Brown v. Citizens' State Bank, Ltd.

107 P. 405, 17 Idaho 716, 1910 Ida. LEXIS 127
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 12, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 107 P. 405 (Brown v. Citizens' State Bank, Ltd.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brown v. Citizens' State Bank, Ltd., 107 P. 405, 17 Idaho 716, 1910 Ida. LEXIS 127 (Idaho 1910).

Opinions

SULLIVAN, C. J.

— This is an action to recover from the defendant, who is appellant, the sum of $1,500 in cash and a promissory note for $1,700, which it is alleged were deposited with the appellant bank as an escrow deposit.

It appears from the record that C. L; Brown, one of the respondents, sometime in February, 1908, was negotiating with the Great Western Beet Sugar Company at Mountain* Home for the purchase of a water right and the assignment of a certain desert land entry of eighty acres of land near Mountain Home; that after the terms of the escrow agreement had been agreed to, and O. E. Cannon, cashier of the Citizens’ Bank of Mountain Home, had been sent for by Mr. Garrett, the representative of the sugar company, to come and sign the escrow agreement and receipt for the $1,500 paid and the said promissory note, the following agreement was entered into:

“Received from C. L. Brown, of Bellingham, Wash., the sum of Fifteen Hundred Dollars, the same being the first payment upon the purchase of a water right to 80 acres of land as per a contract this day entered into between him and the Great Western Beet Sugar Company, a Washington corporation, doing business at Mountain Home, Idaho.
“The land in question is the SW. % of the NW. 14 and the NW. 14 of the SW. % of Section 8, Township 4 South, Range 7 East of Boise Meridian, in Elmore County, Idaho, and it is understood that the same has been filed upon by Mrs. Adolph Aus., of Mountain Home, Idaho, under the Desert Land Act. It is understood and agreed that Mrs. Adolph Aus is to deposit with me, as Cashier of the Citizens’ State Bank, Ltd., of Mountain Home, Idaho, the Desert Land receipt to be issued to her by the United States Land Office at Boise, Idaho, covering the entry as above described, and upon the 15th day after the date of such Desert Land Entry receipt she is to turn over to me her assignment, properly executed, conveying the said entry and the rights thereunder to said C. L. Brown or A. B. Estabrook. I will write to the Register of the United States Land Office to ascertain if the entry and assignment are regular and will be recognized by said Land Office, and upon re[718]*718ceipt of a favorable reply to that effect, will send to C. L. Brown at Bellingham, Wash., by registered letter, the above mentioned Land Office receipt and assignment, and at that time I will pay to the Great Western Beet Sugar Company, or its order, the said sum of $1500.00.
“It is further understood and agreed that the said C. L. Brown will, within fifteen days after this date, send to me his promissory note, signed also by A. B. Estabrook, for the sum of $1700.00, due and payable to the said Great Western Beet Sugar Company, on or before February 12, 1909, which said note I will surrender to said Great Western Beet Sugar-Company at the time I turn over the $1500.00 in cash as above provided, or when the validity of the entry and assignment hereinbefore referred to has been proven to my satisfaction. Said Great Western Beet Sugar Company is to place with this bank in escrow a deed covering the above water right, which I am to surrender to said C. L. Brown when the above-mentioned note is paid.
“Dated at Mountain Home, Idaho, February 12, 1908.
“O. E. CANNON,
“Cashier Citizens’ State Bank, Limited.”

It also appears that it was represented to Brown that Mrs. Adolph Aus, of Mountain Home, had entered said land under the desert land act of the United States, and that an assignment of her entry would be made to Brown; that said Cannon was to write to the register of the United States land office at Boise City to ascertain if said desert entry and assignment, were regular and would be recognized by said office, and upon receipt of a favorable reply he would send to C. L. Brown at. Bellingham, Washington, by registered letter, the receipt and assignment. This was not done, for the reason that Mrs. Aus-had never entered said land under the desert land laws of the-United States, or otherwise.

It also appears that within five days after said escrow agreement was made* the said cashier turned over tó the-sugar company the $1,500 deposited with said bank subject to-said escrow agreement, and also turned over said promissory [719]*719note for $1,700 to either the sugar company or one Wilcox who, it appears, had some dealings with the sugar company.

It also appears from the record that the sugar company undertook to scrip the eighty acres of land referred to, and entered into an agreement with said Wilcox for that purpose on August 17, 1908. Said Garrett and his wife entered' into a written agreement with said Wilcox. One stipulation of said agreement is as follows, to wit: ‘ ‘ The said L. T. Wilcox agrees to purchase approved land scrip and apply it upon the said land, endeavoring thereby to secure title for the said Esta-brook and Brown, which title shall remain in said L. T. Wilcox until the said Estabrook and Brown pay their said note above described. The remainder of said note, after deducting the price of the scrip therefrom, shall be credited to the said John H. and Allie G. Garrett upon their notes above described, and all equity in the said land above described, and the improvements thereon shall be held by the said L. T. Wilcox as security for the payment of the balance on the said notes of.' John H. and Allie G. Garrett.”

Counsel for appellant contends that even though Mrs. A us-had never entered said land as a desert claim, that if Garrett, as manager of the sugar company, procured title to said land by scripping it under the above-mentioned contract with Wilcox, that was a sufficient compliance with the terms of' said escrow agreement, and that the respondents must take-such title as might be procured by seripping said land in -lieu of a title procured as contemplated by the escrow agreement.

It will be observed from that portion of the Wilcox contract above quoted that Wilcox was to hold the title to said land as security for the payment of said $1,700 note and also-for a balance due on the Garrett promissory notes. This was. not contemplated by the original agreement and Brown and Estabrook had not agreed to any change therein. There is. nothing in the contention of counsel for appellant that the respondents must accept any kind of title that Garrett or the sugar company might give to them under the provisions of said escrow agreement. The escrow agreement was entered into on February 12, 1908. It was known by Garrett, the manager [720]*720■of the sugar company, that title to said land could not be procured in the manner that the respondents had been led to believe that it could be procured, to wit, by assignment of Mrs. Aus’ desert entry. Said manager, so far as the record shows, made no effort to procure title thereto by scripping it ■or otherwise, until the 17th of August, 1908 — more than six months after said escrow agreement was made. Within five •days after said agreement was made, the said $1,500 and the note were delivered, contrary to the provisions of said escrow ■agreement, to the beet sugar company — a very reckless way ■of doing business, to say the least. This no doubt was procured to be done by the manager of the sugar company; at least, after it was done, he accepted the benefits of it. That kind of sleight-of-hand performance or dishonest dealing will not be countenanced by this court.

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Bluebook (online)
107 P. 405, 17 Idaho 716, 1910 Ida. LEXIS 127, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-citizens-state-bank-ltd-idaho-1910.