Clapp v. Wallace

866 N.W. 493, 221 Iowa 672
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedApril 7, 1936
DocketNo. 43319.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 866 N.W. 493 (Clapp v. Wallace) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clapp v. Wallace, 866 N.W. 493, 221 Iowa 672 (iowa 1936).

Opinion

Kinteinger, J.

On or about September 16, 1930, J. W. Watkins and Gus W. Watkins, his son, made and executed their promissory note to one F. H. Raynor in the sum of $165.25. This note was also signed by the defendant Wallace, as surety thereon. The note was given to Raynor in payment of funeral expenses due him from the Watkinses for funeral services furnished in connection with the burial of Mrs. J. W. Watkins. The payee, Raynor, indorsed the note and sold it to the Mills County National Bank. The defendant Wallace was vice president, director, and general manager of the bank, and had authority to make loans therefor.

This note was not paid when due, and on June 23, 1931, it was renewed by the execution of a new note on that date, executed and indorsed in the same manner as the first note, with defendant Wallace as surety thereon, and becoming due December 22, 1931.

*674 This note was not paid when due, and on January 2, 1932, J. W. Watkins and Gns W. Watkins signed a new note to F. H. Raynor in the sum of $165.25, due July 2, 1932. This note was left at the Mills County National Bank when signed, and the note of June 23, 1931, was, by said Wallace, canceled and surrended to J. W. and Gus W. Watkins, and the third note was then substituted in the bank’s asse.ts and records by the defendant Wallace for the previous note, and was thereafter carried as such in the records of the bank.

The bank became insolvent and went into the hands of a receiver in December, 1932. Thereafter, a payment of $25 was made to the receiver of the Mills County National Bank upon the note dated January 2, 1932, and credited upon the note. Thereafter, said receiver also commenced an action in the district court of Mills county against J. W. Watkins, Gus W. Watkins, and F. II. Raynor on the note dated January 2, 1932. The plaintiff, however, filed an amended and substituted petition in that action, alleging that the note of January 2, 1932, was intended as a renewal of the note dated June 23, 1931; in the substituted petition, plaintiff alleges that F. J. Wallace, defendant in this action and the surety on the note of June 23, 1931, was, at the time of the execution of that note, vice president, director, and manager of the Mills County National Bank; that said Wallace was at that time indebted to the Mills County National Bank, as surety on the note of June 23, 1931, and although vice president and manager of the bank, he took into the assets of the bank the note of January 2, 1932, in substitution of the note of June 23, 1931, on which he was personally liable as surety, without signing the same as surety, and without securing the indorsement of F. H. Raynor thereon. That without authority, therefore, he surrendered the note of June 23, 1931, to J. W. Watkins and Gus W. Watkins; that the note of January 2, 1932, was intended a renewal of the indebtedness represented by the note of June 23, 1931, but had not been indorsed by either Wallace or Raynor; that said Wallace, in his capacity as an officer of the bank, had no authority to accept the note of January 2, 1932, in renewal of the indebtedness evidenced by the note of June 23, 1931, without signing the same as surety or securing the indorsement of the payee Raynor thereon. In said substituted petition, plaintiff further alleged that the debt evidenced by the note of June 23, 1931, was not paid *675 either by Wallace or by the note of January -2, 1932, taken as an attempted renewal of the debt evidenced by the note of June 23, 1931, without the signature of Wallace, as surety, and without the indorsement of Raynor; that there is due thereon from Watkinses and Raynor the sum of $155.76 and interest; plaintiff, in the substituted petition, therefore, asks judgment thereon against the defendants, J. W.- Watkins, Gus W. Watkins, and F. H. Raynor, for the sum of $155.76.

The court, in the judgment in that action, held that although that

“Suit was originally brought upon the third note, * * * by amended and substituted petition plaintiff * * * seeks to recover upon the second note, on the ground that Wallace as an officer of the bank and signer upon the second note could not cancel his own debt, and therefore said second note, not having been paid, is still outstanding and * * * the obligation of all the parties whose names it bears. * * * The matter of the liability of Wallace for such act is not in issue and is not determined herein.”

Judgment was, therefore, entered in favor of the plaintiff against the defendants J. W. Watkins and Gus W. Watkins in the sum of $203.41.

The present action was brought against the defendant Wallace upon his indebtedness as surety upon the note of June 23, 1931, and judgment was rendered thereon against him in the sum of $155.76 and interest. From this judgment, the defendant Wallace appeals.

I. Appellant contends that the substitution of the note of January 2, 1932, for the perfectly good note of June 23, 1931, released him from his indebtedness to the bank on the latter note.

Appellee contends that the act of Wallace, vice president and directing manager of the bank, in accepting the note of January 2, 1932, which contained neither the indorsement of Wallace nor Raynor, did not constitute a release of the indebtedness of Wallace and Raynor on the note of June 23, 1931.

There is no testimony in this record tending to show that any of the officials of the bank had any knowledge of or gave any consent to the substitution of the note of January 2, 1932, for the note of June 23, 1931, containing the indorsement of appellant, as surety, and that of Raynor, transferring the note. -

*676 The facts show without dispute that Wallace, as an individual, signed the note of June 23, 1931, as a surety, and became liable for the indebtedness represented thereby. It is also undisputed that Wallace’s debt, as surety, was never paid. At the time of the transactions in question, Wallace was the agent for and represented the bank. It was his duty, as agent of the bank, to collect this debt. His personal interests, because of his indebtedness on the note, conflicted with his duty to the bank, his employer.

It is the settled rule of law that an agent cannot represent both himself and his employer in transactions where their interests are adverse. Caffee v. Berkely, 141 Iowa 344, 118 N. W. 267; First National Bank v. Fireproof S. B. Co., 199 Iowa 1285, 202 N. W. 14; Hoyt v. Hampe, 206 Iowa 206, 214 N. W. 718, 220 N. W. 45; 14A Corpus Juris, 108; 7 R. C. L. 479; Note 48 A. L. R. 918; 21 R. C. L. 825; U. S. v. Carter, 217 U. S. 286, 30 S. Ct. 515, 54 L. Ed. 769, 19 Ann. Cas. 594; Note 13 A. L. R. 911.

In First National Bank v. Fireproof S. B. Co., 199 Iowa 1285, loc. cit. 1295, 202 N. W. 14, 19, this court said:

“In the enjoyment of this right, however, he was bound to exercise the utmost good faith, to act for and in the interest of the corporation, and not for his own benefit or profit. Officers and directors of a corporation occupy a fiduciary relation toward the stockholders in the transaction of the business and care of the property of the corporation.”

In Hoyt v. Hampe, 206 Iowa 206, loc. cit.

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866 N.W. 493, 221 Iowa 672, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clapp-v-wallace-iowa-1936.