Citizens' Bank of Clovis v. Brown

32 P.2d 755, 38 N.M. 310
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedApril 28, 1934
DocketNo. 3926.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 32 P.2d 755 (Citizens' Bank of Clovis v. Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Citizens' Bank of Clovis v. Brown, 32 P.2d 755, 38 N.M. 310 (N.M. 1934).

Opinion

SADLER, Justice.

This appeal involves a claim of equitable assignment based upon transactions to be related in the order of their happening. On March 1,1925, one R. J. Murray and wife executed and delivered to W. O. Oldham of Dallas, Tex., thirteen series of negotiable promissory notes, with ten notes to each series. Contemporaneously therewith they made and delivered to said payee thirteen separate mortgage deeds, each mortgage covering a separate quarter section of land located in Curry county, N. M., each separate mortgage securing the payment of a separate series of said notes.

Through mesne conveyances ownership of the lands involved some time prior to the date of trial had passed to one R. C. Vinyard and wife. Intervening the two ownerships they had belonged to one P. H. Herndon. While so owned, the latter, joined by his wife, incumbered by two mortgages the same lands covered by the aforementioned mortgages to secure two separate series of notes signed by them aggregating $10,850. These mortgages were, of course, junior to the Oldham mortgages.

Oldham sued to foreclose, joining as defendant, among others, one J. N. Bryant, the then owner of the last eight in point of maturity of the two series of notes, as well as the two mortgages securing same, executed subsequently to the notes and mortgages running to Oldham.

Pending trial and after the filing in said cause of petition in intervention by the appellee, Citizens’ Bank of Clovis, asserting ownership by. equitable assignment of an interest in the Oldham mortgages through its claimed status as holder of the first five notes in each of the thirteen separate series of notes executed in favor of Oldham, the appellant, A. B. Brown, became the owner by purchase of the notes and mortgages held by Bryant at the time of the institution of Old-ham’s suit and was substituted as a defendant in Bryant’s stead. Oldham having died pending suit, the cause was revived in the name of his executor.

It appears that the funds with which to meet the principal and interest of the first five notes maturing under the thirteen separate series of what will hereinafter be designated as the Oldham notes were advanced by Citizens’ Bank of Clovis, the appellee. It asserted itself to be the holder thereof by purchase, that the indebtedness evidenced by such notes remained unextinguished, and that upon the theory of equitable assignment it was secured to the extent of the notes so held by the lien of the Oldham mortgages as against the subsequent mortgages executed in the meantime by Herndon and wife and owned at the time of trial by the appellant, Brown. It conceded priority of payment to Oldham under his mortgages to the extent of the unpaid notes still held by him.

The appellant, .Brown, on the contrary, contended that the moneys received by Oldham from appellee on account of said notes were received in payment thereof and operated to extinguish the indebtedness under the Old-ham mortgages to that extent, thus increasing the margin of security remaining to his (Brown’s) mortgages.

At the trial the appellee restricted its claim to notes 3, 4, and 5 of each series. Appellee’s discovery that payments by Yinyard on account of the advancements made by it to meet said notes almost equaled the amount of notes 1 and 2 is stated in the brief by counsel in explanation of the virtual retraxit entered as to said notes.

The 'trial court sustained the position of appellee and rejected that of appellant. It found that the moneys paid Oldham by appellee were advancements, not payment of said notes; that appellee was the owner and' holder thereof; decreed foreclosure of the Oldham mortgages to satisfy not only the notes 6 to 10, both inclusive, still retained by Oldham’s estate in each series, but also notes 3, 4, and 5 of each series held by appellee, but with priority of payment given to the ' notes held by the Oldham estate. The court also decreed foreclosure of appellant’s mortgages. The practical effect of the trial court’s decree was a foreclosure of the Old-ham and Brown mortgages with the following order of payment, to wit: First, to satisfaction of the five notes of each series held by the Oldham estate; second, to satisfaction of the three notes of each series held by appellee; and, third, the balance then remaining, or so much thereof as necessary, to satisfaction of appellant’s notes.

The appellant complains here of failure of the trial court to hold that the Oldham notes in possession of the bank were paid and extinguished rather than transferred and kept alive. Largely his arguments resolve themselves into the contention that there is no substantial evidence to support a finding of transfer; or, to state it another way, that the trial court should have declared, as a matter of law, on the facts proven, that the notes in question were paid and extinguished.

As we view the matter the decisive question is not so much one of equitable assignment as it is whether a given payment operates to discharge or transfer a promissory note. For, if the payments here shown operated to transfer rather than extinguish the indebtedness evidenced by the notes involved, there can surely be no serious doubt that a proportionate interest in the security passed as an incident to transfer of the debt. What then is the rule applicable? Both parties cite and discuss in their briefs the case of Lee v. Field, 9 N. M. 435, 54 P. 873. In the third paragraph of the syllabus to that case, prepared by the territorial Supreme Court, it is said: “Payment by a stranger to a promissory note of the money due to the holder, without any agreement, express or implied, to purchase the same, extinguishes the note.”

Without feeling called upon to determine the distinction urged by appellee, viz. that the court was there dealing with the question in a common-law action without right to heed equitable considerations, we shall examine to ascertain if there is here any substantial evidence to support a finding of transfer as against extinguishment, of “agreement, express or implied, to purchase.”

It should be mentioned that the notes were in the hands of the bank unindorsed. This circumstance alone is of slight importance if the evidence supports a finding that there was an intention to transfer. See 1929 Comp. § 27-155. Indeed, it has been held that possession of a note, unindorsed, by one other than the payee or indorsee, affords prima facie evidence that he is the equitable owner. 3 R. C. L. 981, § 190, under topic “Bills and Notes.” Cf. Mann v. Whitely, 36 N. M. 1, 6 P.(2d) 468, touching prima facies of possession, as evidence of nonpayment, where note is devoid of indorsements indicating payment.

But the evidence does not here rest upon mere presumption. The first series of notes was due March 1, 1927. A short time after maturity and apparently while remittance to owner was in the mails, according to testimony of the cashier of appellee bank, Oldham called the former over long-distance and carried on a conversation with him over the telephone. The cashier’s examination on this subject was as follows:

“A. In that conversation I asked him for permission or an understanding that we would hold those notes uncancelled,' because we were making these advances and intended to hold them as collateral.
“Q. Did you tell Mr.

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247 P.2d 868 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1952)

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32 P.2d 755, 38 N.M. 310, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/citizens-bank-of-clovis-v-brown-nm-1934.