First National Bank of Lewiston v. Williams

23 P. 552, 2 Idaho 670, 1890 Ida. LEXIS 13
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 24, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 23 P. 552 (First National Bank of Lewiston v. Williams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
First National Bank of Lewiston v. Williams, 23 P. 552, 2 Idaho 670, 1890 Ida. LEXIS 13 (Idaho 1890).

Opinion

BERRY, J.

(After Stating the Facts.) — The alleged grounds ■of error, mostly occurring on the trial in the findings of the ■court, in refusing a new trial, and in the judgment, will more fully hereafter appear. The case was. tried by the court without ■a jury. The evidence received upon the trial was introduced and given without objection. Being so given, the question of its admissibility, if objected to, does not arise. The complaint shows the note to have been past due when transferred by Shaw, the payee, to the president of the plaintiff; that on the same day he transferred it to his bank; and that both transfers were by ■“assignment.” Whatever equities existed in favor of the appellant against the note, or the right to sue upon the note in the hands of the original payee, continued to exist against it in the hands of this plaintiff. It is proper, then, in the outset, to inquire as to the rights of the appellant, as against the original payee of the note. The obligations of Shaw will be considered as equally the obligations of the plaintiff. On the trial, when the plaintiff had rested his case, the appellant, the defendant below, called John P. Vollmer, who testified that he had been president of the plaintiff corporation “ever since the bank was •organized”; identified the note; and, on being shown another paper, said: “That is a mortgage executed by defendant Leiand to A. J. Shaw, the payee named in this note. I notice there is no seal of party executing it on this mortgage. It is in the same condition, as to execution and acknowledgment, as when I received it from Mr. Shaw. It may have been at the time I had transaction with Mr. Shaw that I noticed lack of seal. I never mentioned or said anything to Williams about there being any ■defect in the mortgage.” Mortgage introduced in evidence by ■appellant. Alonzo Leiand testified: “This is the note executed by me to A. J. Shaw. This is my signature. The other signature is that of Williams. I am principal debtor on the note. Williams signed it as surety only; and it was signed by Mm on condition that I should execute, to secure the payment of the note, a valid first mortgage upon real property. That was a condition of his signing the note. That condition was known also by Mr. Shaw, the payee of that note, and the agreement was [674]*674assented to by him at the time. It was on those conditions, and under that agreement, that defendant Williams signed the note. That is my signature, and I executed that document, and supposed it to be a mortgage upon the land.” M. M. Williams; the appellant, testified: “I am defendant sued in this action. I signed this note as surety only. I signed it on condition and under the agreement that Leland should secure the payment of it by a first mortgage on property, and he would get the money from Mr. Shaw, and I would have only any balance to pay that the property did not bring. Mr. Shaw, the payee, knew of the agreement and condition of my signing the note. I don’t know whether the mortgage was executed or not. Mr. Shaw called right away, and told me he had the mortgage upon the land. Mr. "Vollmer, nor any officer of the bank, ever told me the mortgage was defective, or said anything about the mortgage.”

There was no evidence in any way controverting either of' these facts. Each was within the issues made by the pleadings. The judge in his findings, though specially requested by the defendant, refused to find upon either of these facts, except the-fact that the mortgage to secure the note was, at Williams’ request, given by Leland. To this refusal to find (1) as to the conditions on which the defendant Williams became a maker of the note, also as to the connection of Shaw with that agreement,, and signing of the mortgage; (2) as to the condition of the mortgage as to seal, and what lands it was upon; (3) as to the-knowledge of the plaintiff, in becoming the successor of Shaw in the ownership of the note — the appellant excepted. This raises the question of the materiality of the issues involved in the points;, or any of them, on which the judge refused to find. The description and amount of lands covered by the mortgage-are shown in that exhibit, as well as its object to secure this note. The evidence, as we have seen, will warrant findings only as-claimed by the appellant. Contrary findings on either point,, upon the evidence, could not be made. Those points are: 1. Was Williams only a surety upon that note ? 2. Did Shaw, in taking that note, know what relations Williams held to it? 3., And for what purpose the mortgage was executed ? And did he become a party thereto, by knowing the agreement between the-[675]*675principal and surety on the note, assenting to the agreement, and accepting the mortgage as security for the note? Of course, if he did, he was bound in good faith not to defeat the measures which the appellant had taken for his protection, and which Leland had placed in Shaw’s hands as special security for the note. The mortgage security became and was part of the contract between Shaw and the makers of this note. Besides the fact of its being the condition of appellant’s signing, the payee of the note held it as a lien on property of the principal debtor, to which it was his duty to look before resorting to the surety on the note. If this were not an elementary principle of law, it became a controlling principle in this ease, by virtue of the agreement between the makers, known and assented to hv Shaw, and by his act in accepting the mortgage, pursuant to such agreement, together with the note. It is clear that those facts are material to this defendant. The counsel for respondent contends that, where there is no material issue tendered by the pleadings, findings on such matters will not be required. But the amendment to defendant’s answer does tender these issues. The matter was material, and evidence was given upon it without objection, and was so submitted to the court as a part of the defendant’s case. The authorities are numerous and conclusive that a failure to find upon a material issue, where the same is not in effect waived, but is requested, is error, and ground for reversal. (Hayne on New Trial and Appeal, secs. 239, 240, and cases cited; Porter v. Muller, 65 Cal. 512, 4 Pac. 531.)

The appellant further contends that the court below erred in striking out a part of the answer, in effect as follows: “That since the execution and delivery of the mortgage by which the note herein sued upon is secured, and since the recording of said mortgage, that two mortgages, still valid and existing, have been executed and delivered by the defendant Leland — one of said mortgages to John P. Yollmer, president of the First National Bank of Lewiston, plaintiff herein; and the other of said last-named mortgages to the plaintiff herein,” aggregating $1,600 in amount, and “covering the lands herein described” (the lands in the Leland mortgage), “both of which were recorded prior to the commencement of this action”; and that said lands are not [676]*676worth more than sufficient to pay said last two mortgages, etc.; and claiming such act was to the damage of the defendant. It appears by the evidence that the plaintiff claimed the Leland mortgage to be defective, in not having been sealed; that such supposed defect was discovered by the president of the plaintiff when taking the note .and mortgage from Shaw, and before taking the subsequent mortgages from Leland, upon the same property; but that the fact of such supposed defect was not communicated to Williams by any holder of these papers. It is only in view of the invalidity of this first mortgage that any injury to Williams could arise from those other mortgages.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
23 P. 552, 2 Idaho 670, 1890 Ida. LEXIS 13, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-national-bank-of-lewiston-v-williams-idaho-1890.