Coon v. Bosque Bonita Land & Cattle Co.

8 N.M. 123, 8 Gild. 123
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 12, 1895
DocketNo. 611
StatusPublished

This text of 8 N.M. 123 (Coon v. Bosque Bonita Land & Cattle Co.) 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
Coon v. Bosque Bonita Land & Cattle Co., 8 N.M. 123, 8 Gild. 123 (N.M. 1895).

Opinions

Laughlin, J.

On the twentieth day of October, 1885, the defendant; company, the Bosque Bonita Land & Cattle Company, a corporation organized and existing under the laws of the territory of New Mexico, executed a deed of trust to Antonio y Abeytia, as trustee, to secure the payment of twenty coupon bonds, for $500 each, payable in ten years after date to the order of complainant, A. D. Coon, or order, at the Chatham National Bank, in the city and state of New York, with interest at one per cent per month from date until paid. The deed of trust contained the usual clause for sale and foreclosure on the default of payment of any of the interest due at any time, or in. case of a breach of any of the covenants or agreements in the same by the said company, or any part of the principal. The trust deed, bonds, and coupons were properly executed, issued, and delivered to said Coon, who advanced the said company $10,000 thereon.The trust deed charged, in trust, to secure the loan, certain live stock and real estate, the property of the said company, situate in Socorro county. It also contained a provision that, in the event of the death or inability of the trustee named to act, the sheriff of Socorro county should then act as such trustee. The trust deed also contained a clause, after stating the conditions of sale, “and all other expenses of this trust, including all moneys advanced for insurance, taxes, or for any money paid by the party of the third part,” meaning Coon as the party of the third part. At different times thereafter, Coon advanced to the general manager of the company, with the knowledge and consent of the other officers, various sums of money, for the company, in addition to the $10,000 loan, for the purpose of paying taxes, repairing an acequia for irrigating alfalfa growing upon a portion of the mortgaged premises, and to throw up an embankment to protect the farming lands from inundation by the Rio Grande, and took notes from the company for the same, in amount of $957.82 with interest, at one per cent per month from date until paid, which notes were signed by the said company, by Ira E. Leonard, president, and Charles O. Tiffany, secretary and treasurer, and approved by J. C. Tiffany, general manager, and were dated January 1 and April 10, 1886. In the latter part of February, 1887, J. C. Tiffany paid Coon the $10,000 and interest to that date with his personal check on the Albuquerque National Bank; and Coon indorsed the bonds and coupons “without recourse,” and delivered them to said Tiffany, and held the original deed of trust, and the two notes which were not paid. Some time thereafter said 'Tiffany deposited all of the said bonds and coupons in the Albuquerque National Bank. Afterwards said Tiffany became personally indebted to said bank, and gave his notes and said bonds as collateral, and after-wards, on September 18, 1888, said company gave its two notes, for $5,000 each, to said bank, in lieu of Tiffany’s personal notes. And the bank held the said bonds as collateral, and the bank made further advances, and took additional security; but when the company authorized the making of said two notes to said bank, and giving additional security, it expressly reserved in its resolution, from the effects of further incumbrances, the Bosque Bonita ranch, the real property here in controversy. In December, 1889, the complainant, Coon, filed his bill in the district court ■ against the Bosque Bonita Land & Cattle Company, the Albuquerque-National Bank, and the trustee sheriff, for an accounting, and for a decree for payment to him of whatever might be found due by the said defendant corporation, or the Albuquerque National Bank, and that the sum so found due him on said promissory notes be decreed a prior lien on the mortgaged property, over the said bonds and coupons, and for complainant’s solicitor’s fees, and in case of default in the payment. the property be sold and foreclosed; and for general relief. The Bosque Bonita Land & Cattle Company did not answer, or make any defense, but the Albuquerque National Bank answered the bill, and denied that the debt for which said two notes were given was, by virtue of the language in the defeasance clause in the mortgage deed, — “including all moneys advanced for insurance, taxes, or for any money paid by the party of the third part,” sufficient to create a prior lien to that of said bonds, and was insufficient in law to bind the defendant bank, and denied that any power of sale existed by law in said mortgagee to sell and foreclose, except in default of payment of interest or principal, and then only at the instance of the holders of said bonds or coupons; and also denied that there was any agreement for future advance by said Coon to said company, other than the $10,000, at the time of the execution of the said mortgage, and that it was understood then that, for any further advance by Coon, additional security was to be given; denied that the debt on said notes was due and unpaid; averred that on February 19, 1891, said bank, as the holder of said bonds and coupons, sold and foreclosed said mortgaged property in accordance with the au-. thority in said deed of trust contained, and became the purchaser of said mortgaged property, but denied that the property brought sufficient money to pay the sum of principal and interest due said bank on said bonds; with a general denial to all the material issues in the bill, — to which complainant filed a general replication, and the cause was referred by the court to a special master, to take proofs, and report his findings of facts and conclusions of law thereon. The special master took the proofs, and reported his findings in favor of complainant. Defendant bank interposed objections and exceptions to the master’s report, which were denied, and the report was confirmed, and a decree by the Fifth judicial district court was entered for the sum of $1,906.34 due complainant on said note, against the Bosque Bonita Land & Cattle Company and the Albuquerque National Bank, with an order for sale and foreclosure in default of payment by said company and said bank, and for a deficiency judgment in case the proceeds of sale did not satisfy the amount; and the property was sold and' bid in by complainant. And from this decree and order defendant bank appealed, but did not give a supersedeas bond; and pending the appeal the venue was changed to the second district, and the report of the sale by the special master was there approved, and the case is here on appeal also from that court.

^artSfmort-05 ^closure-counting: ad-deficiency judgment. The appellant bank assigned a number of grounds as errors in the final decree and confirmation of the master’s sale by the court below, and sufficient to raise all the issues material to aj proper disposition of the case on its merits, and the first one which will be consideredis: “Second. The court erred in finding by its decree that the Albuquerque National Bank was indebted to the complainant for and on account of the notes mentioned in the bill of complaint, and made by defendant the Bosque Bonita Land & Cattle Company.” The principal contention of the appellee is .

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Bluebook (online)
8 N.M. 123, 8 Gild. 123, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coon-v-bosque-bonita-land-cattle-co-nm-1895.