Futrell v. Wagner

771 P.2d 292, 96 Or. App. 27
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedApril 5, 1989
Docket85-1-280; CA A47302
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 771 P.2d 292 (Futrell v. Wagner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Futrell v. Wagner, 771 P.2d 292, 96 Or. App. 27 (Or. Ct. App. 1989).

Opinion

*29 BUTTLER, P. J.

In this action for declaratory' relief, plaintiffs seek a declaration that they own the vendors’ interest under a land sale contract and also seek a money judgment for the contract payments that have been made to defendants. 1 After trial to the court, it entered a judgment declaring defendants to be the owners of the vendors’ interest. Plaintiffs appeal.

Plaintiff Jack Futrell obtained a certificate of authority from the U.S. Department of Agriculture to market a new type of wheat that he had developed. He organized Futrell Cereals, Inc. (the corporation) to market it for breakfast cereals. First Independent Bank of Sandy loaned the corporation a total of $492,000, guaranteed by plaintiffs, who were stockholders. As security, plaintiffs mortgaged their interest under a land sale contract covering farm property that they had sold to the Waibels for $475,000. Later, in order to permit plaintiffs to use their vendors’ interest under that contract to secure another loan for $200,000, part of which was to bring the bank’s loan current, the bank reconveyed its security interest in the contract to plaintiffs.

Richard Busby agreed to provide the corporation with a $200,000 loan. Although no money changed hands at the time, the corporation executed and delivered a note to Busby. Plaintiffs guaranteed payment of the note and assigned their vendors’ interest in the Waibel contract to Busby as security for their guarantee. Under the assignment, plaintiffs retained the right to collect the payments on the contract so long as the obligation from the corporation to Busby was not in default. One month later, Howard Houston, Jr., loaned Busby and the corporation $100,000 on very onerous terms. To secure that loan, Busby executed an assignment of his assignee’s interest in the Waibel contract to Houston; defendants guaranteed that loan. Busby obtained the other $100,000 of the $200,000 that he had agreed to provide the corporation from another lender; that loan is not involved in this proceeding.

Busby and the corporation defaulted on the Houston *30 loan, and Houston terminated plaintiffs’ right to receive further payments under the Waibel contract. He then brought an action against Busby and the corporation, as well as defendants as guarantors. When that action was filed, the total amount then owing to Houston was $175,000, plus interest, attorney fees and costs. Defendant Wagner settled with Houston by paying him $162,500 and paying to the Department of Veterans Affairs $12,500; Houston assigned to defendants the note executed by Busby and the corporation and also all of his right, title and interest in and to the Waibel contract.

Those underlying facts are not disputed. Evidence was adduced at trial from which the trial court found that it was understood from the outset that Busby would not be loaning his own funds. It also found that, when Busby closed the $100,000 loan from Houston, plaintiff Jack Futrell and his attorney were present and that it was understood that Busby was to assign his interest under the land sale contract to Houston as security for the loan and that Houston accepted the assignment of the contract from Busby as security. The court also found that, in order to pay off the Houston loan, then in default, and to regain ownership of the vendors’ interest under the Waibel land sale contract, plaintiffs approached the U.S. National Bank for a loan to refinance the debt. An application was completed for a loan of $175,000, the amount then owing to Houston.

Among the documents that were prepared to effect the loan was a bargain and sale deed from Busby to plaintiffs, which recited that it was intended to reconvey any interest that Busby might have in the Waibel property as a result of the conveyance and assignment of the contract for security purposes from plaintiffs to Busby. Busby denied delivering that document to plaintiffs. Plaintiffs were to assign their interest under the contract to the U.S. National Bank as security for the new loan. The loan documents provided:

“4. The parties hereto are aware of the possibility that the security interest of the U.S. National Bank may be assigned to Lindsay Wagner and that the loan of the U.S. National Bank shall be repaid by Lindsay Wagner and that Lindsay Wagner may loan the money to Futrell Cereals, Inc. All parties agree that such replacement of the U.S. National Bank of Oregon by Lindsay Wagner is in the best interest of *31 all the parties hereto and that the rights and obligations of the parties will be interpreted as applying to Lindsay Wagner as though her loan position was that of the U.S. National Bank of Oregon.”

That loan was never consummated; instead, Wagner settled with Houston, as indicated above, and Houston dismissed the lawsuit against defendants and took a judgment by consent against plaintiffs and Busby for $203,000.50, plus attorney fees and costs.

Plaintiffs contend that Houston obtained nothing by Busby’s assignment of his interest in the Waibel contract, because Busby had only a security interest in it and did not assign to Houston the underlying debt that it secured. Plaintiffs are correct: The assignment of a security interest without the assignment of the debt that it secures yields the assignee nothing. Schleef v. Purdy et al., 107 Or 71, 78, 214 P2d 137 (1923). The trial court appears to have concluded that that assignment was valid and could be assigned by Houston to Wagner. If so, it erred.

However, the court also concluded that plaintiffs were estopped to assert the invalidity of the assignment from Busby to Houston. Although the record supports the trial court’s finding that plaintiffs or their attorneys were aware at all times of the transaction with Houston, and neither raised any objections to the assignment from Busby to Houston or suggested that such an assignment would not be effective as security for the Houston loan, that is insufficient to create an estoppel. Silence or inaction may create an estoppel when there is a legal duty to speak. Earls et ux v. Clarke et al., 223 Or 527, 532, 355 P2d 213 (1960). The rule is stated in Ruddy v. Ore. Auto. Credit Corp., 179 Or 688, 703, 174 P2d 603 (1946), in which the court quoted from 31 CJS, “Estoppel,” § 91, 310:

“Where one who owns or has an interest in personal property, with full knowledge of his rights, suffers another to deal with it as his own by selling or pledging it, or otherwise disposing of it, he will be estopped to assert his title or right as against a third person who has acted on the faith of, and has been misled by, his acquiescence.”

There is no evidence that plaintiffs knew that the assignment from Busby to Houston would be ineffective, and there is no finding that they did. Accordingly, they could not *32 be required to speak up. They were as ignorant of the situation as, apparently, was Houston. 2

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Bluebook (online)
771 P.2d 292, 96 Or. App. 27, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/futrell-v-wagner-orctapp-1989.