Holt v. Schneider

77 N.W. 1086, 57 Neb. 523, 1899 Neb. LEXIS 40
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 19, 1899
DocketNo. 8646
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 77 N.W. 1086 (Holt v. Schneider) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Holt v. Schneider, 77 N.W. 1086, 57 Neb. 523, 1899 Neb. LEXIS 40 (Neb. 1899).

Opinion

Ragan, C.

Herman Holt brought this suit in the district court of Lancaster county against Eilert Schneider and others to foreclose a real estate mortgage executed by Schneider to Holt in February, 1884, to secure a note of Schneider of that date payable to Holt for $8,200, due January 1, 1889, with eight per cent interest per annum from its date. As a defense to the action Schneider pleaded payment. The court found the issues in his favor and dismissed Holt’s action, and he has appealed.

1. The history of the case is as follows: From 1882 until this controversy arose C. C. Burr, at Lincoln, Nebraska, was engaged in the business of negotiating real estate loans, and until this time Herman Holt was a capitalist residing in New Hampshire. About the year 1882 Burr began lending money to borrowers, taking their notes secured by mortgage payable to Holt. Burr [525]*525would give Ills own check to the borrower for the amount of the loan, record the mortgage, and transmit the papers evidencing the loan to Holt, and draw on him for the amount of the mortgage loan. This course of business was in pursuance of an agreement between Burr and Holt that the latter would take about $20,000 of such loans. The payment of all the loans so made for Holt by Burr in pursuance of this arrangement were guarantied by the latter. The applications for loans were made to Burr. He examined, or caused to be examined, the borrower’s title, passed upon its validity, and determined its value as security. He collected interest on the Holt loans from time to time as they matured, and from time to time sent Holt statements of the interest he had collected, and sent him drafts for Such interest, deducting any charges made for his services in collecting this interest. In some instances Burr also collected the principal of loans, which he likewise remitted to Holt in the statements made to him from time to time of collections in his hands. Holt sent to Burr from time to time coupons that were due for collection, and when these coupons were received by Burr and paid, he would turn them over to the borrower. Sometimes Burr remitted the interest due before it was actually paid, to him. Sometimes the borrower would pay his interest to Burr before Burr received the coupon. In no instance did Holt ever notify any of his debtors to remit the principal or interest of their loans to him, nor did he notify them to pay their loans to Burr. In fact, he had no communication at any time with any of the persons who had borrowed his money, except in one or two instances borrowers wrote him asking, that if they would remit him the amount due on their loans, would he release the mortgages; and in such instances he. answered, saying, that he would .first communicate with Burr and ascertain if Burr had in his possession any coupon which he, Burr, had paid but which had not been paid to him. Burr also caused in some instances the mortgaged property to be insured for [526]*526the benefit of Holt, and generally he transacted the entire business in reference to the making and collection of these loans on behalf of Holt. In 1884 Schneider made application to Burr for a loan of $3,200. Schneider executed to Holt the note and mortgage in suit. Burr caused this mortgage to be recorded and forwarded the same, together writh the bond which it secured, to I-Iolt and drew his draft on Holt for $3,200, which Holt paid. When the annual interest coupons matured in January, 1885, 1886, and 1887, Schneider paid them to Burr and he remitted the amounts to Holt. He made these remittances, not exactly at the time they were paid, but according to the usual method adopted by him and Holt for the transaction of their business. It seems that when money was collected by Burr he placed it to his own credit in the bank until such time as he was ready to make a statement to Holt, and when he made such statement he would charge himself with all the moneys he had collected since his former statement, and credit himself with his charges and expenses for making the collections. Holt sent the Schneider coupons to Burr in the same manner that he sent the coupons of other borrowers, and they were by Burr turned over, to Schneider. At the time Burr made this loan to Schneider he took from the latter a note for $320, secured by a second mortgage upon the same real estate mortgaged to Holt. This was Burr’s commission charged Schneider-for obtaining for him the loan. It seems that Burr, because of his guaranty, advanced and paid to Holt the Schneider coupon which matured January 1, 1888; and that coupon not having been paid by Schneider to Burr and Burr’s commission mortgage remaining unpaid, he brought a suit in April of that year in the district court of Lancaster county against Schneider to foreclose the commission mortgage. To this Suit Schneider and his wife were made parties and duly served with process of the court. Burr also made Herman Holt a party to this suit and employed a firm of attorneys for Holt. The attorneys [527]*527filed a cross-bill for Holt, in which the execution of the principal note and mortgage was alleged; that Schneider had made default in paying the interest due thereon, by reason whereof Holt had elected to and had declared the entire mortgage debt due. This case went to decree, Holt, being awarded a first lien for the principal of his mortgage and the interest thereon and Burr a second lien. 1-Iolt had not expressly authorized Burr to bring this foreclosure suit. He had no knowledge that it had been brought until October, 1894. At the time the suit was brought, and at all times until this decree was ren: dered, the Schneider mortgage was in Holt’s possession, and at the time the decree was rendered on Holt’s cross-bill in the Burr suit the mortgage had not by its terms matured. Schneider took a stay of execution of this decree, and before the stay expired procured a loan of money from the Lombard Investment Company and secured it by mortgage upon the real estate in controversy and paid the proceeds of this loan, about $3,800, over to Burr. This sum was not sufficient to discharge all liens awarded against the land by the decree rendered in the Burr case. Presumably to enable Schneider to procure the loan from the loan company, Burr released his own lien against the Schneider land and procured the release of all other liens against the same, and also as the agent and attorney of Holt released the decree which the court had awarded Holt' against that land and took from Schneider his note secured by chattel mortgage for the difference between the sum of $3,800 paid him by Schneider and what it took to clear said real estate from all the liens awarded by the decree in the Burr case. Burr did not account and pay over to Holt all, if any part, of the money paid to him by Schneider to apply on the Holt mortgage. In October, 1894, Holt visited Lincoln and for the first time learned that Burr, assuming to act as his agent, had foreclosed the Schneider mortgage and received from Schneider the money already referred to. After • a somewhat complete examination into this [528]*528Schneider affair, after consultation'with Burr, and. with a full knowledge of everything that Burr-had done in reference to this Schneider loan, Holt took an assignment in writing from Burr of a large number of certificates of stock owned by the latter in certain corporations, the face or par value of this stock being something-more than $200,000.

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Bluebook (online)
77 N.W. 1086, 57 Neb. 523, 1899 Neb. LEXIS 40, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holt-v-schneider-neb-1899.