Commonwealth Farm Loan Co. v. Wall

183 S.W. 193, 122 Ark. 281, 1916 Ark. LEXIS 344
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedFebruary 14, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 183 S.W. 193 (Commonwealth Farm Loan Co. v. Wall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth Farm Loan Co. v. Wall, 183 S.W. 193, 122 Ark. 281, 1916 Ark. LEXIS 344 (Ark. 1916).

Opinion

Smith, J.

Appellant is engaged in the business of making farm loans and had as a local correspondent, or agent, at Marked Tree, Arkansas, one Paul Leatherwood. On February 20,1913, appellee made application, through Leatherwood, for a loan of $1,200, and submitted an abstract of the title to his property, which showed the existence of two liens, one in favor of the Chapman & Dewey Land Company, and the other in favor of the Marked Tree Bank & Trust Company. Leatherwood had formerly been the cashier of this 'bank. Notes for the amount of the loan and the mortgage securing the same, were executed by appellee on March 7, and after the mortgage had been duly recorded it was sent, with the notes, to appellant. Leatherwood drew a common 'Customer’s draft on the appellant for the amount of the loan, made payable to Mmself, but the payment was refused by appellant on presentation. Thereafter a draft was drawn on one of the company’® forms, executed by appellee and payable to his own order and endorsed by him and delivered to Leatherwood to pay off the prior liens. This draft was then endorsed by Leatherwood and was paid upon presentation, and the proceeds thereof placed to the credit of Leatherwood with the Marked Tree Bank. Leather-wood checked out the money for other purposes and the prior liens were never discharged.

Appellee instituted suit praying that the notes and mortgage in appellant’s favor be cancelled on the ground that no consideration therefor had ever passed, or that he have judgment against appellant for the amount of said loan. There was an answer and cross-complaint in which, a foreclosure was asked on acount of appellee’s failure to discharge the prior liens and to pay interest. Upon the trial a decree was -rendered cancelling said mortgage and notes, and this appeal has been prosecuted from that decree.

The parties to this litigation agree that the controlling question in this case is the one of fact: Whose agent was Leatherwood in the matter of the payment of the prior liens on the land offered as security for the loan?

In the application for the loan Leatherwood was referred to as “your (appellant’s) local agent,” and he was referred to by appellant’s officers, who testified, as their “local correspondent,” but no attempt was made to 'differentiate between an agent and a correspondent.

The officers of the appellant company knew, of course, of the outstanding liens and that it was anticipated-that the loan would be used in part in their satisfaction and that according to their contract these items were to be discharged before the loan was completed. Appellant company knew, when it paid the draft, that Leatherwood was the last endorser .and in the usual course of business the money would pass through his hands. There is nothing about the transaction to indicate any purpose on appellant’s part to pay appellee the entire amount of the loan and then trust to his honesty to properly apply the money. Leatherwood testified that he had procured numerous loans from appellant company and that his fees or commissions were always paid by it and never by the borrower, and that his instructions in all cases were to secure a release and satisfaction of all prior liens, and that in making these loans it was generally necessary to satisfy some prior lien, and that his custom was to deposit the draft in the local bank and to pay off the prior indebtedness 'by checks on the bank. He further testified that it was his duty to see that the papers were properly executed and that he was required to submit a report on the loan, in which he gave his opinion on the appellant’s character and credit and also his opinion on the desirability of the loan. The applicant knew nothing of this report and was not supposed to see it.

The evidence on appellant’s behalf was to the effect that it had no local agents, but only local correspondents, and that the duty of these correspondents was confined to submitting applications for loans.

The cashier of the bank testified that Leatherwood had negotiated a number of loans and that his custom was to attach the mortgage to a draft drawn on appellant for the amount of the loan, and deposit the draft for collection to his credit, and out of the proceeds of the draft to pay off the prior liens- and any balance to the borrower.

Appellant lays stress on the recital in the application that all liens will be discharged, and insists that in undertaking to do this Leatherwood was the agent of the borrower. But this is the very point in issue. The agreement was not that appellee would discharge the liens but that there are no liens which would not be removed before the loan was completed.

Discussing a similar question the Supreme Court of Iowa said:

“As to McLean’s agreement to pay off the prior mortgage, it is clear from all of the facts and circumstances that that amounted to no more than a consent on McLean’s part that so much of the money loaned as was needed for that purpose should be applied in satisfaction of the existing incumbrance upon his land. We do not • deem that statement in the application as of controlling ■importance in determining the main question as to whether or not, in receiving the money, Coleman was acting for McLean.” MeLean v. Ficke, 62 N. W. 753.

In 31 Cyc., p. 1222, in a discussion of the principle which must control the decision of this case, it was said:

“In the negotiation of loans it is often difficult to determine whether an intermediary is the agent of the borrower or of the lender. Each case must be decided upon its own particular circumstances. If a person desiring a loan makes known that desire to one who applies to a money lender and consummates the loan, the intermediary is the agent of the borrower, not of the lender. So if the borrower in a written application or otherwise expressly makes the intermediary Ms agent, if he pays the agent’s commission for negotiating the loan, or if he employs the intermediary to examine the title to the property offered as security or to discharge prior encumbrances thereon, these facts, taken collectively or in various lesser combinations, justify an inference that the intermediary is the agent of the borrower. On the mother hand if a money lender employs the intermediary to negotiate loans, to examine the title to property offered as security, to see that the property is discharged from prior encumbrances, to prepare the papers and see to the execution thereof, to pay over the money to the borrower, or to perform other services in regard to the loan, these facts, taken collectively or in various lesser combinations, justify an inference that the intermediary is the agent of the lender. If the lender pays the intermediary’s commission, it tends to establish an agency in the lender’s ' behalf; and if the service is performed at the request and by the direction of the lender, presumptively the agent is his agent, even though the borrower is required to pay for the service. However, none of the foregoing facts is conclusive on the question of agency, and will not preclude the alleged principal from showing that the intermediary was actually acting as the agent of the other party, or as agent of each, but for different purposes. And the fact that the application for the loan recites that the intermediary is the agent of the borrower is not controlling, if the facts and circumstances are such as to create an agency in behalf of the lender as a matter of law. ’ ’

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
183 S.W. 193, 122 Ark. 281, 1916 Ark. LEXIS 344, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-farm-loan-co-v-wall-ark-1916.