Harrell v. Southwest Mortgage Company

22 S.W.2d 167, 180 Ark. 620, 1929 Ark. LEXIS 348
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedDecember 9, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 22 S.W.2d 167 (Harrell v. Southwest Mortgage Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harrell v. Southwest Mortgage Company, 22 S.W.2d 167, 180 Ark. 620, 1929 Ark. LEXIS 348 (Ark. 1929).

Opinion

Mehaeey, J.

Appellants had borrowed money from the Missouri State Life Insurance Company, upon which they were paying- 6 per cent, interest. The Clay County Abstract Company advertised that it had money to lend at a low rate of interest, a long- time to repay, and no commission. Appellants saw this ad, and applied to the Clay County Abstract Company for a loan on their farm. They desired to increase the loan; that is, to borrow more money than enough to take up their loan with the Missouri Life Insurance Company, and they also wished to get it at a lower rate of interest.

The -Clay County Abstract Company was operated by Ira C. Langley and O. E. Winto-n. The Missouri State Life Insurance Company at first refused to permit payment of the loan to it because it was not due, but finally, through the efforts of Ira C. Langley, it agreed to accept payment of its loan.

The appellee, through the Clay County Abstract Company, agreed to lend appellants $5,000, and they executed note and mortgage to secure the payment of the $5,000, together with ten interest notes, the loan being for ten years.

The appellants went to the office of the Clay County Abstract Company to execute the necessary papers to complete the loan. The papers were signed and acknowledged before O. R. Winton. At the same time that the mortgage for $5,000 and notes were executed, it is alleged that a second mortgage for $500 was executed to secure four notes of $125 each for commissions. This suit was brought to foreclose the second mortgage.

There is no controversy about the first mortgage for $5,000, and no controversy about the interest notes, but appellants contend that they did not sign the second mortgage and the notes which it secured, and did not agree to pay any commission.

Copies of the notes and mortgage sued on were filed with the complaint. Defendants answered, denying the execution of the second mortgage and notes which it secured, and their answer was verified, and later appellants filed an affidavit denying the genuineness of the four promissory notes and mortgages involved in this suit.

O. R. Winton, who took the acknowledgment of plaintiffs to the mortgages, and in whose presence it is alleged that the notes were signed, was dead at the time the testimony was taken, and, of course, his testimony could not be had.

The evidence shows conclusively that the attorney, Arthur Sneed, had in his possession the original mortgage and notes in court, but they disappeared, and could not be found during „the trial. The clerk testified from the mortgage record, and introduced a certified copy of the mortgage.

The appellants testified that they did not sign the four notes sued on as commission for securing the loan, and that they knew nothing about the second mortgage or the notes which it secured, and did not agree to pay any commission. The commission was not payable to the Clay County Abstract Company or to Langley or Winton.

On cross-examination appellant, Frank A. Harrell, was banded a photostatic copy of the second mortgage, and asked whether the signature resembled his, and he said it did a little bit; that it looked something like it, but that he did not sign it, even if it did look like his signature.

Witness had written, requesting the mortgage to be sent to the Bank of Piggott, but, instead of sending the original, they sent copies. They admitted that they signed the $5,000 mortgage and the notes which it secured, and this mortgage was introduced for the purpose of showing the signature, and for no other purpose. They contended that they did not sign the second mortgage and notes, but that, if they did sign, it was a fraud, and that they had been tricked into signing it; that, if the signature was theirs, it was obtained by some kind of a scheme; by 'fraud. Both of them could read and write, and testified that Winton handed them the mortgage, and Harrell read it, and then Winton picked up ten papers which he called coupons. They represented interest on the loan, and he told them to sign them, and after Harrell had signed they were passed over to his wife, and she signed them.

Harrell testified that the signature on the copies looked very much like his, but, if it was, it was obtained by error, and he did not mean to sign them; testified that what he really meant was that his signature was obtained through fraud. Witness does not know whether he read all the papers that he signed or not. He said Winton was in a hurry, and that he sat at one table and signed the papers and his wife sat at a different table in the same room.

Mrs. Harrell, the wife of Frank A. Harrell, testified substantially the same as her husband, but she said she did not know whether it was her signature or not, and she did not know whether it was her husband’s signature, but that they resembled her signature all right, but she did not sign them. She just signed what was handed to her after Mr. Harrell had signed them, and did not pay close attention.

The only question involved is a ■ question of fact. If the appellants signed the notes and mortgage without being induced to do so by fraud, they are liable. If they did not sign them, or if their signatures were obtained by fraud, and they did not agree to pay any commission, then they are not liable.

It is appellants’ contention that the proof is not sufficient, 'because they filed an affidavit denying the genuineness of the second mortgage and notes, and that when they filed this affidavit the burden was upon the appellee to show that the signatures were genuine. The fact that the answer was sworn to by the parties makes no difference, because Harrell simply swore that he verily believed that he had a good and valid defense, and that the facts stated in the answer were true to the best of his knowledge and belief. But there was an additional affidavit denying the genuineness of the mortgage and notes, and a proper affidavit denying the genuineness, either in the answer or a separate affidavit, would be sufficient. This affidavit was made in compliance with § 4114 of C. & M. Digest, which provides: “Where a writing purporting to have been executed by one of the parties is referred to in and filed with a pleading, it may be read as genuine against such party, unless he denies its genuineness by affidavit before the trial is begun.”

The purpose of the statute is to permit the party who files a written instrument with his pleadings to introduce it in evidence as genuine, unless its genuineness is first denied under oath. When this affidavit is made and its genuineness is denied, then the party, without some other evidence, could not introduce the instrument as genuine.

This court said, in discussing this statute: “It means only that, in the absence of such an affidavit, the party offering the instrument may introduce it without proof of its execution, and that it is taken prima facie as genuine, but its genuineness may be contested. In other words, the statute merely establishes a rule of evidence, and does not bar the opposite party absolutely of his right to contest its genuineness, nor does the 'failure to deny its genuineness by affidavit give it the force of absolute verity.

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125 F. Supp. 696 (W.D. Arkansas, 1954)
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Bluebook (online)
22 S.W.2d 167, 180 Ark. 620, 1929 Ark. LEXIS 348, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harrell-v-southwest-mortgage-company-ark-1929.