Castleman v. Canal Bank & Trust Co.

156 So. 648, 171 Miss. 291, 1934 Miss. LEXIS 196
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 8, 1934
DocketNo. 31304.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 156 So. 648 (Castleman v. Canal Bank & Trust Co.) 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
Castleman v. Canal Bank & Trust Co., 156 So. 648, 171 Miss. 291, 1934 Miss. LEXIS 196 (Mich. 1934).

Opinion

Griffith, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

On July 16', 1925, the Canal Bank & Trust Company, of New Orleans, sold the property known as the McDaniel plantation, in Humphreys county, Mississippi, to S. and P. Castleman, residents of that county, at an agreed purchase price of one hundred twenty-five thousand dollars. The property was then incumbered by a first mortgage held by the Mississippi Fire Insurance Company for about thirty-seven thousand five hundred dollars. As a part of the purchase price the Castlemans assumed this first mortgage and gave the bank a series of eight notes to evidence the balance. In 1928 the insurance company determined to foreclose its first mortgage unless paid, and Castleman, being unable to make the payment, applied *296 to the bank for assistance. As a result of the negotiations between the parties, it was arranged that the insurance company would foreclose, the bank would buy at the foreclosure, would then make another conveyance to the Castlemans, and they, in turn, would execute a deed of trust with new notes, all in such form that the entire indebtedness and security could be transferred to a farm mortgage company and thus relieve the bank of it. In order to make it possible to discount this large indebtedness to a mortgage company, it was deemed advisable that a profit or bonus or discount to the prospective mortgage company should be provided, in the sum of twelve thousand five hundred dollars.

The agreed arrangements were carried out, except in the particular last above mentioned. In calculating the amount of balance due, with interest, on the previous Castleman purchase-money notes, so far as unpaid, plus the fire insurance company’s first mortgage notes with interest, plus the twelve thousand five hundred dollar bonus, the aggregate amount was found to be one hundred forty-one thousand four hundred twenty-six dollars and thirty cents, and on December 28, 1927, the Castle-mans executed three notes to cover, with interest at seven per cent.; and as of the same date they gave a deed of trust on the property to secure .the payment of the said notes, and all the previous purchase-money notes were canceled and surrendered.

The mortgage company which the parties had in mind as the prospective purchaser of these notes and the deed of trust securing the same was the Canal Mortgage Company, Inc., of New Orleans, and the notes and deed of trust were drawn payable to that company or bearer. The notes appear on their face to have been executed in New Orleans, and were payable at the Canal Bank & Trust Company in New Orleans, and the deed of trust carried the following express stipulation: “All rights *297 of the note holders shall he admeasured by the laws of the state of Louisiana, which are hereby expressly adopted to control this entire transaction.” When the notes and deed of trust were delivered to the bank, it was found that an error in the calculation of the aggregate amount due had been made in preparing the notes and deed of trust;.this error being in the sum of five thousand two' hundred twenty-three dollars and twelve cents, and this was at once credited upon the first note, thus making the total amount of the notes one hundred thirty-six thousand two hundred three dollars and eighteen cents. The bank failed to obtain a purchaser of the notes and deed of trust, and later the notes were credited with the aforesaid bonus of twelve thousand five hundred dollars, which reduced the principal of the notes to one hundred twenty-three thousand seven hundred three dollars and eighteen cents. No part of the principal or interest on the amount last stated was ever paid by the Castlemans, as the evidence now discloses.

Some time during the fall of 1932, Mr. Castleman died," and, as apparently the bank had largely depended upon him personally to work out this large indebtedness, the bank determined to foreclose. After Mr. Castleman’s death, the attorneys for the administrator and heirs called upon the bank for a full and complete statement of all the various transactions between the bank and the Castlemans, of which there were several loans other than that above outlined, and in heavy amounts, covering a period of not less than six or seven years. This statement was furnished by the bank, but it was unsatisfactory to the Castlemans, and, the notice of foreclosure having been served and published by the trustee, Mrs. S. P. Castleman and the heirs filed a bill praying for ah accounting, for a receiver, and for an injunction to re-, strain the sale under the deed of trust. Upon a preliminary hearing the court declined to appoint, a receiver, but allowed the injunction. The complainants, however, *298 were unable to give an injunction bond, and the sale proceeded, after which the complainants filed supplemental and amended bills.

The first attack upon the deed of trust and the sale thereunder is that the charge of twelve thousand five hundred dollar bonus, included in the notes, operated to forfeit the entire debt, principal and interest, on account of usury. The heirs contend that the said bonus was in consideration of the payment by the bank of the fire insurance company mortgage, and that, since the bonus was more than twenty per cent, of the amount of that mortgage, and since that mortgage indebtedness was integrated into the total of the three notes given on December 28, 1927, the whole of the three notes has thereby become forfeited for usury.

Conceding, but not intimating that we so decide, that, if the transaction is to be solved under the laws of this state, it would be usurious, we must apply the laws of Louisiana on that subject. This transaction was negotiated in New Orleans, the notes were payable there, and the deed of trust carried the express stipulation that the laws of Louisiana were to govern the rights of the parties, which stipulation we have already quoted; and we regard it as the settled law that, when a substantial portion of a transaction has been had and is to be had in one state and a substantial portion in another, the parties may by express terms agree as to which of the laws of the two states are to govern in respect to the obligations of that contract. 2 Wharton, Conflict of Laws (3 Ed.), pp. 919, 920, 1194, 1195; 5 R. C. L., p. 938; 27 R. C. L., pp. 256, 257; 12 C. J., p. 451; 33 C. J., p. 184; 66 C. J., pp. 144, 145. This rule was freely recognized even in the building and loan cases, e. g., Shannon v. Georgia, etc., Association, 78 Miss. 955, 30 So. 51, 57 L. R. A. 800, 84 Am. St. Rep. 657, with which bench and bar are well acquainted. It is, of course, not permissible that, for the purposes of evasion, a fictitious stipulation, in the re *299 spect mentioned, may be enforced; but, so long as made in good faith and under admissible facts, such a stipulation is as good in law as any other provision which, under the liberty of contract, the parties may elect to insert in their agreement. There is nothing in this case which the court may take hold of and depend upon as showing that the stipulation mentioned was other than one made bona tides, and, since under Dodds v. Pyramid Securities Co., 165 Miss. 269, 147 So. 328, it was held that a bonus contract, such as here complained of, may be validly made under the laws of Louisiana, we must hold that the stated contention of the complaining heirs is not well taken.

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Bluebook (online)
156 So. 648, 171 Miss. 291, 1934 Miss. LEXIS 196, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/castleman-v-canal-bank-trust-co-miss-1934.