Farmers State Bank of Columbus v. Wishart

204 N.W. 1, 52 N.D. 776, 1925 N.D. LEXIS 117
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedMay 4, 1925
StatusPublished

This text of 204 N.W. 1 (Farmers State Bank of Columbus v. Wishart) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Farmers State Bank of Columbus v. Wishart, 204 N.W. 1, 52 N.D. 776, 1925 N.D. LEXIS 117 (N.D. 1925).

Opinion

BuitKE, J.

This is an action to foreclose a real estate mortgage. The *777 complaint is in tbe usual statutory form. The plaintiff claims to be the owner of the mortgage by assignment and, of the note thereby secured. Defendant admits the execution and delivery of the mortgage but alleges that the same has been paid in full. That is the one question at issue under the pleadings. The trial court made its findings of fact and conclusions of law in favor of the plaintiff; that the allegation in the defendant’s answer that the note and mortgage had been paid was not true; that the plaintiff had paid to Wells and Dickey Company, the original owner of the mortgage, the amount due thereon and thereby become entitled to an assignment of all the rights of the said Wells.& Dickey Company in and to said mortgage; that the defendants William Wishart and Alice Wishart agreed that the said note and mortgage might be held by the said plaintiff as a pledge of indebtedness then owing to the plaintiff-by the said William and Alice Wishart, and that as conclusions of law, the plaintiff was entitled to a foreclosure of the mortgage and the sale of the property in payment of the amount due thereon. Judgment was duly entered upon the findings of fact and conclusions of law, and the defendant appeals to this court and asks for a trial de novo.

The record shows that the trial court erred in finding number 12 wherein the court finds: “That William Wishart and Alice Wishart agreed that the said note and mortgage involved in this action be held by the said plaintiff as a pledge of indebtedness then owing to the plaintiff by the said defendants William and Alice Wishart.” Alice Wishart was not a witness at the trial. She was not present at the annual settlements made between the plaintiff and the defendant William Wishart. No -witness testified that she made any promise or ple'dge of any kind in connection with the so-called Wells & Dickey Company loan, or any other loan. The record is silent on the subject so far as the defendant Alice Wishart is concerned.

It appears from the record that the defendant William Wishart had been doing business with the plaintiff bank for a great many years; that he borrowed money at the bank at different times on his note. His credit was good. The note and mortgage in question was procured by the plaintiff bank as agent for the Wells & Dickey Company, a corporation. It became due in 1916 'and the plaintiff bank, as agent for Wells & Dickey Company, secured an extension of one year. In *778 the fall of 1917 the plaintiff bank undertook to secure for the defendant William Wisbart a loan upon four quarter-sections of land, which, did not include the land mortgaged to Wells & Dickey Company, but did include three other quarter-sections of land owned by defendant William Wishart and one other quarter-section that he had purchased and known in this action as the Abbott land. Wishart testifies that lie wanted this loan so that he could pay the Wells & Dickey loan and what he owed on the Abbott land. At this time William Wishart was in good financial standing at the bank.. Three quarter-sections of the land was free from encumbrance and he was mortgaging the whole section, he says, for the purpose of paying what he owed on the Abbott land and to take up the Wells & Dickey loan on his homestead; that he wanted his homestead clear and free from encumbrances. That is where he lived and where he had his buildings. George G. ICoup, vice-president of the plaintiff bank, who did all the business with the defendant, corroborates him in this statement at times in his testimony. On page 85 of the transcript Mr. ICoup says: “The only conversation we had with him (meaning defendant Wishart) was when we received a letter from Wells & Dickey Company threatening to foreclose on the 20th of January if it was not taken care of.” On page 86 of the transcript:

Q. Nothing was said then by him, as to holding Exhibit 1 as collateral to Exhibit 7 ?
A. It was to be held as collateral until we got his other loan through or until he paid it up.

This relates to the time when Wells & Dickey _ Company was asking for their money and the loan that the plaintiff bank was to procure .for the defendant was not perfected but was at that time well under way. ICeup says that this was the only conversation that he ever had with the defendant about the matter and that the Wells & Dickey Company loan was to be held by them as collateral until this new loan was made or until the defendant paid it up.

Q. That was your construction ?
A. That was absolutely the way it was agreed on.

This letter that he refers to is plaintiff’s Exhibit 19 and is dated January 9th, 1918. The loans referred to, Mr. ICeup testifies on jsage *779 146 o-f the transcript, were four different lo'ans on the four different quarters of land. Tho money was received on the first loan on the 30th day of March in the sum of $1800.00 which was placed to the credit of the defendant in the bank. On April 4th $2200.00, on April 18th $1800.00, on April 24th $2200.00, making a total of $8000.-00 secured on the loans and placed to the defendant’s credit in the bank. The amount of money that the plaintiff paid Wells & Dickey Company was $1629.50 and on page 173 of the transcript Mr. Keup says, in reference to that charge against Mr. Wishart’s account, “That is the memorandum note of the Wells & Dickey loan.” On page 174 of the transcript: “Ordinarily when we take up a loan of that kind, after we get the papers we make a memorandum note of it, just on the typewriter, so in this case it was the William Wishart loan, and we cany it in our case until we get the loan papers.”

Q. Then isn’t it a fact that the $1629.50 represents the memorandum note for the Wells Dickey mortgage, was charged against Mr. Wis-hart’s account at that time ?
A. Yes sir.
Q. And that was on the 4th day of April ?
A. Yes sir.
The 4th day of April was the day that $2200.00 was received on the second loan and placed to Mr. Wishart’s credit, and charged against his account was the $1629.50 which the plaintiff had advanced in payment of the Wells & Dickey Company loan.
Q. Then Mr. Keup, how do you explain the fact that no part of this loan was used to pay the Wells & Dickey advance that you made ?
A. It was used only.that — in this way — that when we come to settle and he did not want to make the loan on that quarter theji we held the paper as collateral.
Q. But you had charged Mr. Wishart’s account with $1629.50?
A. Yes sir.
Q. For the Wells & Dickey money that you had advanced %
A. That we advanced ?
Q. Yes. And that was charged against this loan of $8000.00 ?
A. Yes sir.
Q.

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Bluebook (online)
204 N.W. 1, 52 N.D. 776, 1925 N.D. LEXIS 117, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farmers-state-bank-of-columbus-v-wishart-nd-1925.