencumbered title. Neither can there be any doubt that Jewell
understood that he could, and intended to, convey a full
unencumbered title, and that the grantees supposed they were
receiving such title. The deeds contain no suggestion of any
encumbrance, and purport to transfer the title notwithstanding the
fact that there is no warranty
Page 140 U. S. 250
therein, and the parol testimony, so far as that is competent,
establishes the fact that such was the purpose and understanding of
all the parties. Nor was the duty cast upon the purchasers of
seeing that Jewell appropriated the proceeds in accordance with the
stipulation. That was a matter between Jewell and the appellants,
and in respect to which they trusted him. Nor, further, can there
be any substantial question that the parties acted in entire good
faith. It is true that Jewell did not turn over the proceeds
directly to the appellants, but, according to his testimony, he
supposed that the appellants were abundantly secured by their
mortgages on his other property. There was apparently good reason
for this belief. He considered his factory, which was included in
one of the mortgages, worth at least $60,000, an amount sufficient
to twice pay his entire indebtedness to appellants, and, after he
heard complaint from them in respect to the second conveyance, he
shipped to them enough of the products of his mill to cover, as he
thought, the money he had received.
As against this, appellants urge that this contract was invalid
as an authority to convey, because not executed before two
witnesses, and in support of this two sections of the Code of
Georgia are quoted, to-wit, 2182, 2690, Code 1873. The latter
requires a deed to lands to be attested by at least two witnesses,
and the former provides that
"the act creating the agency must be executed with the same
formality (and need have no more) as the law prescribes for the
execution of the act for which the agency is created."
But this contract was not the creation of an agency to sell
lands belonging to the appellants. The title to the lands was all
the while in Jewell. The instrument which Jewell executed was a
mortgage, and, by section 1954 of the same Code, "a mortgage is
only a security for debt, and passes no title." By section 1955, it
is provided that
"No particular form is necessary to constitute a mortgage. It
must clearly indicate the creation of a lien, specify the debt to
secure which it is given, and the property upon which it is to take
effect."
The section also provides the mode of execution. All these
matters are found in this instrument. It is true that in the middle
of the instrument, after
Page 140 U. S. 251
the granting clause and the description and before the warranty
and defeasance clauses, is found this sentence:
"This deed, made, executed, and delivered under the acts of the
legislature of Georgia of 1871 and 1872, and found in the Code of
1873, sections 1969, 1970, 1971."
Appellants contend that, according to these sections, the title
passed to them, and that therefore the title being in them, the
contract was, for the reasons above given, insufficient to
authorize a sale by Jewell. But these sections are in an article
entitled "sales to Secure Debts," and apply only to those cases in
which an absolute deed is made of the property, and a bond taken
for reconveyance. The first part of section 1969 discloses what
instruments are referred to. It reads:
"Whenever any person in this state conveys any real property by
deed to secure any debt to any person loaning or advancing said
vendor any money, or to secure any other debt, and shall take a
bond for title back to said vendor upon the payment of such debt or
debts, or shall in like manner convey any personal property by bill
of sale, and take an obligation binding the person to whom said
property was conveyed to reconvey said property upon the payment of
said debt or debts, such conveyance of real or personal property
shall pass the title of said property to the vendee."
But although this instrument recites that it is executed under
those sections, in fact it was not, for no bond for title back was
taken, nor was the instrument signed by the grantees, and was,
notwithstanding the declaration in it, only a mortgage. In the case
of
Lackey v. Bostwick, 54 Ga. 45, the instrument
considered was a deed absolute on its face, and, while it was
contended that it was in fact executed as security for an
indebtedness, yet such a defense was cognizable only in equity, and
on the face or the instrument the legal title passed. In
Woodson v. Veal, 60 Ga. 562, the instrument was a deed
absolute on its face. It was, however, intended as security for a
debt, and contained an agreement that the grantor might repurchase
within a specified time, and that the grantee, on failure to so
repurchase, might sell in a certain way. It also contained
provisions as to possession and costs and expenses. This instrument
was held effective to pass the legal title. The
Page 140 U. S. 252
court observed:
"Where the parties do not intend a title, but only a legal
mortgage, why should they adopt an absolute deed instead of a
mortgage? It is precisely that they do intend, and deliberately
intend, title to pass, that they eschew the mortgage and make use
of a deed absolute."
