Clark v. Roberts

92 N.E. 461, 206 Mass. 235, 1910 Mass. LEXIS 790
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedJune 24, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 92 N.E. 461 (Clark v. Roberts) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clark v. Roberts, 92 N.E. 461, 206 Mass. 235, 1910 Mass. LEXIS 790 (Mass. 1910).

Opinion

Loring, J.

This case comes before us on a report.

It appears from the report that just before March 7, 1905, the plaintiff was the holder of six notes, aggregating $6,700, se[237]*237cured by a second mortgage on a lot of land and a building thereon situate in Holyoke. The first mortgage was $6,000 and the property was assessed for $11,600. These notes were signed by the defendant Winkler as maker of them and were payable on the first day of January in successive years up to and including January 1,1911. On March 7,1905, the plaintiff delivered these notes indorsed in blank to the defendant Roberts and assigned to him the mortgage conditioned for the payment of them. The plaintiff’s claim was that these notes and the mortgage securing them were transferred and assigned as collateral security for a loan of $1,000 then made by Roberts to the plaintiff. He testified that he agreed to pay Roberts a bonus of $200 for making the loan and six per cent interest on the whole sum of $1,200. Roberts’s claim was that he bought the $6,700 mortgage notes for $1,000.

The interest, amounting to $167.50, due on July 1, 1905, was paid by Winkler to Roberts at maturity. One note for $1,000 and the interest due thereon and the interest due on the balance of the mortgage debt (amounting to $142.50) was also paid by Winkler to Roberts on January 1, 1906. The plaintiff testified that on February 22, 1906, he wrote to Roberts stating that the sums received by him on the collateral more than paid the amount due under the loan, asking for a return of the “ papers ” and a check for the balance. To this the plaintiff received no answer. Roberts testified that he never received it. The plaintiff testified that he called at Roberts’s office a number of times during the next eight months, but never found him there. The mortgage interest (amounting to $142.50) was paid by Winkler to Roberts on July 2. The plaintiff finally found Roberts at his office on December 17. Roberts then asserted that the plaintiff sold him the mortgage notes and this bill was filed on the same day. The plaintiff testified that Roberts told him at this interview on December 17 that he then had the mortgage notes in his possession and never had assigned them. On the advice of his attorney the plaintiff had made a search in the registry of deeds in November and found that there was no record there of an assignment of the mortgage. But it appears that on December 21, 1905, (a year before the bill in equity here in question was filed,) Roberts executed an assignment of [238]*238the mortgage to the defendant Baker and acknowledged it on that day. This assignment never has been recorded. The plaintiff amended his bill in January, 1907, by adding an allegation on information and belief that the defendant Bakér had the mortgage notes and mortgage in his possession and that he was “ claiming them as his own.” By a subsequent amendment allowed in July, 1907, the plaintiff alleged that “ At and before the time of the alleged sale by said Roberts to said Baker, said Baker knew or had reasonable cause to believe that said notes and mortgage were not the absolute property of said Roberts and that they were the property of the plaintiff and held by said Roberts as security only.”

On motion of the plaintiff three issues were framed to be tried by a jury, namely: (1) Was the transfer by the plaintiff to Roberts an absolute sale? (2) Was that transfer made as collateral security for money lent by Roberts to the plaintiff ? and (3) If the transfer was made as collateral security “ did the defendant Baker, at the time of or before the assignment of said notes and mortgage to him by said Roberts, know or have reasonable cause to believe that notes and mortgage were held by said Roberts as collateral security ? ”

At the trial of these issues

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
92 N.E. 461, 206 Mass. 235, 1910 Mass. LEXIS 790, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clark-v-roberts-mass-1910.