Griffiths v. Thrasher

26 P.2d 995, 95 Mont. 210, 1933 Mont. LEXIS 144
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 25, 1933
DocketNo. 7,093.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 26 P.2d 995 (Griffiths v. Thrasher) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Griffiths v. Thrasher, 26 P.2d 995, 95 Mont. 210, 1933 Mont. LEXIS 144 (Mo. 1933).

Opinion

ME. JUSTICE STEWAET

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the district court of Silver Bow county rendered in favor of plaintiff after her demurrer to defendant’s amended answer had been sustained. The action was for the foreclosure of a chattel mortgage covering furniture and furnishings in a hotel in Butte.

On April 19, 192'8, plaintiff, respondent here, but hereinafter called plaintiff, sold to defendant, appellant, hereinafter called defendant, the mortgaged personal property for the *215 sum of $9,000. A payment of $3,000 was made at the time, and fifty-five promissory notes for $100 each were executed for the balance of the purchase price. The notes were payable monthly, commencing June 1, 1928, and ending December 1, 1932. They were secured by a chattel mortgage given by the defendant to plaintiff and covering the property sold. The mortgage was duly filed and possession of the property was taken by defendant. Twenty-five of the notes were paid, being all that matured prior to July 1, 1930. The principal and interest of thirty notes remained unpaid on February 14, 1931, when this action was instituted. The complaint alleged the nonpayment of the sum of $3,000 and interest, and demanded the foreclosure of the chattel mortgage by reason of the failure of the defendant to pay.

The defendant filed answer, admitting the execution of the-notes and mortgage, the payment of the twenty-five notes, and the failure to pay the balance. It contained formal denials, three affirmative defenses to the complaint, each separately stated, and two cross-complaints.

The first affirmative defense set forth that John H. Curtis & Co., a copartnership consisting of John H. Curtis, Jr., and George D. Curtis, was joint owner with plaintiff in the notes and mortgages, and was the duly authorized agent of the plaintiff, with full power and written authority to represent plaintiff and handle the notes and mortgage on her behalf; that on or about June 30, 1930, in consideration of the sum of $1,000, paid by defendant to John H. Curtis & Co., the plaintiff, through her agent and co-owners, did promise and agree that the then unpaid notes, thirty in number, would all be extended from the respective due dates until July 1, 1932; that the above sum was paid to and received by John H. Curtis & Co., and that the same was with the knowledge of plaintiff as co-owner, and that she fully ratified the agreement and received her full share of the amount; that, although the extension agreement was fully executed as to the payment and performance on the part of the defendant, plaintiff did on February 13, 1931, in violation of the agree *216 ment, institute this action for the collection of the notes and the foreclosure of the mortgage.

The second affirmative defense reiterated the facts of the first defense, with the added allegation that plaintiff should be estopped from alleging the facts set forth in her complaint as a cause of action. In effect, the second separate defense is a plea of estoppel.

The third affirmative defense repeats the facts of the first separate defense, with an additional paragraph alleging that, by reason of those facts, plaintiff had expressly waived the provisions of the notes so far as time of payment was concerned.

The first cross-complaint contained in defendant’s answer alleges the facts of the sale, the execution of the notes and mortgage, and the payment of the first twenty-five notes, together with the nonpayment of the balance, and repeats the allegation that the Curtis Company and plaintiff were the owners of the notes and mortgage, and that the Curtis Company had full power to represent plaintiff with relation to the notes and mortgage. This cross-complaint contains a separate paragraph repeating the allegations as to the extension agreement, alleging that, in violation of that agreement, plaintiff instituted this action and took the property covered by the mortgage from the possession of the defendant and converted the same to her own use, and still has the property under her control; that by reason of the suit and threats of suit made by plaintiff to various and divers persons, and communicated to the tenants of defendant, the tenants were caused to remove from the Park Hotel, in which the furniture and furnishings were being used, and defendant was thereby deprived of her business and damaged in the sum of $10,000.

The second cross-complaint alleges the fact of the sale of the property, the execution and delivery of the notes and mortgage, the payment of the twenty-five notes, the nonpayment of the thirty notes, and, in addition thereto, alleges that, as an inducement offered by the plaintiff to the defendant for the purchase of the property, plaintiff represented to defendant and warranted to her that each and every room then rented *217 in the building was permanently rented to desirable tenants who paid their rent promptly; that such tenants were paying rentals in certain specified amounts, and were of good character and desirable tenants, so as to make the business of the hotel worth the reasonable sum of $2,500 at the time of the sale, over and above the reasonable value of the property; that the representations and warranties made by plaintiff to defendant were false, and were known to be false by plaintiff, and were made for the purpose of inducing defendant to pay the sum of $2,500 for the business over and above the reasonable value of the property; that defendant had a right to rely upon the acquaintanceship of the plaintiff with her tenants, her knowledge of the manner in which they paid their rent and the amount of rent which they, by contract with plaintiff, had agreed to pay and had been paying, but notwithstanding, for the purpose of verifying the statements of plaintiff, the defendant made inquiries of several of the tenants to whom she was referred by the plaintiff for the purpose of verifying the representations made, and that in each ease the tenants, who were by the defendant alleged to be confederates and conspirators with plaintiff in a scheme to defraud prospective purchasers of the Park Hotel, did verify such representations.

It is further alleged that defendant had no opportunity prior to taking possession of the hotel to determine for herself the facts as to the character, desirability and good pay of the tenants, and therefore relied upon the representations and warranties of the plaintiff; that, after taking possession of the property, defendant discovered that many of the tenants were persons of bad character who had been solicited to room in the premises the few months immediately preceding the sale of the property, and during the time plaintiff had the property listed for sale, for the purpose of cheating and defrauding any prospective- purchaser whom she might ensnare by her false representations, in order to obtain a fraudulent advantage of such purchaser; that plaintiff did thus ensnare and cheat defendant, and that, as a result, the purchase price paid by defendant failed in the sum of $2,500, and plaintiff *218 was cheated and defrauded by such act in that amount; that, upon taking possession of the premises, defendant first learned that, not only

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Bluebook (online)
26 P.2d 995, 95 Mont. 210, 1933 Mont. LEXIS 144, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/griffiths-v-thrasher-mont-1933.