Home Owners' Loan Corp. v. Thornburgh

1940 OK 424, 106 P.2d 511, 187 Okla. 699, 1940 Okla. LEXIS 345
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 15, 1940
DocketNo. 29417.
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 1940 OK 424 (Home Owners' Loan Corp. v. Thornburgh) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Home Owners' Loan Corp. v. Thornburgh, 1940 OK 424, 106 P.2d 511, 187 Okla. 699, 1940 Okla. LEXIS 345 (Okla. 1940).

Opinion

NEFF, J.

The defendants executed their note and mortgage to the plaintiff Home Owners’ Loan Corporation. After continued delinquency the plaintiff obtained a judgment against them ■on the note and foreclosing the mortgage. Pursuant to the judgment the mortgaged property was sold at sheriff’s sale and was purchased thereat by ■plaintiff for a sum less than the money judgment, leaving a deficiency judgment to the extent of the difference. The •sale was confirmed, and that portion of the proceeding is behind us and not involved herein.

Subsequently plaintiff caused an alias •execution to be issued on its deficiency judgment and levied against other property of defendants. Defendants filed a motion to recall the alias execution and a hearing was had on that motion. 'The trial court sustained the motion on the ground that the judgment had been satisfied and settled, and the plaintiff appeals.

The trial court’s conclusion that the judgment had been fully satisfied is based upon an alleged oral agreement between one of the defendants and a field agent of the plaintiff, arising out •of a sidewalk conversation had between them after the sale had been confirmed, and relating to the deficiency judgment. The trial court was of the belief that because of this conversation the Home Owners’ Loan Corporation became obligated to release the deficiency, in consideration of the defendant’s promise to give immediate possession of the premises and the further promise of defendant to forbear appealing from an order of the United States District Court denying his petition to be declared a bankrupt.

It is first contended that there is no showing of a sufficient consideration for the alleged promise of plaintiff’s field agent. The plaintiff points out that the defendants were legally obligated to surrender possession of the foreclosed property anyway, since the sheriff’s sale had been confirmed and was in all respects regular, and that the performance or promise of performance of a duty imposed by law or of a duty which one is already legally bound to do, forbear, or suffer, is not a sufficient consideration to support a contract, citing Bowers v. Missouri State Life Ins. Co., 69 Okla. 14, 169 P. 633; Maker v. Taft, 41 Okla. 663, 139 P. 970, 52 L.R.A. (N.S.) 328; 6 R.C.L. 664; 34 C. J. 701. That principle is too well settled to justify extended discussion, and it would obviously be applicable to that part of defendant’s promise to surrender possession of the foreclosed premises.

But would it be applicable to the remainder of defendant’s promise, to forbear pursuing his remedy of appeal in the bankruptcy matter, under the Frazier-Lemke Act, which it is said would have deferred plaintiff’s obtaining possession of the premises? Although plaintiff in its brief includes the formal statement of a proposition related to this question, said proposition is not argued by plaintiff or supported either by authorities or original reasoning. On the other hand, defendant cites authorities holding that the forbearance of the right of appeal is a sufficient promise to constitute consideration for a contract.

If, however, the Home Owners’ Loan Corporation was not bound by the statement of the field agent that the *701 deficiency would be released, it is immaterial whether defendant’s promise to forbear appeal was or was not a good consideration. We therefore move our inquiry into the law of agency, intermixing discussion of the law and the facts in order to clarify the solution.

The authority of an agent legally to bind his principal in a contract with a third person is, in broad terms, either actual or apparent. Actual authority includes both express and implied authority. But apparent authority may come either within or in excess of actual authority. If liability of the principal is predicated upon apparent authority in excess of actual authority, the principles of estoppel necessarily come into play, and those principles in turn bring into importance the knowledge or duty of the person who invokes them, namely, the third person who is relying thereon.

In the instant case the field agent did not have actual authority to release the deficiency judgment. That is undisputed. The loans, mortgages, judgments, etc., of the Home Owners’ Loan Corporation are assets for the cancellation of its bonds which in turn are guaranteed by the United States Treasury. In order to protect those assets from dissipation by irresponsible and unwarranted statements or promises by employees in its various departments, including its thousands of field agents, the corporation had adopted and published a manual which limited and particularized the powers of its agents and employees. Federal Register, March 4, 1937, page 496, of which courts take judicial notice. 49 Stat. 500, 503, section 7. Section 605 thereof prescribed that regional managers, with the approval of regional counsel, subject to procedure and limitations prescribed by the general manager with the approval of general counsel, could exercise the authority of compromising or settling deficiency judgments, and that officials of the corporation in the field were authorized to take said action “as is herein provided, as designated by the general manager, with the approval of the general counsel and under procedure prescribed by them.” As stated above, the absence of actual authority by the field agent to release the judgment is established by undisputed evidence, and same appears to be conceded by defendants.

Such absence of actual authority, therefore, relegates analysis of the case to the remaining form of authority, namely, apparent authority. But at this point we are met by the frank admission of the defendant that he knew, when he talked with the field agent, that the latter did not have authority to release the judgment. Apparent authority loses all of its apparency when the third party knows that actual authority is lacking. As stated in 2 C.J.S. 1188, 1189, citing many cases as authority:

“Insofar as a third person has notice or knowledge at the time of dealing with an agent of the inconsistency between the powers which the agent has and those which he assumes to exercise, the authority of the agent is deemed not to extend beyond that actually conferred upon him, to the exclusion of whatever apparent authority might exist in the absence of such notice or knowledge.
“Any apparent authority that might otherwise exist vanishes in the presence of the third person’s knowledge, actual or constructive, of what the agent is, and what he is not, empowered to do for his principal; and, regardless of the third person’s ignorance of this rule of law, no resort can be had to that doctrine, for the underlying principle on which the doctrine of apparent authority is based, that where one of two innocent parties must suffer, that one must bear the burden who placed another in a position to cause a loss, has no room to operate in behalf of one who is apprised as to an agent’s authority. * * *
“The third person need not know or be charged with notice of the precise limits and extent of the agent’s authority or of the exact tenor of the qualifying instructions; whenever, under all the facts or circumstances, such third person knows, or has good reason for knowing or believing, that an act undertaken by the agent or a matter with which he assumes to deal is in ex *702

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Bluebook (online)
1940 OK 424, 106 P.2d 511, 187 Okla. 699, 1940 Okla. LEXIS 345, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/home-owners-loan-corp-v-thornburgh-okla-1940.