Court Opinion

ID: 8800210
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-11-26 14:28:22.27846+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:03:51.314933
License: Public Domain

GILBERT, Circuit Judge
(after stating the facts as above). [1] The findings of fact are all based upon evidence which is conflicting, and which was taken in open court, and they will not be disturbed by this court, in the absence of a showing that in arriving at the same, the court below erroneously applied some rule of evidence or found contrary to the decided weight of the testimony. Moore v. Moore, 121 Fed. 737, 58 C. C. A. 19; Tilghman v. Proctor, 125 U. S. 136, 8 Sup. Ct. 894, 31 L. Ed. 664; Tate v. Holmes, 76 Fed. 664, 22 C. C. A. 466.
[2] The evidence was that the appellant and the appellee were jointly interested in some of the mining properties, the appellee’s interests in which were sold on execution; that for many years the appellant had sustained toward the appellee a relation of close personal friendship and business agency; that on the date of the execution sale the appellant attended the sale at the request of the appellee for the purpose of buying in the property for the appellee’s benefit; that the appellant bought the property upon an understanding with the ap-pellee that the title therein was to be held by the appellant as a mortgage for the amount of the appellant’s bid; that on April 6, 1915, less than two years after the sale, the appellee offered to pay the appellant the sum which the latter had bid on the land, together with interest thereon, on condition that the property be reconveyed to the ap-pellee ; that in the interval between those dates the appellant repeatedly admitted the appellee’s title to the property, and promised to reconvey the same to him.
*622Additional considerations suggesting equitable relief are the facts of the gross inadequacy of the consideration, the ample evidence that the appellant abused the trust and confidence of the appellee, and the irregularity in the sale, in that the interests of the appellee in four separate parcels of property were not sold separately, but were sold in gross to the appellant, he making no protest or objection- thereto, and he being the representative of the appellee at the sale and attending the same at the appellee’s request.
The appellant contends that under section 6836, Revised Codes of Montana, which provides that “upon a sale of real property the purchaser is substituted to and acquires the right, title, interest, and claim of the judgment debtor thereto,” the appellant acquired the complete legal and equitable title of the appellee in the property, the ap-^ pellee retaining only the bare right to repurchase (McQueeney v. Toomey, 36 Mont. 282, 92 Pac. 561, 122 Am. St. Rep. 358, 13 Ann. Cas. 316), and that thereafter nothing passed to the appellant by reason of the expiration of the period of redemption or by the sheriff’s deed, and that a promise, if made by him within that period, to hold the property as a mortgage was without consideration and void. But the evidence shows that the promise was made before the expiration of the period Of redemption, and that the trust relation remained unchanged after that date as it existed before, and that the agreement, snce a mortgage, was always a mortgage as between the two parties thereto-.
The case needs no further discussion. We find no merit in the appeal. The decree is affirmed.