Bankers' Mortgage Co. v. McMullan

141 So. 331, 165 Miss. 382, 1932 Miss. LEXIS 269
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMay 2, 1932
DocketNo. 29847.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 141 So. 331 (Bankers' Mortgage Co. v. McMullan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bankers' Mortgage Co. v. McMullan, 141 So. 331, 165 Miss. 382, 1932 Miss. LEXIS 269 (Mich. 1932).

Opinion

*387 Cooik, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The appellee, W. P. McMullan, filed a bill of complaint in the chancery court of Scott county against the appellant, the Bankers’ Mortgage Company, and the Fidelity & Deposit Company of Maryland, its surety, seeking to recover the sum of six hundred fifteen dollars, alleged to be due the appellee on account of false representations of fact embodied in statements of appellant’s salesman and agent in a transaction involving the sale of installment investment bonds. The Fidelity & Deposit Company interposed a demurrer to the bill of complaint, and thereafter the appellee dismissed his bill as to it. The appellant, the Bankers ’ Mortgage Company, filed its answer to the bill of complaint, and, on the trial of the cause on the pleadings and proof, the chancellor granted a decree awarding the appellee a recovery of the amount sued for, with attorney’s fees and costs; and from that decree this appeal was prosecuted.

The bill of complaint alleged that the appellant is a corporation organized and chartered under the laws of Kansas and domiciled in the city of Topeka, in that state, and authorized to do business in this state as a foreign corporation engaged in the sale of installment investment bonds; that it had qualified under the statutes of this state, known as the “Blue Sky Law,” to engage in the sale of stocks, bonds, and other securities of said corporation; and that it entered into a bond in the sum of five thousand dollars with the Fidelity & Deposit Company of Maryland, as its surety, to qualify under the statutes for the sale of its bonds and securitiés.

It was further alleged that in the month of December, 1930, a duly accredited agent and bond salesman of the appellant company opened negotiations with the appellee for the sale of a four thousand dollar investment bond of said company; that the said salesman offered to sell him a four thousand dollar investment bond dated July 15, 1927, fully paid up to January 15, 1931, with a *388 cash surrender value of six hundred eig’hty-eight dollars, and to accept, in exchange or payment therefor, two investment bonds issued by other companies, and then owned by the appellee, on which he had paid the aggregate sum of six hundred fifteen dollars; and that, relying on these overtures and representations of the said agent and salesman, he (the appellee) surrendered his two bonds to the said agent in exchange for a four thousand dollar bond of the appellant to be of the description, date, and value aforesaid.

The bill of complaint further charged that the appellant investment company, with full knowledge of the representations and promises made to appellee by its agent and salesman, issued to him their certain first mortgage savings bond, numbered MIOOOD, in the sum of four thousand dollars, dated July 15, 1927, and also issued to him its receipt acknowledging payment of a cash consideration of six hundred fifteen dollars for said bond, the said receipt being in words and figures as follows: “The Bankers’ Mortgage Company received from W. P. McMullan on account of bond No. MIOOOD1 subject to its privileges and conditions. Date paid, 7/15/1929; amount, six hundred fifteen dollars. Received by J. F. Kell, Treasurer.”

It was further averred that on March 24, 1931, thereafter, the appellee surrendered, or offered to surrender to the appellant, the said bond for four thousand dollars in consideration of the payment to him of a cash surrender value of six hundred eig’hty-eight dollars; that the appellant company refused to comply with the representations of its agent by paying the six hundred eighty-eight dollars, the cash value of a bond dated July 15, 1927, and fully paid up to January 15, 1931, but, on the contrary, admitted and offered to pay a cash surrender value of only two hundred eighty dollars.

The bill then alleged that the officers and agents of appellant company induced the appellee to purchase said bond by means of the misrepresentation of material facts *389 concerning the cash value of said bond, and as to its willingness and readiness to pay a cash value of six hundred eighty-eight dollars upon the surrender of the bond after January 15, 1931; that by virtue of said misrepresentation, the appellee was induced to deliver to the company other bonds upon which six hundred fifteen dollars had been paid;'and that, by reason of the facts set forth, the appellee had the right under the statutes to recover from the appellant and its surety the sum paid out by him by reason of the said misrepresentations of material facts concerning the value of the bond purchased by him, and also interest and attorney’s fees, for all of which he prayed that a decree be entered. A copy of the bond delivered to the appellee by the appellant company was filed as an exhibit to and part of the bill of complaint.

In its answer to the bill of complaint, the appellant company denied that its salesman offered, and the appellant accepted, a bond fully paid up to January 15, 1931, with a cash value of six hundred eighty-eight dollars; denied that its agent and salesman represented that the bond to be delivered would be paid up* January 15, 1931, and have a cash surrender value of six hundred eighty-eight dollars, as alleged in the bill of complaint; and denied that the appellee relied on any promise or representation other than those appearing on the face of the bond, a copy of which was in appellee’s possession when the contract of sale was executed. It admitted the issuance of the bond described in the bill of complaint, and also the contents of its receipt for six hundred fifteen dollars set forth therein, but denied that it had any information of any representations, overtures, or promises of its agent and salesman, or that it had any knowledge or information concerning the transaction other than that disclosed by the application for the bond which was signed by the appellee, and was made an exhibit to the answer. The answer alleged that this application, bond, and receipt constituted the sole, only, and *390 entire contract between tbe parties, and alleged that the proper cash surrender value of the bond is two hundred eighty dollars, which it- tendered to appellee with its answer. The answer also denied that the appellee relied on any misrepresentation of material facts concerning the bond, or that he was induced to surrender the bonds owned by him by reason of any such misrepresentation of fact.

The application for the bond, which was made an exhibit to the appellant’s answer, and was proved in evidence, is in the following words and figures:

“I am of legal age and hereby apply to the Bankers Mortgage Company, of Topeka, Kansas, for a four thousand dollar One Hundred Sixty-two Months Installment First Mortgage Savings Bond and agree to pay six hundred fifteen dollars upon the signing of this application and further payments according to the conditions of said bond.
“To be issued in the name of W. P. McMullan for self, Age, Legal. Any statement made by salesman at variance with the bond shall not be binding on the company. The salesman taking this application is authorized to- collect no more than the initial payment of sixty-seven dollars and fifty cents for each one thousand dollar bond.

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Bluebook (online)
141 So. 331, 165 Miss. 382, 1932 Miss. LEXIS 269, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bankers-mortgage-co-v-mcmullan-miss-1932.