Bjorkstam v. Federal Land Bank

244 P. 981, 138 Wash. 456, 1926 Wash. LEXIS 1059
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedApril 5, 1926
DocketNo. 19475. Department One.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 244 P. 981 (Bjorkstam v. Federal Land Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bjorkstam v. Federal Land Bank, 244 P. 981, 138 Wash. 456, 1926 Wash. LEXIS 1059 (Wash. 1926).

Opinion

Holcomb, J.

Owing to the complicated appeals in this case, for the sake of brevity, the parties will be *457 called plaintiffs and defendant, respectively, except the Federal Land Bank of Spokane, which will he called respondent. Originally, the plaintiffs consisted of husband and wife, but the wife having died, and her interests having passed solely to her husband, he was substituted as sole party plaintiff, and will be so designated herein.

The complaint of plaintiffs alleges that the Federal Land Bank of Spokane is a corporation, organized under the act of Congress, and that it has its principal place of business at Spokane, Washington; that it is engaged in loaning money on farm lands in the state of Washington; that one Monterieffe Cameron, at all times in question, was an attorney at law practicing in Seattle, and was secretary-treasurer of the Seattle National Farm Loan Association, a corporation, organized and existing under an act of Congress; that, by virtue of his office, Cameron was the agent of respondent bank for the purpose of receiving applications for loans under the act, and for the purpose of disbursing funds advanced by the bank.

It is further alleged that, on October 21, 192B, and for many years prior thereto, plaintiff and his now deceased wife were the owners of the land in question; that upon that day they sold and conveyed the lands to defendants Stewart and wife, for the agreed purchase price of $5,500, of which plaintiffs received in cash the sum of $1,250, and a note and mortgage representing the remainder of the purchase price, of $4,250, due six months after date; that, at the time of making the conveyance referred to, plaintiffs entered into a written contract with defendants Stewart, which is attached to and made a part of the complaint, marked Exhibit “A,” by which it is recited that Stewart and wife, having applied for a farm loan on the premises with *458 which to pay. off the $4,250 mortgage held by plaintiffs, in the event the farm loan be granted, plaintiffs npon receiving $3,000 would release, the mortgage and take a second mortgage in the sum of $1,250, due in one year; that on December 26, 1923, plaintiff was notified by.Cameron that the application of Stewart for a loan had been accepted, and he was requested to call upon Cameron and satisfy the mortgage; that pursuant to such request, and relying npon the assurance of Cameron, as agent of respondent bank, that plaintiff would receive the sum of $3,000 out of the proceeds of the Federal farm loan, plaintiff executed and- delivered to Cameron a satisfaction of his $4,250 mortgage, and surrendered to Cameron his note; that thereafter the loan was made by respondent bank and the proceeds thereof sent to Cameron for disbursement; that Cameron failed to pay plaintiff the $3,000 due him from the Federal farm loan, but converted it to his own use; that demand has heretofore been made upon Cameron, as agent of respondent bank, and upon the defendants Stewart, which has been refused; that the bank caused its mortgage in the sum of $4,250 to be placed of record, purporting to be a first and prior lien upon the lands in question; that in justice and equity respondent’s mortgage should be held to be inferior and subsequent to the lien in favor of plaintiff for the sum of $3,000, and interest. Plaintiff therefore demanded that the original note and mortgage of defendants Stewart, in the sum of $4,250, with interest, be reinstated as a first and prior charge upon the lands involved, and that a decree be entered foreclosing the same, and that the plaintiff have and recover other equitable relief.

. The answer of respondent bank was a general denial of the allegations of the complaint respecting the agency of Cameron and the alleged acts of Cameron and Stewarts.

*459 The answer of defendants Stewart admits the conveyance and the giving of the mortgage mentioned in the complaint; alleges that defendants have performed the obligations of their contract, Exhibit “A;” that they now hold possession of the lands in question subject to a $4,250 mortgage in favor of the Federal Land Bank, and subject to a second mortgage of $1,250 in favor of plaintiffs.

At the conclusion of the trial, the court entered a decree dismissing plaintiff’s cause of action against the Federal Land Bank, reinstating the original mortgage in the sum of $4,250, executed by defendants Stewart to plaintiff, and foreclosing the same, subject, however, to the prior lien of the mortgage held by the Federal Land Bank, the effect of which decree is to reinstate plaintiff’s mortgage, but making it subject to a prior eharge in favor of respondent in the sum of $4,250.

The defendants Stewart have appealed from the decree against them in favor of plaintiff. The plaintiff has appealed from so much of the decree as dismisses his cause of action against the respondent bank.

The facts are not disputed, but the deductions to be drawn from them and the legal effect to be concluded therefrom are in very great dispute.

We are beset with some difficulty to determine whose agent Cameron was, in respect to the transaction involved in his misappropriation of the funds borrowed from respondent bank by defendants Stewart, in part for the purpose of paying the $3,000 to plaintiff. Respondent bank denies that Cameron was its agent; plaintiff strenuously contends that Cameron was the bank’s agent, while defendants contend that Cameron was either the agent of the bank or of plaintiff.

While the facts are not disputed, except as to the deductions and conclusions to be derived therefrom, it *460 will be necessary to make a very lengthy and detailed statement of the facts in order to understand the matter at issue and determine the law.

It may be well to premise the statement of facts by a glance at the statutory relations of respondent and another agency with borrowers of Federal farm loan funds.

The Federal Farm Loan Act, as it is called, and its various amendments (U. S. Comp. Stat. 1925, Cumulative Supplement, Compact Ed., § 9835-B, et seq.) creates three separate agencies with distinct and independent functions:

(1) The Federal Farm Loan Board, consisting of seven members, at the head of which, ex officio, is the Secretary of the Treasury, which is given general supervision over the administration of the act.

(2) The Federal Land Banks, which are separate and independent corporations obtaining their charters from the Federal Farm Loan Board, and having such powers only as are granted them by the act. They report to the Federal Farm Loan Board, and are, at all times, subject to its supervision and regulation. They are given no power of supervision or regulation over farm loan associations, other than to recommend to the board for or against an application of these associations for the granting of their charters.

(3) The National Farm Loan Associations, which are authorized to be created by ten or more persons who own farm lands qualified for loans under the act.

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Bluebook (online)
244 P. 981, 138 Wash. 456, 1926 Wash. LEXIS 1059, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bjorkstam-v-federal-land-bank-wash-1926.