First Security Bank v. Zaring Farm & Livestock Co.

10 P.2d 303, 51 Idaho 700, 1932 Ida. LEXIS 21
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedApril 1, 1932
DocketNo. 5765.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 10 P.2d 303 (First Security Bank v. Zaring Farm & Livestock Co.) 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 Security Bank v. Zaring Farm & Livestock Co., 10 P.2d 303, 51 Idaho 700, 1932 Ida. LEXIS 21 (Idaho 1932).

Opinion

GIVENS, J.

Respondent interplead tbe other parties herein to determine who was entitled to $764.67 held by it as the proceeds from the sale 'of certain wheat. The real controversy is between the Evans Mercantile Company, who claims as chattel mortgagee, and the Westcott-Allen Oil Company, who claims as execution creditor of the Zaring Farm & Livestock Company.

April 4, 1930, the Zaring Farm & Livestock Company gave a first chattel mortgage for $1,200 to the Citizens Bank & Trust Company, and a second mortgage for a larger amount to the Evans Mercantile Company, covering certain growing crops, part of which later harvested, was the wheat sold herein. Thereafter, during the summer of 1930, the Farm Company needed more money to carry on operations, and warehouse receipts covering some 600,000 pounds of the wheat covered by the above mortgages then in the Michaud Warehouse Company, were pledged to the respondent, First Security Bank of Pocatello, and the Citizens Bank & Trust Company, for loans made by them to the Farm Company.

*702 Later, this wheat was sold with the consent of all parties, with the understanding between the Farm Company, the .Mercantile Company and the "Warehouse Company which sold the wheat, that after the two banks were paid, the balance was to be paid to the Mercantile Company. After the warehouse receipts had been pledged to the banks, and before the sale of the grain, the Westcott-Allen Oil Company brought suit against the Farm Company, and served garnishment proceedings upon the First Security Bank, later reducing its claim to judgment and likewise levying execution. . When the wheat was sold the Warehouse Company received the proceeds from the purchaser, deducted its charges, and made out two checks drawn on the First Security Bank: one to the Citizens Bank & Trust Company for its loan and the other to the First Security Bank for the balance, which covered the amount due the First Security Bank, and the $764.67. in dispute herein. The Citizens Bank & Trust Company, being paid in full, is now entirely out of the controversy. The First Security Bank cashed the cheek payable to it without an indorsement of the Evans Mercantile Company, paid itself, and held the balance because of the garnishment proceedings.

The court adjudged respondent, Evans Mercantile Company, entitled to the amount in dispute, and the Oil Company appeals. The First Security Bank deposited the $764.67 in court, and was dismissed from the suit with its costs.

The numerous errors assigned are summed up in the two main contentions of appellant: first, that the findings were insufficient, and, second, as a matter of substantive law and fact, that respondent consented to the sale and thereby waived its mortgage, and that no lien continued over as to the proceeds of the sale of the wheat.

J. Paul Evans, of the Evans Mercantile Company, testified in substance that when he consented to the sale, it was understood between him and a representative of the mortgagor, and the warehouse concern which sold the wheat, that the proceeds were to be used, first, to pay the banks, *703 and the balance applied on the Mercantile Company’s mortgage. The representative of the Farm Company testified in substance to the same thing, as did also Mrs. Irvine, one of the employees of the Warehouse Company, and the checks drawn by the Warehouse Company after it had received the proceeds from the purchaser of the grain were drawn either in accordance with or in such manner as to carry out this understanding: first, one in favor of the Citizens Bank & Trust Company for' the full amount of its note, and the other drawn in favor of the First Security Bank and Evans Mercantile Company, for the full amount of the note held by the First Security Bank, the balance being the $764.67 in dispute herein.

While the testimony of the respective officers of the two banks may be taken to indicate that they did not know of any condition attached to the sale, their testimony does not controvert that such condition was understood and agreed upon between the Mercantile Company, mortgagee, the Farm Company, mortgagor and debtor, and the Warehouse Company which sold the wheat; merely that they did not know of it. The banks knew of the mortgage held by the Mercantile Company, and that it had certain rights in the grain, because they insisted that the warehouse receipts be indorsed by the Mercantile Company before they would advance the loans upon the security of the warehouse receipts. The banks have been paid, claim no rights adverse to either party, and no rights are claimed by either of the real contestants herein, by or through the banks; hence, the banks and any questions concerning them are entirely out of the controversy.

Even though the finding that the Mercantile Company had not waived its mortgage is, in view of the evidence and the vital point involved, viz., conditional or unconditional consent by the mortgagee to the sale, more of a conclusion than a finding, it, in effect, is sufficient to cover the point. (Nohrnberg v. Boley, (opinion on rehearing) 42 Ida. 48, at 71, 246 Pac. 12.) The issue of consent is, and was, recognized and considered as an issue in the case, *704 and argued by both parties, and neither misunderstands the point involved, and no prejudice is shown by the finding not being more specific. Findings should be liberally construed (Cleveland v. Mochel, 48 Ida. 37, 279 Pac. 410), and the evidence does not demand with such compulsion a contrary finding, i. e., of unconditional consent, as to require a reversal on this point. (Storey Fawcett v. Nampa & Meridian Irr. Dist., 32 Ida. 713, 187 Pac. 946.)

The Oil Company can claim no greater right to the money in dispute than the Farm Company possesses, or possessed at the time of the garnishment or execution. (Feltham v. Blunck, 34 Ida. 1, at 9, 198 Pac. 763; Hudelson v. Sanders-Swafford Co., 111 Or. 600, 227 Pac. 310; First Nat. Bank v. Riggle, 195 Iowa, 189, 190 N. W. 143, 147; Scurry v. Quaker Oats Co., 201 Iowa, 1171, 208 N. W. 860; Borgen v. Aguski, 51 S. D. 65, 212 N. W. 47.)

Starting, then, with the factual premise that the Mercantile Company, mortgagee, gave only conditional consent to the sale conducted by a third party not the mortgagor, and that the proceeds never came into the latter’s possession, appellant’s authorities do not touch the point; thus: Peoples v. Whitworth, 41 Ida. 225, 238 Pac. 306, Adamson v. Moyes, 32 Ida. 469, 184 Pac. 849, Ramsey v. California Packing Corp., 51 Cal. App. 517, 201 Pac. 481, Greer v. Newland, 70 Kan. 315, 109 Am. St. 424, 78 Pac. 835, 70 L. R. A. 554, Frick Co. v. Western Star Milling Co., 51 Kan. 370, 32 Pac. 1103, Reese v. Kapp, 82 Kan. 304, 108 Pac. 96, Burnett v. Gustafson, 54 Iowa, 86, 37 Am. Rep. 190, 6 N. W. 132, Coughran v. Western Elevator Co., 22 S. D. 214, 116 N. W. 1122, Stinson v. Sneed, (Tex. Civ. App.) 163 S. W. 989, Irish v. Citizens Trust Co., 163 Fed.

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Bluebook (online)
10 P.2d 303, 51 Idaho 700, 1932 Ida. LEXIS 21, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-security-bank-v-zaring-farm-livestock-co-idaho-1932.