American Bank Trust v. First Nat'l Bank of Paris

43 S.W.2d 248, 184 Ark. 689, 1931 Ark. LEXIS 261
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 16, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 43 S.W.2d 248 (American Bank Trust v. First Nat'l Bank of Paris) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Bank Trust v. First Nat'l Bank of Paris, 43 S.W.2d 248, 184 Ark. 689, 1931 Ark. LEXIS 261 (Ark. 1931).

Opinion

Butler, J.

The appellee bank filed an action in the chancery court of Logan County for judgment against Thomas B. Harris on a note executed by Harris to the bank, and for foreclosure of a mortgage given to secure the same and executed and filed for record on December '24, 1926. Appellee bank alleged among other things that appellant bank and trust company was claiming some interest in the property secured by the mortgage, and asked that it be made a party to the action. The bank and trust company answered, alleging that Harris was indebted to it for a balance on a note of $9,644 to secure which he had executed a mortgage in favor of the bank and trust company, which mortgage included the property named in the mortgage from Harris to the appellee bank, as well as certain other property located in the town of Paris. This mortgage was executed and filed for record on February 9, 1925. The bank and trust company made its answer a cross-complaint against the appellee bank, and Harris, and asked for judgment for the balance claimed, and that its mortgage be declared prior and paramount to that of the appellee bank, and prayed for foreclosure.

Thereafter, the appellee, Leora Blair, having obtained permission of the court, filed an intervention by which she claimed that on December 4, 1925, Harris and wife were indebted to T. C. Blair, the debt being evidenced by a note and mortgage executed to the said Blair by which it conveyed certain town lots in the city of Paris included in the mortgage executed on March 9, 1925, to appellant bank and trust company. She alleged that this note and mortgage had been assigned to her, and asked that her rights be adjudicated, alleging further, as also did the appellee bank in-its reply to the cross-complaint of the appellant bank and trust company, that the note given by Harris to said bank and trust company had been paid, and that the cross-complaint should be dismissed.

After having heard the evidence on the issues raised by the above pleadings, the chancellor found in favor of the appellees, and that the indebtedness secured by the mortgage set up in the cross-complaint of the bank and trust company had been paid, and that the lien of said mortgage had been satisfied. The court dismissed the cross-complaint as to its asserted rights under the mortgage for want of equity.

It was established by the evidence that in 1923 Harris borrowed $2,500 from the appellee bank and gave his note to evidence the transaction with Lewis C. Sadler as security thereon, executing to Sadler a mortgage on a small farm near Paris to secure Sadler from loss and to protect and save him on any renewals of the note, provided that, if Harris should pay the money borrowed when due, the mortgage should be void, etc. This note was extended from time to time in consideration of payments of interest made and indorsed thereon; the due date of the original note being January 2, 1924. This note and mortgage remaining unpaid, the note sued on by appellee bank was given in renewal on the 24th of December, 1926, and a new mortgage including the same property was executed by Harris to the appellee bank direct, but the original note and mortgage given to Sadler were not canceled or satisfied.

In the beginning of the year 1925, Thomas B. Harris, a brother-in-law, W. M. Quaile, and Guy O’Kelly purchased a mercantile business located in the city of Paris, and Harris applied to appellant for a loan of $9,000 with which to pay for his third interest in the business purchased. This loan was approved, the interest to the amount of $600 was included in the note which was executed on March 9, 1925, for the sum of $9,600, to secure which Harris executed the mortgage set out in the appellant’s cross-complaint. At that time the mortgage from Harris to Sadler and the debt secured thereby were still subsisting, of which fact the cashier of the appellant bank who handled the transaction had actual notice. The mortgage required by appellant included the mercantile business for which the money was borrowed, several town lots in the city of Paris, and also the small farm which had been mortgaged to Sadler as aforesaid.

Leora Blair, the appellee, loaned Harris, through her brother, T. C. Blair, $1,600; to secure which the note and the mortgage on some town lots was given as set up in her intervention.

A number of questions are presented by counsel in their respective briefs which will be unnecessary to consider, for in our view of the case a decision of only two questions is necessary to a determination of the issues.

It was shown by the evidence that Harris, prior to the date of purchase of the third interest in the mercantile business, was indebted to appellant bank on a note for which he was surety in the sum of $1,053.33, and two other smaller notes amounting to about $126. From February 9, 1925, down to, and including, August 16, 1926, he made a number of small notes, discounting others which he owned and which, not being paid, were charged back to his account. All these amounted to about $4,500. At and during the time of the purchase by Harris of the one-third interest in the mercantile business, he seems also to have been engaged in the insurance business, but in the year 1925 his health became bad, and he had to go to a hospital on several occasions and so concluded to sell his interest in the mercantile business. He induced his father-in-law, Mr. Quaile, to buy it, who, on March 9, 1926, in payment of the same, executed a note payable to appellant bank in the sum of $9,7i89.74, which note he afterwards paid.

It is the contention of the appellees that the transaction last referred to was a payment of the $9,600 note made by Harris to appellant and secured by mortgage. Appellant contends first that the $9,600 note was not paid, but that when Quaile executed his note for $9,-789.74, there was no direction given as to what debt the proceeds should be applied, and therefore appellant had the right, and did, make application first to the payment of the small notes, crediting the residue on the $9,600, leaving a substantial amount of that note unpaid. Second, appellant contends that, even though the $9,600 note was paid, the mortgage given by Harris on February 9, 1925, was security not only for that note but also for all indebtedness incurred by Harris from its date to the time due, and that therefore its mortgage still subsisted, and it was entitled to have its mortgage declared paramount to the mortgages of the appellee, and to foreclosure in satisfaction of that indebtedness.

Reed, the cashier, testified in positive terms that Harris not only did not direct that the $9,G00‘ note was to be paid, but expressly agreed that the payment made by Quaile was to be applied, first, to the “small notes and get them out of the way, and apply the balance to that covered by this mortgage ’ ’; that the understanding was that he was to take up “all of his little stuff and leave one note — get that all out of the way and apply the balance to the one big note which was covered by the mortgage.” This testimony was contradicted by the testimony of Harris and of Mr. Quaile and by the attendant circumstances. Harris repeatedly stated during the nine times he was examined and cross-examined by the attorneys that he never at any time had any specific agreement or made any specific direction as to what should be done with the proceeds of Mr. Quaile’s note, but that it was understood “between me, Mr. Quaile, Mr. O’Kelly and Mr. Reed that Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
43 S.W.2d 248, 184 Ark. 689, 1931 Ark. LEXIS 261, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-bank-trust-v-first-natl-bank-of-paris-ark-1931.