Hill v. Banks

23 A. 712, 61 Conn. 25, 1891 Conn. LEXIS 61
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJune 19, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 23 A. 712 (Hill v. Banks) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hill v. Banks, 23 A. 712, 61 Conn. 25, 1891 Conn. LEXIS 61 (Colo. 1891).

Opinion

Seymour., J.

Before August 18th, 1888, the defendant Banks had executed and delivered to the plaintiff his promissory notes of different amounts and dates, and due at different times, amounting to $1,426.44. The plaintiff had procured them to be discounted at the bank.

Eight days prior to August 18th, 1888, one of the notes, being for the sum of $905.38, fell due. It was in the bank where it had been discounted. Banks was unable to pay it, but promised that, if the plaintiff would take it up and renew it for eight days, he would raise the money by mortgage andpaj' the renewal note at its maturity. This the plaintiff did, but Banks did not pay the note at its maturity, but *27 asked the plaintiff for further time and aid, and agreed that if he would take up and renew the note again he would execute and deliver to him, as collateral security for his indebtedness, his note-for $900, secured by mortgage upon his real estate. This the plaintiff assented to and thereupon Banks delivered to him his note as follows :—

“$900.00 Norwalk, Conn., Aug. 18th, 1888.
“ On demand, after date, I promise to pay to the order of E. J. Hill nine hundred dollars at the National Bank of Norwalk, value received, as collateral, with mortgage, for indebtedness by note or otherwise to E. J. Hill, at six per cent interest and taxes. F. S. Banks.”

He also delivered his mortgage deed of the same date with the note, the condition of which is as follows : — “ The condition of this deed is such that, whereas the said grantor is justly indebted to the said grantee in the sum of nine hundred dollars, as evidenced by his promissory note for said sum of even date herewith, payable to said grantee on demand with interest at the rate of six per cent per annum, and till paid. Now therefore, if said note shall be well and truly paid according to the true intent, tenor and meaning thereof, then this deed to be null and void,” etc. The note and mortgage were, in pursuance of the agreement, accepted by the plaintiff, who on the same day renewed the note for $905.38.

In the premise of the mortgage the grantor is described as “ Frederick S. Banks.” It is signed “ F. S. Banks,” and acknowledged by “ Frederick S. Banks.” There are mortgages on the property subsequent to the above.

When the $900 note fell due it was not paid nor any part of it, and the amount of it, together with the amounts of the other notes then due, was put into one note of $1,332.87, which note, or its renewal, the plaintiff still holds and owns, and it is now past due and wholly unpaid.

The plaintiff brought his complaint claiming judgment for the foreclosure of the mortgage and possession of the premises therein described. To his complaint he made the *28 subsequent encumbrancers parties defendant, who appeared and made answer thereto, and Banks made no defense.

Upon the trial of the cause the plaintiff offered the mortgage deed in evidence. The subsequent encumbrancers, Robert W. Keeler, Thomas J. Raymond and William S. Raymond, objected to its admission on the ground that it appeared to have been executed by “ E. S. Banks” and acknowledged by “ Frederick S. Banks.”

The plaintiff also offered the testimony of the magistrate who took the acknowledgment of the mortgage deed and who was also one of the attesting witnesses to it, in proof of the fact that the person who signed the mortgage deed was the same person who acknowledged it. The subsequent encumbrancers objected to the admission of this testimony, giving no specific reason for such objection.

The plaintiff also offered in evidence the note of which a copy appears above. The subsequent encumbrancers objected to its admission, because, they claimed, it was not the note described in the complaint nor the one described in the mortgage.

These are the only objections stated in the finding to have been made at the trial. The court overruled them respectively and admitted the mortgage and note in evidence. Thereupon the subsequent encumbrancers took their appeal.

As to the first point. It was objected at the trial, as already appears, to the admission of the mortgage deed as the deed of Frederick S. Banks, that it appeared to have been executed by F. S. Banks and acknowledged by Frederick S. Banks. Of course it was open to the defendants to show, if they could, that Frederick S. Banks never executed the deed which it was sought to foreclose. But the doctrine contended for, that the signature of F. S. Banks and the acknowledgment by Frederick S. Banks present a case of fatal variance which itself precluded the admission of the deed in evidence as the deed of Frederick S. Banks, even in connection with testimony as to the identity of the two, is a novel one and unsupported by reason -or, so far as we *29 know, by authority. If the defendants denied that the Banks who executed the deed was the Banks who acknowledged it, in other words, if they denied that it was the deed of Frederick S. Banks, the evidence of the magistrate who took the acknowledgment and who was also one of the attesting witnesses of the deed was admissible to show their identity.

In the next place the defendants objected to the admission of the note in evidence, first, says the finding, because, as they claimed, it was not the note described in the complaint; second, because it was not the note described in the mortgage. Upon the argumeut before us the claim was that the mortgage was not a good and valid mortgage as against subsequent encumbrancers because it did not truly and correctly describe the debt intended to be secured thereby. Perhaps that was the real point intended to be made in the Superior Court by the .objections there taken. Lest we should do the defendants injustice we will so understand it and examine the question as presented to us.

The allegation of the complaint is, that on August 18th, 1888, the defendant Banks owed the plaintiff $900, as evidenced by said Banks’s note for $900, dated on said day and payable to the order of the plaintiff on demand, with interest at six per cent and taxes.

This the answer of the defendants denied. In proof of the allegation the plaintiff offered the note. It was admissible as tending to prove it. The defendants seem to treat the matter as if it were a suit on a specialty with profert. It is not a suit even upon the note. It is a proceeding to foreclose, in which the real question attempted to be made is whether the mortgage sufficiently describes the debt sought to be secured so as to prevail against subsequent encumbrancers. The plaintiff insists that the note, in connection with the attendant circumstances, proves an indebtedness such as is alleged and is described in the mortgage.

When we consider what the real transaction was between the plaintiff and Banks most of the difficulties suggested by the defendants vanish. Banks owed the plaintiff some four *30 teen hundred dollars, for nearly all of which indebtedness he had given his notes of different amounts. One of them, for $905.38, fell due, was unpaid, was renewed for the round sum of $900, and again renewed and the mortgage security given.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Capitol National Bank & Trust Co. v. David B. Roberts, Inc.
27 A.2d 116 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1942)
Progressive Welfare Assn., Inc. v. Morduchay
200 A. 813 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1938)
First National Bank v. National Grain Corporation
131 A. 404 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1925)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
23 A. 712, 61 Conn. 25, 1891 Conn. LEXIS 61, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hill-v-banks-conn-1891.