The converse of this is true in the case at bar. The appellants
not only accepted this instrument in form a mortgage, but they
understood and intended a mortgage. In the bill of complaint it is
expressly averred that "the instrument is in legal effect a
mortgage deed," and also that "no bond to reconvey said property
upon the payment of said indebtedness was executed." It is also
alleged that the sales by Jewell to Myrick were made "subject to
the lien of said mortgage to your orators." The contract therefore
is not to be taken as a power of attorney of Jewell to sell land
the title of which was in the appellants, but simply as a consent
of lienholders to the release of their lien upon a sale made by the
mortgagor of the real estate described in the mortgage.
It is further urged by appellants that the considerations of
these transfers were so far below the real value of the property as
to indicate bad faith on the part of Jewell and his vendees, or, if
not that, that the transfers are to be adjudged as made subject to
the lien of appellants' mortgage. We cannot agree with this
contention. The testimony as to the value is conflicting, but it is
very far from making clear that there was a great disproportion
between value and consideration -- such a disproportion as would
overthrow the evidence of good faith and the understanding and
intent of the parties, furnished by the other and positive
testimony respecting the same. Jewell had never seen the land. He
bought it at a bankrupt sale in 1874, bought it partly to protect
himself, as he had a claim against the bankrupt, though to perfect
his title he was compelled to pay off certain liens, which made the
property cost him perhaps double what he received for it. He wanted
money; had been trying to sell the property ever since he purchased
it; had advertised it for sale, and, so far as appears, finally
disposed of it on the best terms he could get. So although he lost
money by the transaction, yet if he
Page 140 U. S. 253
and his vendees acted in good faith, and intended the one to
transfer and the other to receive an unencumbered title, the
disproportion between the value and the consideration does not
justify the court in annulling the transfers or in making a new
agreement between the parties or in compelling the vendees to pay
more than they had agreed to.
Thus far, we have considered these two transfers by Jewell as
alike, and, for the reasons indicated, find no reason to differ
from the conclusions reached by the trial court, but they were not
alike. The consideration of the deed to Myrick was cash. It was a
sale, and was within the authority given to Jewell. The
consideration of the conveyance to Mrs. Daniel was a conveyance by
her to Jewell of other lands. The transaction was an exchange, and
not a sale. This was outside of the authority of Jewell. It is a
general proposition that power to sell gives authority of sell for
cash only, and does not uphold a mere exchange.
Morrill v.
Cone, 22 How. 75; Perry on Trusts, § 769;
Taylor v. Galloway, 1 Hammond 232;
Cleveland v. State
Bank, 16 Ohio St. 236;
Russell v. Russell, 36 N.Y.
581; 1 Devlin on Deeds §§ 370, 373, 436;
Lumpkin v.
Wilson, 5 Heisk. 555.
This is the general rule where there is given simply a power to
sell, and in this case that the authority was limited to a sale for
cash is evident from this language of the provision -- "the
proceeds of sale to go to the credit of the said Woodward, Baldwin
& Co." That which was due to these appellants was money, and
the proceeds of the sale were to go to their credit. That implies
that money was to be received and applied on their account. The
mortgage from Jewell to appellants was recorded in the county in
which the land was situated. Mrs. Daniel took the property subject
to that recorded lien, and can claim no discharge therefrom save as
was authorized by the language of this stipulation. That permitted
a sale, and a sale for cash only. The land which she conveyed to
Jewell he thereafter sold and conveyed to his nephew. It is
therefore beyond the reach of the appellants. Nor is it shown that
any money was ever applied on appellant's account which could be
considered as an equivalent of
Page 140 U. S. 254
the land sold, for while Jewell testifies to forwarding the
products of his mill to them when he heard of their complaint, his
testimony is that he forwarded what he supposed was enough to cover
the money that he had received.
Our conclusion, then, in reference to this tract of three
hundred and fifty-three acres, is that Jewell had no authority to
exchange it for other lands, and that a mere exchange did not
divest the land from the lien of the recorded mortgage. On this
ground, and on this alone, the decree must be reversed. The order
therefore will be that the decree be
Affirmed so far as respects the parties interested in the
land conveyed to Steth P. Myrick by the deed of February 2, 1882;
that otherwise it be reversed, and the case be remanded with
instructions to enter a decree against Jewell for the amount due
from him, and a decree of foreclosure and sale of the three hundred
and fifty-three acres of land conveyed to Mrs. Daniel by the deed
of February 3, 1879.
One-half of the costs of this appeal will be paid by the
appellants, and the other half charged as costs in the foreclosure
against the last-named tract.
MR. JUSTICE BRADLEY was not present at the argument of this
case, and took no part in its decision.