Hutchings v. Binford

206 S.W. 557, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 876
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 20, 1918
DocketNo. 1411.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 206 S.W. 557 (Hutchings v. Binford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hutchings v. Binford, 206 S.W. 557, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 876 (Tex. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

BOYCE, J.

This suit was brought by C. P. Hutchings, a loan broker, to recover commission for services in procuring a loan of 340,000 for Thaddeus Binford, now deceased, to be secured by land in Oldham and Deaf Smith counties, Téx. The defendants, appel-lees here, were sued as heirs of Thaddeus Binford, under allegations that obviated tbe necessity for an administration and authorized the maintenance of this suit against such heirs. The facts are practically undisputed, and under these liability for tbe payment of commission is dependent on whether the proposed loan secured was in accordance with the terms upon which appellant had been authorized to secure it, and if there was a departure from the terms of this proposed loan, from the terms of the loan he was authorized to secure, whether Thaddeus Binford had, by his conduct, waived the variance.

Appellant having been authorized to secure a loan under an agreement for a commission of $400, to be paid for such services, entered into negotiations with the Missouri State Life Insurance Company, which resulted in Thaddeus Binford making written, application to said company for a loan, which appli *558 cation, we take it, embodied tbe terms of the loan which appellant was to procure under his employment. According to this application and some modifications agreed upon by the parties, the loan was to be for $40,000, payable January 1, 1927, with privilege ’of payment of certain parts of the principal before maturity after January 1, 1022, bearing interest at the rate of 7 per cent, per annum, payable annually, to be secured by first mortgage on 10,000 acres of land in Deaf Smith and Oldham counties. In this application a question was asked and answered as follows:

“Q. Eor what purpose is this loan desired? A. To take up loan now against land and state debt.”

In answer to another question in the application, it was stated that—

‘‘The only incumbrance against this land is deed of trust of $30,000, held by Geo. Hotchkiss, and state debt of $6,000, which incumbrance is to be paid from the proceeds of this loan.”

Abstracts of title were submitted to the insurance company and considerable delay incurred in meeting objections made to the title. Finally, the insurance company prepared notes and deed of trust for execution by Binford and sent them, with checks payable to Binford, to the First National Bank of Amarillo, with instructions to deliver the checks upon execution of the papers by Bin-ford, and subject to certain other conditions. Among these conditions was one that nothing was to be done with such checks until the bank should “first receive patents from the state of Texas to the borrower or some one in his chain of title” to the land on which there remained a balance due the state. The deed of trust, among other provisions, contained a stipulation to the effect that if any tax should be imposed or assessed within the state of Texas against the interest of the trustee, or the beneficiary of the trust, in said premises, or against the debt or notes secured thereby, while held by a nonresident, then the whole indebtedness should, at the option of the legal holder of said notes, become immediately due and payable, etc. The deed of trust contained other provisions which it is claimed were not contemplated by the terms of the application, but which we need not notice. The negotiations in behalf of T. Binford, who lived in Iowa, had been conducted by his son, who resided in Texas, who, it appears, did not keep his father advised of the facts causing the delay or the progress made in closing said loan. The said T. Binford, in the meantime, had made application to secure the money he needed 'elsewhere, and when he was notified that the papers aforesaid were at the Amarillo bank, ready for closing, he did not examine them, but declined outright to proceed further with the loan, on the ground that he had made other arrangements to secure the money.

[1-6] We think it clear that the terms and conditions of the loan as proposed by the papers tendered Binford for execution, and instructions to the bank accompanying them, did not correspond to the terms and conditions of his application. Under the instructions to the bank the proceeds of the loan were not available to pay the state its in-cumbrance, and thus secure the patents which were made a condition precedent to the use of such funds at all. In order to have complied with such conditions, Binford would have been required to secure $6,000 elsewhere, and one of the expressed purposes of the loan would have been defeated. We think, also, that the provision for the maturity of the indebtedness upon, the contingency above referred to was a departure from any terms of the loan which appellant was authorized to procure. It is not shown that the life insurance company was willing to make the loan on any other terms or conditions, so that appellant cannot, we believe, successfully assert that it is shown that he procured a loan to be offered on the terms upon which he was authorized to procure it. Colvin v. Blanchard, 101 Tex. 231, 106 S. W. 323; Evants v. Fuqua, 102 Tex. 430, 118 S. W. 132, 132 Am. St. Rep. 892; Moss & Raley v. Wren, 102 Tex. 567, 113 S. W. 739, 120 S. W. 847; Rabinowitz v. Smith Co., 190 S. W. 201. The only question then is: Whether Thaddeus Binford, by his refusal to proceed further with the loan, on the ground that he had secured a loan elsewhere, waived this departure in the terms of the loan offered from that authorized to be negotiated. “A waiver; to be operative, must be supported by an agreement founded on a valuable consideration, or the act relied on as a waiver must be such as to estop a party from insisting on a performance of the contract or forfeiture of the condition.” . Insurance Co. v. Lacroix, 45 Tex. 168; Cyc. vol. 40, p. 263. Waiver is also only operative where the person charged with the waiver, has knowledge, actual or constructive, of the facts. Cyc. vol. 40, pp. 255, 256. Thaddeus Binford did not examine the terms of the loan contract proffered him, and had no knowledge thereof, unless it could be said that he was charged with knowledge thereof on the theory that it was his duty to examine them to see whether they conformed to his application. He had the right to assume, and doubtless did, that the terms of the loan embodied in the papers sent to the bank for execution were in conformity with his application. If he was ignorant of any departure from the terms of the application, such ignorance was, in a large measure, due to the fault of the loan company in varying the terms of the application. Under these circumstances, it does not seem to us that he could be properly chargeable with knowledge of these departures from the contract, which he had no reason to suspect existed. There certainly was no consideration for any waiver, nor is it suggested by the evidence that, if these objections had been seasonably made, they *559 could or would have been obviated. So that the elements of estoppel do not seem to be present. He had the right, of course, if he saw fit to do so, to vary the terms of the loan contract, and, if it was accepted on such varied terms, the loan broker would have been entitled to his commission; but, of course, this agreement for a variance, in order to bind him, must have been knowingly made. Therefore we do not see how it can properly be said that Thaddeus Binford waived the difference in the terms of the proposed contract.

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206 S.W. 557, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 876, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hutchings-v-binford-texapp-1918.