Farmer v. Wallin

246 S.W. 53, 212 Mo. App. 380, 1922 Mo. App. LEXIS 86
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 6, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 246 S.W. 53 (Farmer v. Wallin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Farmer v. Wallin, 246 S.W. 53, 212 Mo. App. 380, 1922 Mo. App. LEXIS 86 (Mo. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

*384 BRADLEY, J.

Plaintiff filed his bill in equity against J. P. Wallin and J. P. Aldridge praying for an injunction to enjoin the sale of certain land under a deed of trust. On trial the temporary writ was made perpetual, and defendants appealed.

Defendant Aldridge was the sheriff and is not concerned except as acting trustee. The controversy is between plaintiff and defendant Wallin. When using the word defendant hereinafter we have reference to defendant Wallin, who resided at New Windsor, Illinois. In November, 1913, defendant placed $300' with the Citizens Bank of Pomona in Howell county for the purpose of loaning said money. On November 25, 1913, the bank, acting for defendant, loaned the three hundred dollars to plaintiff and his wife, taking their note payable to defendant, and due in five years, with interest at six per cent, payable annually at Citizens Bank of Pomona. The note was secured by a trust deed on plaintiff’s land. Plaintiff paid the interest annually at said bank, and the bank remitted to defendant. On October 18, 1920, plaintiff attempted to pay off this note. The transaction was with the Citizens Bank of Pomona, and the question is: For whom was the bank acting?

One Lewis was cashier when the $300 was loaned for plaintiff, but later one A. L. Babb was cashier, and was such during the transactions of importance here. Annually plaintiff paid the interest on this note at the Citizens Bank, and these interest payments were cred *385 ited on the note. Plaintiff owed another note of about $600, mentioned in the record as the Woods note. Babb, it seems, represented plaitniff in borrowing $1000 from a Mrs. Bruner. Plaintiff purposed to pay the Wallin and Woods notes out of the proceeds of the Bruner loan. On September 27, 1920, Babb wrote defendant, as follows:

“THE CITIZENS BANK OF POMONA Capital Stock $10,000
Pomona, Mo., Sept. 27, 1920.
Mr. J. P. Wallin,
New Windsor, 111.
Dear Sir: Please "send the J. H. Farmer note and trust deed given to you to us, and the same will be paid, as he wishes to pay this off. Please send all papers connected therewith. Yours very truly, (Signed)- A. L. Babb, Cashier.”

In reply defendant caused to be sent the note and trust deed to the Citizens Bank with the following letter:

“BANK OF WINDSOR
C. C. CRAIG, BANKER.
New Windsor, 111. September 30, 1920.
The Citizens Bank of Pomona,
Pomona, Mo.
Gentlemen: We are mailing you note executed by Jas. H. Farmer and Emma Farmer in favor of J. P. Wadin together with trust deed securing said note. Mr. Wallin states that it is by your instruction that he asks to have these papers mailed to you as payment of this note is to be made. When payment of this note is made to you, you may deliver trust deed to Mr. Farmer, and remit proceeds to us for Mr. Wallin. Please collect your charges in this matter from Mr. Farmer as it is to his convenience that these papers are mailed to you. Thanking you for your attention to this matter, we are, Yours truly, (Signed) H. G. Peterson, Cashier.”

On October 15, 1920, the cashier of the Bank of New Windsor wrote again as follows:

*386 “The Citizens Bank of Pomona,'
Pomona, Mo.
Gentlemen: On September 30, we mailed you for collection note and mortgage executed by Jas. H. Parmer and Emma Parmer in favor of J. P. Wallin. It was for the convenience of Mr. Parmer that these papers were sent to you as Mr. Wallin understood that same was to be paid at • once. Please advise fate of these papers and if unable to collect please return papers. Thanking your for your attention to this matter, we are, Yours truly, (Signed) H. G. Peterson, Cashier.”
Babb returned this letter with pencil notation on bottom as follows: “Party arranging loan. As soon as complete will send money with interest in full. Had a hitch in his loan or would have had his money by this time. (Signed) Citizens Bank, A. L. Babb, Cashier.”

The Bruner money being then available, plaintiff on October 18, 1920, paid to the Citizens Bank $921 to take up the Wallin and Woods notes, and received a deposit of $79, the balance of the $1000 from the Bruner loan. The Woods note and the Wallin trust deed were at the time turned over to plaintiff, and the Wallin note was marked “paid,” but Babb retained the Wallin note to satisfy the record. Babb did not remit nor report the collection to Wallin nor to the Bank of New Windsor. He made no record of the collection of the Wallin note. Not having heard from Babb the cashier of the Bank of New Windsor on December 27,1920, wrote as follows: “Bank of Pomona,

Pomona, Mo.

Gentlemen: Mr. J. P. Wallin called at our bank today and asked us to write in regard to the matter we mailed you some time ago. Mr. Wallin requests that you return all the papers sent you if cannot make the collection. We feel you have done all you can to get this deal through", but Mr. Wallin does not feel that he can let the matter stand as it is, and therefore asks that his papers be returned. Thanking you for your trouble, we are, Yours truly, (Signed) H. G. Peterson, Cashier.”

*387 In April, 1921, Babb’s house came down upon him, and he fled the country, and the State Banking Department took charge of the bank. No one could or did find the Wallin note during Babb’s absence. He returned, however, and found the note in the bank.

For whom was the Citizens Bank acting? The answer to this question solves the problem here. The learned chancellor below found that the bank was acting for and was the agent of the defendant. The court in its decree found the facts as follows: “The court doth find that on the 25th day of November, 1913, the Citizens Bank of Pomona, Missouri, by and through its then cashier, A. T. Lewis, was agent for defendant J. P. Wallin in loaning the sum of $300' for said defendant to the plaintiff, and on said date plaintiff Jas. H. Farmer and Emma Farmer, his wife, executed their promissory note for the said $300 to defendant Wallin, payable at said Citizens Bank of Pomona, together with their deed of trust to secure its payment upon the following described lands in Howell county, Missouri. (Here follows description.) That plaintiff delivered said note and deed of trust to said bank as agent for defendant Wallin upon execution of same. The court doth further find from the evidence that the plaintiff has fully paid off and discharged said note by payment of same at and to said bank, and that said note was then marked ‘paid,’ and afterwards returned to plaintiff; and that plaintiff is entitled to have said deed of trust can-celled and released of record.”

We agree with the court below.

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254 P. 123 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1927)

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Bluebook (online)
246 S.W. 53, 212 Mo. App. 380, 1922 Mo. App. LEXIS 86, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farmer-v-wallin-moctapp-1922.