Colorado Investment Loan Co. v. Beuchat

48 Colo. 494
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedSeptember 15, 1910
DocketNo. 6356
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 48 Colo. 494 (Colorado Investment Loan Co. v. Beuchat) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Colorado Investment Loan Co. v. Beuchat, 48 Colo. 494 (Colo. 1910).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Gabbert

delivered the opinion of the court:

Appellee, as plaintiff, brought suit against appellant, as defendant, to quiet title to certain lots. The defendant claimed a lien upon the premises in question growing out of what it terms a building and loan contract, consisting of (1) a certificate for twenty-five shares of the capital stock of the defendant issued to plaintiff, upon which he agreed to pay the sum of $12.50 per month, payable monthly in advance until such stock should mature, which was assigned to defendant as collateral security for a loan made by the latter to. the former; (2) a note of plaintiff for $2,500.00, payable on or before ten years after date, at six per cent, per annum, together with a monthly premium thereon of $15.00, the stock subscription, interest and premium amounting to $40.00 per month, which plaintiff, by the note in question, agreed to pay monthly until such stock matured. The considera[495]*495tion recited in the note is as follows: “This note is given in consideration of a loan of One Thousand Dollars by the payee to the maker hereof, and in further consideration of the agreement of the payee to assume and pay for the maker a certain promissory note of $1,500.00.” (3) A real estate mortgage by plaintiff to the defendant on these lots, securing the $2,500.00; and (4) a by-law of the defendant imposing penalties for delinquent payments.

The defendant claimed that plaintiff had failed to comply with the terms of the note and mortgage in question; that for this reason certain sums were due it; that as provided in the mortgage, it had elected to declare the whole sum thereby secured, due; that the .cash surrender value of the stock was $337.22; that after allowing this credit, there was due and unpaid on the $2,500.00 note, including the interest thereon, premiums, monthly installments on the stock certificate, and other items, aggregating the sum of $2,426.43, for which defendant prayed judgment, and a decree foreclosing the mortgage on the lots in controversy. In brief, it' may be said, the defendant contended that, according the the conditions upon which the stock was issued, the terms of the note given, and the mortgage securing it, the plaintiff was to pay the sum of $40.00 per month until his stock reached its face value, namely, $2,500.00, when, by the surrender of the certificate representing it, the $2,500.00 note was to be cancelled and the mortgage securing it released; but as the stock had not matured, and was only worth the surrender value indicated, plaintiff was indebted to the defendant in the sum demanded.

As a defense to this claim, the plaintiff contended' that he and a Mr. Harding had been for a long time intimate and confidential friends; that Harding was the agent of the defendant, in charge of the lots in [496]*496question; that Harding, acting for the defendant, informed him that he could sell him the lots for the sum of $3,000.00, of which amount $500.00 was- to be paid in cash, and the remainder in payments of $40.00 per month, without interest, secured by a deed of trust on the lots; that he accepted the proposition, paid Harding, as the' agent of the defendant, five hundred dollars in cash; that defendant was to execute and deliver to him a deed for the lots, and that he was to execute a deed of trust securing the deferred payments conditioned as per their oral arrangement, and that he has, from month to month, paid the defendant the sum of $40.00, which payments, aggregated the sum of $2,480.00, and has tendered to defendant the balance of the $2,500.00.

As a defense to the note and mortgage embraced in the so-called building contract upon which the defendant relied, the plaintiff averred facts (the sufficiency of which is not challenged), from which it appears that these instruments were secured in such circumstances as to render them void, and for this reason the plaintiff prayed that they be so declared. The pleadings and testimony disclose that at the time plaintiff signed the building and loan contract, he also signed a note for fifteen hundred dollars, payable to the defendant, and a deed of trust on the lots in question securing it, and that this note and the security were subsequently assigned to another party. This is the fifteen-hundred-dollar note above referred to.

By supplemental defense the plaintiff set up that defendant had failed to pay this note, and that the deed of trust securing it had been foreclosed, which would necessitate the payment by plaintiff of the amount for which the premises in dispute were sold in order to redeem.

The evidence establishes, without question, that [497]*497plaintiff paid the $500.00 cash, and monthly payments aggregating $2,480.00, and tendered the remainder of the $2,500.00. It farther establishes that defendant assumed and agreed to pay the $1,500.00 note, that it failed to comply with this agreement, and that the deed of trust securing it has been foreclosed.

The testimony of plaintiff is to the effect that he bargained with Harding, as the agent of defendant, for the purchase of the premises for the sum of three thousand dollars, five hundred dollars of which was to be paid in cash, and the remainder in installments of forty dollars per month without interest, the deferred payments to be secured by deed of trust or mortgage on the lots. His testimony on this subject is corroborated by other witnesses.

On the subject of the execution of the instruments under which the defendant claimed a lien on the premises in dispute, he testifies, in substance, that-when he' paid the five hundred dollars, the defendant was to prepare the necessary papers to evidence their contract, consisting of a. deed to him from it, and a trust deed securing the balance of the purchase price, to be paid in installments of $40.00 per month; that he was subsequently notified by Harding that the deed of trust was ready for his signature; that he called at the office of Mr. Harding, and there found a Mr. Bennett, who at that time was secretary of the defendant; that when the papers he' was to execute were presented for his consideration, they were more voluminous and numerous than he expected, and he suggested to Harding that he had better get a lawyer to look them over for him; that Harding replied: “Charlie, why do you want to fool away your money on a lawyer? You have known me for a number of years, and know that I wouldn’t misrepresent anything to you. These papers are exactly in accordance with our agreement, and you had just [498]*498as well sign them.” He then states, substantially, that having full faith and confidence in Harding, and believing he would not misrepresent anything to him, he (plaintiff), without further question or examination, signed the papers, went with Mr. Bennett to a notary public, and acknowledged them; that he never had occasion to suspect that the papers signed contained anything different from the verbal contract made by him when he purchased the property until something over a year later, when, in discussing with friends the terms of his purchase, it was suggested that he might have been the victim of a conspiracy, and induced to sign papers different in contents from those he supposed he had signed; that, being uneasy about it, he made a special trip to see Harding; told him what had been suggested, and asked him if he had a copy of the papers; that Harding replied to .him: ‘ ‘ Charlie,' what d- fool has been putting that notion in your head? The papers are.exactly in accordance with our agreement.

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48 Colo. 494, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/colorado-investment-loan-co-v-beuchat-colo-1910.