Finney v. Stanfield Fraternal Ass'n

283 P. 415, 131 Or. 393, 1929 Ore. LEXIS 301
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 28, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 283 P. 415 (Finney v. Stanfield Fraternal Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Finney v. Stanfield Fraternal Ass'n, 283 P. 415, 131 Or. 393, 1929 Ore. LEXIS 301 (Or. 1929).

Opinions

BELT, J.

This is a suit to foreclose a mortgage given to secure the payment of seven promissory notes executed by defendant Stanfield Fraternal association in favor of Annie Webster, Florence A. Webster, and Florence E. Finney. Six of these notes were for $1,000 each and one for $500. All of them were dated No vein- *395 her 1,1921. The first note for $1,000 was dne one year after date. Plaintiffs allege default in payment of the notes, with the exception of the first note of $1,000 due November 1, 1922, which is alleged to have been paid. The Stanfield Fraternal association admits the execution of the notes and its liability thereon, but denies payment of the $1,000 note in question. As to this note, it is alleged that, in November, 1923, it was sold and transferred to Anna M. Young. The fraternal association asked that she be made a party in order to have a complete determination of the controversy. An order having been made making her a defendant, she interposed an answer and cross-complaint alleging, in substance that, on or about November 23, 1923, the note for $1,000 was purchased from the payees named therein and that she is now the owner and holder thereof.

The trial court entered a decree in favor of plaintiffs against the Stanfield Fraternal association in the sum of $5,500 together with interest, and attorney fees amounting to $550. It was further decreed that the intervener Anna M. Young have judgment against the Stanfield Fraternal association for $1,000, together with interest, and an attorney fee of $150. The intervener was also awarded costs against the plaintiffs. It was provided that the proceeds of the sale of the property on execution be applied proportionately to amounts due' plaintiffs and the intervener Anna. M. Young. Plaintiffs appeal from that portion of the decree in favor of the intervener and against their interests.

The decision of the case hinges on the question as to whether Anna M. Young purchased this-note from an authorized agent of the payees. It is not *396 claimed that the sale was made by them directly or that they had knowledge of the transaction at the time of the alleged sale. Florence E. Finney, Annie Webster and Florence A. Webster resided in North Dakota. All of the notes were endorsed to the First National Bank of Fargo, North Dakota, for collection. The endorsements of Annie Webster and Florence E. Finney were made by W. H. Finney as attorney in fact. The endorsement of Florence A. Webster was made by her father who merely signed his initials, “C.E.W.” The notes being payable oat the Bank of Stanfield in Stanfield, Oregon, the Bank of Fargo, when the first note became due, forwarded it for collection. Correspondence arose between W. H. Finney, acting as agent for the payees, and M. R. Ling, secretary and treasurer of the .Stanfield Fraternal association, also vice-president and director of the Bank of Stanfield, wherein payment of the $1,000 note was urged. It is quite evident that the association was in financial streets and was unable to pay the amount due on this note. A son-in-law of Anna. M. Young, Frank Sloan, who was president of the association and an officer of the Bank of Stanfield, entered, as her agent, into negotiations with Ling to purchase the note in contro.versy. Ling claimed to be an agent of the payee having authority to sell the note to the intervener for the amount due thereon. To accomplish the transfer of the title to the note, he changed the original endorsement on the note by inserting the name “Anna M. Young” after the words “Pay to the order of ” and by drawing a line through the words “First National Bank, Fargo, N. Dak.” The endorsement, after the change was made by Ling, was as follows:

*397 “Pay to the order of Anna M. Young

First National Bank,-Fargo, N. Dafe.

Annie Webster

Florence E. Finney (by

W. H. Finney,

Attorney in fact.

Florence A. Webster By C. E. W.”

■ Ling also crossed out the endorsement of the First National Bank of Fargo which was: “Without Recourse Pay any Bank or Banker, or Order. First National Bank of Fargo, N. D. G-. W. Jenson, Cashier.” Upon delivery of the note to her, Mrs. Young paid to the Stanfield Fraternal association $1,065.80, which was deposited to its account in the Bank of Stanfield. Ling, as treasurer of the association, drew a check in favor of the bank for such sum. On the lower corner of the check was noted, “B. P. 3.” meaning bills payable. The bank, by cashier’s check dated December 1, 1923, remitted such sum to the First National Bank of Fargo for the benefit of the payee. On August 23, 1923, W. H. Finney, who was pressing the debtor association for payment, wrote its secretary and treasurer, M. R. Ling, in part as follows: “If you can ‘beg, borrow or steal’ the part that is coming to us on your deal, I would very much appreciate if you would send it on at once.” On November 30, 1923, Ling thus wrote to Finney:

“We today took up the $1,000 note that was at the Bank of Stanfield for collection, paying interest on same to December first.

“It has been like pulling hens teeth to get money enough together to take care of this note and the interest on the whole thing to Nov First.”.

Ling again, on December 20, 1923, in answer to Finney’s letter of December 17, making inquiry as to *398 the remittance "by the Bank of Stanfield, wrote: “We paid the note for $1,000 and the interest to that date at the Bank of Stanfield, on November 30, by our check No. 135, for $1,065.30.”

We have searched the record in vain for any competent evidence tending to prove that Ling had authority to sell this note or thus to change the endorsement on it. He does not claim to have obtained authority directly from the payees or either of them. He predicates agency upon correspondence with agents of the payees appointed for the purpose of making collection. At this juncture it is well to observe that an agent who has authority to collect the amount due on a note has no implied authority to sell it. It does not appear to us to be reasonable that an officer of a debtor corporation, the maker of the note, would be delegated authority to sell it. Ling found it difficult to serve two masters. If, indeed, he was acting as agents of the payees, it was his duty to advise them of the alleged sale and not conceal anything affecting their interests. All the evidence tends to show that Ling was endeavoring to make his alleged principals believe that the fraternal association had paid the note. From the correspondence it also appears that Ling, an officer both of the bank and of the association, knew that the note was sent to the bank for collection. Knowing the purpose for which the note was sent, he was bound to know that neither he nor the bank had any authority to sell it. Sloan, also, an officer of the bank and of the association, knew that the bank had the note for collection. Since he was admittedly acting as agent for Mrs. Young, his knowledge relative to the note is imputable to her. As a matter of law, she was not an innocent purchaser. It is fundamental that one dealing with .a pérson .pur *399 porting to act as agent of another does so at his peril:

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Bluebook (online)
283 P. 415, 131 Or. 393, 1929 Ore. LEXIS 301, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/finney-v-stanfield-fraternal-assn-or-1929.