Court Opinion

ID: 8193253
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 23:16:22.741999+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:40:40.613619
License: Public Domain

Jones, J.
We have here one of those unfortunate' but far too frequent cases where corporations and,..their officers *79have won and betrayed the confidence of many trusting people some of whom have to be shipwrecked.
The holders of notes under the third mortgage were cheated by less intricate methods than are usually adopted by those planning to defraud. So far as appears, they accepted these notes secured by a third mortgage on the mere representation of the trust company that they were secured by a first lien, when the slightest, examination would have shown that there was a first mortgage for. $10,000 duly executed and recorded in 1893, which mortgage was assigned to the trust company in 1905 and the assignment promptly recorded. • .
In the present situation one ofi two classes must suffer loss: either the note holders secured by the mortgage third in point of time and record, or .the gestuis que trustent of the company, who had the right to rely for- security on the mortgage for $10,000 deposited with the state treasurer pursuant to sec. 2024 — 77j, Stats.
It is unnecessary to state the history of the various dummy corporations which the Citizens’ Trust Company and its'officers used to accomplish their purposes, nor the details of the various conveyances which were made after the first mortgage, since the findings of the trial court and the facts conceded by counsel have greatly narrowed the issues. The only question left for us to decide is whether the note holders are to take priority over the persons claiming to be secured by the mortgage first executed and recorded. In other words, whether, on account of the fraud of the trust company in dealing with the note holders secured by the third mortgage, that mortgage under the registry act has become a lien prior to the original mortgage.
As appears from the statement of facts, the trial judge found that by reason of an extension of .the time of payment the note secured by the first' mortgage was not past due when the securities were dépósited. with the state treas*80urer. With this conclusion we cannot agree. We hold that the document purporting to give the extension had no effect. It was executed by a corporation which had no shadow of title except a deed by a wife who had only an inchoate right of dower. The deed was given while her husband was living and he-was still living at the time of the trial. Under these circumstances the agreement of extension, as well as the agreement to assume the first mortgage, was without consideration and void. Even if the agreement to extend had been valid, it is a grave question whether it could have so revived a past-due note and mortgage as to give it the qualities of paper not due within the meaning of the negotiable instruments act. Counsel for both parties agree that this act has nothing to do with the case and to this we also agree. We also concur in the view held by both counsel that the case is to be governed by the registry law as applied to the undisputed facts.
It is argued by appellants’ counsel that the state treasurer cannot be held to be a purchaser in good faith and for value; that the deposit with him was not a transfer; that he acquired no rights by the deposit except the right to possess and dispose of the securities; that he took no title to the note and mortgage, but held them without title or beneficial interest as a mere custodian, and that there was no consideration for the deposit.
Sec. 2024 — 77j, after designating the kinds of securities to be deposited by trust companies, continues: “. . . which cash, bonds, mortgages, or notes and mortgages, or public stocks or bonds shall be approved by the commissioner of banking and shall be held by the state treasurer in trust as security for the faithful execution of any trust which may be lawfully imposed upon and accepted by it; . . . ”
In State ex rel. Sheldon v. Dahl, 150 Wis. 73, 135 N. W. 474, this court construed the statute and held, among other things, that it is the official duty of the state treasurer “to hold the securities or cash so deposited in trust, the bene*81ficiaries of which trust are the depositors, creditors, and cestuis que trustent of the trust company,” and that in case. of a trust corporation sought to be dissolved by voluntary proceedings under sec. 1789, the treasurer’s duty to retain the deposited securities is absolute up to the moment when, under the provisions of that section, the dissolution is complete, and after that time the treasurer remains in possession of the securities still charged with the duties of a trus- ■ tee but relieved from the absolute mandate to retain possession.
Whether the legal title to the $10,000 note and mortgage was in the treasurer or not, he held them for the beneficiaries named in the statute, and as trustee; he had received them in the regular course of his official business in exchange for other securities of equal value. As said by the trial judge:
“In legal effect, that transaction constituted the performance of an obligation imposed by statute upon the trust company. That deposit was not made as a gift, but, in addition to being in discharge of a statutory obligation, it was expressly in consideration of the exchange of securities of equal value which the state treasurer, acting in the trust capacity created by statute, then surrendered to the trust company. As such trustee, the state treasurer was a holder, for value, in good faith. . . .”
However, it is claimed by appellants’ counsel that, if this were conceded, still the lien of the note holders under the third mortgage had become and-.remained prior to the lien of the original mortgage, since, as it is claimed, the treasurer could acquire no better lien than the trust company. For this claim the case of Butler v. Bank of Mazeppa, 94 Wis. 351, 68 N. W. 998, is confidently relied on as authority. This case is also relied on by respondents’ counsel, and indeed both counsel largely rely upon and cite the same Wisconsin cases relating to the recording acts, although they come to directly opposite conclusions.
In the Butler Case one Larson, had given two mortgages on the same land. Both were executed on the same day. *82Although by .reason of established facts the Butler mortgage was in equity, as between him and Fowler, the first mortgage, nevertheless, the Fowler, mortgage was recorded about an hour before the other. After this Fowler assigned his mortgage to the Bank of Mazeppa, which took without notice of. the real facts, and it was held that under the recording act, since Butler’s mortgage was first in fact and recorded before the assignment to the bank, its priority was preserved.
In the case before us the first mortgage was executed in 1893, and so far as the record showed had remained- the first mortgage up to November 12, 1910, when it was transferred to the state treasurer, who received it' in good faith and for value for the benefit of the cesiuis que trustent. The third mortgage was executed in 1900. No assignment of it or any interest in it appeared upon the record. There is no claim that the . treasurer had any actual, notice of any agreement that this mortgage should become a prior lien, or of any fraud which might give it priority.
Although it is a subject not discussed in the Butler Case, it is significant that the two mortgages were executed on the same day and that the difference in the time of record was only one hour.
In the Butler Case the owner of a mortgage which in equity was a second lien was seeking to subordinate the first mortgage by an assignment recorded subsequently to the recording of both mortgages. In the, present case the persons having an unrecorded interest in a mortgage third both in point of time and record are seeking to subordinate the original mortgage to the one in which they have an interest. Their claim of the right to thus displace the lien of the first mortgage is- based upon fraud proved by latent facts unknown to the transferee in good faith of the first mortgage. They are not relying upon a recorded assignment to themselves, but upon the record of a mortgage to the trust company long subsequent to the record of the first mortgage.
*83■ Appellants’ counsel argue that the treasurer is not protected by any assignment of the mortgage or any record of the assignment. The statute • regulating the deposit of securities makes no provision for such assignments or recording.
If the note holders had made timely discovery of the fraud upon them they could have brought an action against the trust company to have the third mortgage declared a lien prior to the first and could have prevented its transfer. They made no attempt, either by such a proceeding or by procuring and recording assignments, to give any notice to others that they had a claim-to-priority resting upon secret facts.
Appellants’ counsel rely strongly on the fact that, since the note was past due, the mortgage- was a mere chose in'action, and the proposition that the state treasurer could take no better right than that of the assignor. It does not follow that the treasurer, whom we hold to be a purchasér in good faith, is chargeable with all secret equities which might exist against the mortgagor óf the third niortgage; or the' trust company. In 19'Riding Case Law, p. 355,' §' 126, we find the following statement which seems to be supported by the cases cited to the several propositions laid down:
“While the interest of an assignee of a mortgage, where the obligation secured.is not negotiable, is generally subject to all defenses existing at the’ time of the assignment in favor of the mortgagor or his grantee against the assignor, the great-weight of -authority is to the effect-that such interest is not affected with equities against the assignor in favor of third persons of which the' assignee had nó notice, for- though, it- is the.duty of. the latter, to inquire of -the mortgagor, he is not required to-inquire of the whole world as to latent equities. Accordingly, a bona fide purchaser for. Value, of a mortgage given without-; any"cónsideration holds' it ás a valid incumbrance as against'creditors- of the mortgagor, since.his equities .are at.least equal; to'theirs,,and in such case the legal title prevails: ' Furthermore, a bona fide ;purchaser of- a- mortgage, executed apparently, .on the *84same date between the same parties and upon the same property as was another mortgage, is not held to notice of latent equities in favor of the other mortgage by reason solely of the fact that the other mortgage was recorded after the purchased mortgage, but before the transfer.”
The facts in this case and the Butler Case are so widely different that we cannot give to the latter case the controlling effect claimed for it by appellants’ counsel. We must hold that under the facts before us the lien of the mortgage first executed and first recorded has not been displaced and that it remains, in the hands of the state treasurer, the first lien. We are of the opinion that this ruling is in accord with other decisions of this court. Allison v. Manzke, 118 Wis. 11, 94 N. W. 659; Fallass v. Pierce, 30 Wis. 443; McDonald v. Sullivan, 135 Wis. 361, 116 N. W. 10.
It follows that the judgment must be affirmed except in one particular. We have said that the agreement of the Hamilton Realty Company to assume the first mortgage was without consideration and void. The judgment must therefore be modified by striking out the part which provides for a deficiency judgment against that company.
By the Court. — Judgment modified as indicated in this opinion, and as so modified affirmed.